Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Opts Not To Hike Carbon Tax In New Climate Plan, Won't Adjust Target Dates

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Aug, 2016 02:39 PM
    RICHMOND, B.C. — The British Columbia government is maintaining a freeze on its carbon tax and refusing to budge on a timeline to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in a new climate plan that environmental groups describe as a missed opportunity.
     
    Premier Christy Clark said Friday that the government needs to keep the province economically competitive to protect jobs in the battle against climate change as she highlighted 21 measures the province is taking to cut emissions.
     
    "A climate plan is not just about carbon pricing," she told a news conference. "As the World Bank noted, carbon pricing is just one instrument in a portfolio of approaches to fight climate change. And we cannot get where we need to be in fighting climate change in British Columbia with a carbon tax alone."
     
    The Climate Leadership Plan says the steps the province is taking will help B.C. meet its target to reduce emissions by 80 per cent of 2007 levels by 2050.
     
    The federal government, along with other provinces, have set new goals following the Paris Agreement last December to reduce emissions by 30 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030.
     
    By sticking to its 2050 date, British Columbia has also decided against moving up the target to 2030, as an advisory group known as the Climate Leadership Team had recommended.
     
     
    The plan immediately drew fierce criticism from experts and environmentalists, some of whom were on the government-appointed team.
     
    The group of experts, First Nations, and business leaders who were appointed by the government to the team made 32 recommendations last fall, including raising the $30-per-tonne carbon tax by $10 annually starting in 2018.
     
    The carbon tax has been in place since 2008 but includes some industry exemptions. In 2012, the tax reached $30 per tonne of carbon emissions — about seven cents per litre at the gas pump — but it has not been increased since then.
     
    Green party Leader Andrew Weaver, a climate scientist who served on a similar team under former premier Gordon Campbell when he brought in the tax, said the legacy of the previous Liberal government had been destroyed.
     
    Weaver said the experts on the new team who made the latest recommendations were "used" by Clark's Liberals.
     
    "These were people who actually thought this government cared about the process they set up to deliver a recommendation. They didn't care. It's a game."
     
    Clark called on other provinces to match B.C.'s rate: "We need to know other provinces intend to catch up with us."
     
    The government said it will re-evaluate the carbon tax once other jurisdictions introduce similar levies.
     
     
    The premier said B.C.'s plan includes a focus on liquefied natural gas, methane reduction, reforestation, expanding the province's electric vehicle program and reducing congestion by spending money to expand public transit, particularly in Metro Vancouver. The plan will create 66,000 new jobs, she said.
     
    The Business Council of British Columbia said it remains concerned about the competitiveness of its members, particularly exporters.
     
    "As a small trading economy, B.C. is competing with jurisdictions that have not taken similar climate management steps, putting a number of our energy-intensive, trade-exposed industries at a disadvantage in the global market," it said in a statement.
     
    It said some businesses are paying up to $50 million a year in carbon tax.
     
    "These businesses must compete with companies based outside of the province that sell goods into B.C. and other global markets while paying a much lower price on carbon, or no carbon levy at all. This makes these businesses less competitive."
     
    Clean Energy Canada director Merran Smith, who sat on the Climate Leadership Team, called the government's new plan a set of "vague promises" that aren't backed up by regulations or dollars.
     
    Of the team's 32 recommendations, none has been adopted fully, she said.
     
     
    "This isn't a climate plan about climate action, it's about procrastination," she said. "With this plan, the best-case scenario for British Columbia is that carbon pollution will be about the same in 2030 as it is today."
     
    Tim Pearson, communications director for the Sierra Club BC, said there was no reason for British Columbia to wait for other provinces to bring in carbon taxes.
     
    "Right now, its economic performance is clearly not being hampered by a $30 carbon tax. It is competing just fine against other provinces that have no carbon tax."
     
    HIGHLIGHTS OF BRITISH COLUMBIA'S CLIMATE PLAN
     
    RICHMOND, B.C. — Here are the highlights of B.C.'s Climate Leadership Plan released Friday. Under the plan, the provincial government will:
     
    — Develop a strategy to reduce methane emissions.
     
     
    — Introduce incentives to encourage companies to convert their vehicles to renewable natural gas.
     
    — Expand its Clean Energy Vehicle program to encourage greater use of zero-emission vehicles by increasing point-of-sale incentives for eligible vehicles.
     
    — Support more charging stations for electric vehicles and develop regulations so local governments can require that new buildings install adequate charging facilities.
     
    — Improve the transportation network thought its B.C. on the Move program, a 10-year plan that includes increasing the number of BC Transit buses that use compressed natural gas, and expanding public transit to reduce congestion, particularly in Metro Vancouver.
     
    — Increase tree planting over an area of up to 3,000 square kilometres over the next five years to store more carbon.
     
    — Require all of the electricity acquired by BC Hydro to be renewable or clean.
     
    — Provide more incentives for marine vessels to be fuelled with cleaner burning liquefied natural gas.
     
     
    — Introduce policies to encourage the development of buildings that are carbon neutral.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Soda Pop Tax? Feds Examine Financial Side Of A Potential Obesity-fighting Tool

    OTTAWA — The federal government has weighed the pros and cons of a financial deterrent aimed at shrinking bulging waistlines: a tax on soda pop.

    Soda Pop Tax? Feds Examine Financial Side Of A Potential Obesity-fighting Tool

    'Extremely Challenging' Nova Scotia Wildfire Spreads To 240 Hectares

    'Extremely Challenging' Nova Scotia Wildfire Spreads To 240 Hectares
    Department spokesman Jim Rudderham said crews had to be removed from the Seven Mile Lake area late Monday afternoon for their safety as water bombers kept dousing the blaze.

    'Extremely Challenging' Nova Scotia Wildfire Spreads To 240 Hectares

    Amnesty International Calls For Halt To Site C, Dam Threatens Indigenous Rights

    Amnesty International Calls For Halt To Site C, Dam Threatens Indigenous Rights
    VICTORIA — Amnesty International is calling for a stop work order on British Columbia's $8.8 billion Site C hydroelectric dam, saying the mega project on the Peace River threatens the human rights of indigenous peoples.

    Amnesty International Calls For Halt To Site C, Dam Threatens Indigenous Rights

    Federal Government Expected To Act On 2012 Report Examining Fraser River Sockeye

    Federal Government Expected To Act On 2012 Report Examining Fraser River Sockeye
    The 75 findings in the three-year, $26-million report languished with little if any attention from the former Conservative government.

    Federal Government Expected To Act On 2012 Report Examining Fraser River Sockeye

    Police Identify Victim Of Fatal Stabbing Outside Pub In Coquitlam, B.C.

    Police Identify Victim Of Fatal Stabbing Outside Pub In Coquitlam, B.C.
    Suspect In Fatal Coquitlam Stabbing On The Loose

    Police Identify Victim Of Fatal Stabbing Outside Pub In Coquitlam, B.C.

    Police Say Liesel The 12-Day-Old Filly Was Filched From A Langley, B.C., Farm

    Although she's young, the horse's warmblood Oldenburg breed makes her valued at between $10,000 and $20,000.

    Police Say Liesel The 12-Day-Old Filly Was Filched From A Langley, B.C., Farm