Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

New Manitoba plan contains no carbon tax, higher carbon emissions level

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Jun, 2019 08:55 PM

    The Manitoba government is watering down its target for reducing greenhouse gas emissions and removing any possible carbon tax from the equation.

    Sustainable Development Minister Rochelle Squires announced Monday that the Progressive Conservative government is aiming to reduce annual emissions by one megatonne of carbon dioxide equivalent between 2018 and 2022.

    That's less than half the almost 2 1/2-megatonne reduction target the Tories originally announced in 2017.

    The main reason for the change is that the province is no longer assuming a carbon tax will be around.

    "We've removed the carbon-pricing element from our plan and are moving forward with getting real emissions reductions," Squires told The Canadian Press on Monday.

    "(There are) several more initiatives to come that will help us transition to a low-carbon future without imposing a tax on Manitobans."

    Opposition NDP Leader Wab Kinew said the government is moving in the wrong direction.

    "Reducing the emissions targets will not protect the environment in the way that we need to for the next generation," Kinew said.

    "And it seems like the government, in this announcement, is also agreeing that putting a price on pollution is an effective way to reduce emissions."

    The Tory government proposed a flat $25 per tonne carbon tax in its 2017 plan — an increase that works out to just over five cents a litre on gasoline.

    The federal government said that was not high enough and insisted the province match the federal level that starts at $20 a tonne and is to rise to $50 by 2022.

    Manitoba backed off its tax plan entirely last year, so Ottawa imposed its own levy in April. It has also done so in Saskatchewan, Ontario and New Brunswick, which also refused to meet the federal demand.

    The future of the federal tax is in question. Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer has promised to scrap it if his party is elected this fall. Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Ontario are fighting the tax in court.

    Saskatchewan's Court of Appeal ruled in a split decision last month that the tax is constitutional. The province is appealing that ruling to the Supreme Court of Canada.

    Squires said the Manitoba government is establishing firm, achievable targets and will meet them through initiatives such as a plan she announced Monday to subsidize the trucking industry for purchases of energy-efficient equipment.

    The previous NDP government set emissions targets and failed to reach them — a fact highlighted by the province's auditor general in 2017.

    Kinew has promised to make the province carbon-neutral by 2050 if he is elected premier. He has also said he would impose a price on carbon which, like the federal one, would be at least partially offset by rebates.

    He is not yet prepared to say what that price would be.

    "We will have to look at the federal landscape. We want to get a good deal for Manitobans that balances the environment but also keeping life affordable for people," Kinew said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Accused Of Killing 4 People In Fredericton Shooting Spree Returns To Court

    FREDERICTON — A New Brunswick man accused of murdering four people, including two police officers, in a shooting spree last August was back in a Fredericton courtroom Friday.    

    Man Accused Of Killing 4 People In Fredericton Shooting Spree Returns To Court

    Trudeau Says B.C. Money Laundering Report Is 'Extremely Alarming'

    Trudeau Says B.C. Money Laundering Report Is 'Extremely Alarming'
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says a report out of British Columbia on the extent that criminals are laundering their dirty money in Canada is extremely alarming and absolutely unacceptable.    

    Trudeau Says B.C. Money Laundering Report Is 'Extremely Alarming'

    16-Month-Old Dies In Hot Car In Burnaby, B.C.

    16-Month-Old Dies In Hot Car In Burnaby, B.C.
    BURNABY, B.C. — RCMP say a toddler has died after being left in a vehicle in Burnaby, B.C., during a spring heat wave.

    16-Month-Old Dies In Hot Car In Burnaby, B.C.

    Attempt To Flee Alerts RCMP To 'Suspicious Occurrence' In Surrey, B.C.

    Attempt To Flee Alerts RCMP To 'Suspicious Occurrence' In Surrey, B.C.
    Two men are in custody, two weapons have been found and a vehicle has been seized following what RCMP in Surrey, B.C., are calling a "suspicious occurrence."  

    Attempt To Flee Alerts RCMP To 'Suspicious Occurrence' In Surrey, B.C.

    New Seats, New School, Announced For Students In Coquitlam, B.C.

    New Seats, New School, Announced For Students In Coquitlam, B.C.
    More than $47 million will be spent for a new elementary school on Coquitlam's Burke Mountain residential area, where Premier John Horgan says development outpaced school growth.

    New Seats, New School, Announced For Students In Coquitlam, B.C.

    Five Hurt, Driver Charged After Fuel Truck Strikes Plane At Pearson Airport

    Five Hurt, Driver Charged After Fuel Truck Strikes Plane At Pearson Airport
    MISSISSAUGA, Ont. — Five people were taken to hospital with minor injuries and a fuel truck driver was charged after a truck hit a plane on the tarmac at Toronto Pearson airport early Friday morning.    

    Five Hurt, Driver Charged After Fuel Truck Strikes Plane At Pearson Airport