Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan's Wall, B.C.'s Clark Get Premiers Gathering Off To Fractious Start

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Dec, 2016 12:16 PM
    OTTAWA — A day-long meeting of first ministers on finalizing a pan-Canadian climate plan is off to a fractious start.
     
    Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall is flatly asserting he won't be signing any agreement today on a national carbon price, while B.C.'s Christy Clark says elements of the deal may have to be set aside for further assessment.
     
    Wall is dead set against a federally imposed tax on carbon dioxide emissions, saying Ottawa has failed to provide an economic analysis of the biggest tax change in a generation.
     
    "We're being asked to agree to a carbon tax that the federal government admits will cascade through the system for Canadians, and we're being asked to do it without a full assessment," he said in Ottawa.
     
    "We're not signing."
     
    He said the federal plan will result in a competitive "imbalance" given the number of emitters in central Canada, where cap-and-trade will mitigate emissions, resulting in a lower carbon price than in western Canada.
     
    "We are rushing into this — without the benefit of due diligence, without an impact assessment so we can look Canadians in the eye and say, 'This is what it'll do to your job, by the way, if you work in agriculture, in mining or energy or other trade-exposed industries.'
     
     
    "We're doing it without the benefit of a study that'll say, And this is what it'll do to your household budget.' We will not be signing this framework today, for these and other reasons."
     
    Clark agreed she can't agree to an escalating national carbon price when Quebec and Ontario's cap-and-trade system would mean lower carbon prices per tonne in one part of the country.
     
    "At the moment, it's structured that in the west, the energy-producing provinces, we'd be paying double. Citizens would be paying double what they're paying in Ontario and Quebec," she said. 
     
    "And you can't have a national carbon tax where the westerners who produce the energy are paying double what the people in central Canada are paying to use the energy, in terms of an additional carbon tax."
     
    The premiers also want to extract greater health care funding from the Liberal government, but several say they won't be linking the two crucial issues of climate change and health spending during today's talks.
     
     
    The first ministers will have a special guest later in the day when U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden joins the gathering to talk about Canada-U.S. relations with president-elect Donald Trump gears up to take over the White House.
     
    Biden didn't mention Trump's election victory when he spoke Thursday night at a dinner in Ottawa, but the vice-president did say liberals around the world would be looking to Trudeau to champion their beliefs in the coming years.
     
    "The world's going to spend a lot of time looking to you, Mr. Prime Minister, as we see more and more challenges to the Liberal international order," Biden said.
     
    "There's a lot of soul searching going on in Europe and you saw some of it in my country."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Video Shows Missing Young Mom Hours After She Left Her New Westminster Home

    Video Shows Missing Young Mom Hours After She Left Her New Westminster Home
      It shows Florence Leung buying several items at a convenience store in Vancouver's West End.

    Video Shows Missing Young Mom Hours After She Left Her New Westminster Home

    Newly Re-Rlected Leader Dan Brooks Ousted As Leader Of The BC Conservative Party

    Dan Brooks says the party's board has stripped him of his leadership on a technicality

    Newly Re-Rlected Leader Dan Brooks Ousted As Leader Of The BC Conservative Party

    Justin Trudeau Takes Off To Sign ET Trade Deal

    Justin Trudeau Takes Off To Sign ET Trade Deal
    Trudeau is to depart for Brussels tonight night to attend a summit set for Sunday.  

    Justin Trudeau Takes Off To Sign ET Trade Deal

    Province-wide Electronic Voting In P.E.I. Plebiscite A First: Election Officials

    Province-wide Electronic Voting In P.E.I. Plebiscite A First: Election Officials
    Prince Edward Islanders can cast their ballots electronically in the province's plebiscite on electoral reform that began Saturday afternoon.

    Province-wide Electronic Voting In P.E.I. Plebiscite A First: Election Officials

    Expand Supervised Sites Beyond Overseeing Only Injection Drugs, Advocates Say

     Harm reduction advocates are calling on the government of British Columbia to expand the scope of its safe-injection facilities beyond supervising only intravenous drug use, but medical officials say the focus should remain on needles because they pose the biggest health risk.

    Expand Supervised Sites Beyond Overseeing Only Injection Drugs, Advocates Say

    Vancouver School Trustees Prioritized Political Agendas: Auditor Reports

    Vancouver School Trustees Prioritized Political Agendas: Auditor Reports
    Education Minister Mike Bernier fired all nine members of the board last week and says two reports that show failures of governance and budgetary practices deepen his lack of confidence in the former board. 

    Vancouver School Trustees Prioritized Political Agendas: Auditor Reports