Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

Climate plan includes carbon tax hikes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Dec, 2020 06:42 PM
  • Climate plan includes carbon tax hikes

The federal government has released a $15-billion plan to meet its climate change commitments that includes steady increases to its carbon tax in each of the next 10 years.

"It can no longer be free to pollute anywhere in the country," Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday.

The plan includes money to encourage heavy industry to reduce its emissions, for communities to improve energy efficiency of buildings such as arenas and halls, and for remote communities to get off diesel-generated power.

But its centrepiece will be an increase in the federal carbon price.

The price on carbon will continue to increase by $10 a tonne until it reaches $50 per tonne in 2022. Trudeau announced increases will carry on and get steeper after that — $15 a tonne per year.

By 2030, the price is to be $170 tonne — enough, say federal officials, to increase the price of gas at the pump by 27.6 cents a litre.

Trudeau said the tax will continue to be rebated and that most families should get more back than they pay in tax.

"We are continuing to move forward and putting more money in the pockets of Canadian families by increasing the price on pollution."

Other features of the plan include $3 billion for projects in industries such as steel mills and petrochemical plants to reduce or offset their emissions.

Communities are to get $1.5 billion to refit infrastructure and remote towns are to get nearly $1 billion to help them get off fossil fuels.

The plan is to achieve a 32 per cent reduction in emissions by 2030, slightly more than the federal Liberals' 30 per cent commitment.

Ottawa hopes to reach 40 per cent reductions when provincial programs are layered on.

MORE National ARTICLES

Three Day Search For Skier In Southeastern B.C. Ends With Man Found Alive, Well

TRAIL, B.C. - Members of a southeastern British Columbia search team are celebrating 2020 with what they call an "incredible" day.

Three Day Search For Skier In Southeastern B.C. Ends With Man Found Alive, Well

More Than 30K Without Power In BC's Central And Southern Interior, Utility Says

VANCOUVER - BC Hydro says around 34,000 customers in the central and southern Interior woke up to greet the new year without power on Wednesday morning.    

More Than 30K Without Power In BC's Central And Southern Interior, Utility Says

Top CEOs Made As Much As Average Worker Earns In A Year By Mid-Morning Today

Top CEOs Made As Much As Average Worker Earns In A Year By Mid-Morning Today
OTTAWA - A new report says Canada's 100 highest-paid chief executives were paid record amounts in 2018 in comparison to the employees beneath them.

Top CEOs Made As Much As Average Worker Earns In A Year By Mid-Morning Today

Iconic Gander Airport Lounge Aims To Reopen As Hub For Community, Tourists

Iconic Gander Airport Lounge Aims To Reopen As Hub For Community, Tourists
Reg Wright, president and CEO of the airport, says the "glamour of aviation really coloured what the community was."

Iconic Gander Airport Lounge Aims To Reopen As Hub For Community, Tourists

Boy 15, Killed After Altercation Ends In Stabbing At Park In Laval, Que.

Boy 15, Killed After Altercation Ends In Stabbing At Park In Laval, Que.
LAVAL, Que. - A 15-year-old boy is dead and a 16-year-old is in custody after a stabbing in a park north of Montreal.    

Boy 15, Killed After Altercation Ends In Stabbing At Park In Laval, Que.

Minister Says Change Won't Come 'Overnight' As New Indigenous Child-Welfare Law Takes Effect

Minister Says Change Won't Come 'Overnight' As New Indigenous Child-Welfare Law Takes Effect
The new law, Bill C-92, affirms the rights of those communities to enforce their own rules around child and family services.

Minister Says Change Won't Come 'Overnight' As New Indigenous Child-Welfare Law Takes Effect