Tuesday, March 24, 2026
ADVT 
National

Tax Credits, Penalizing Big Polluters, Key To Conservative Climate Plan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jun, 2019 07:13 PM

    OTTAWA — Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer wants to give corporate tax breaks to companies that develop and patent green technology in Canada and introduce another federal tax credit for residential energy-efficiency projects.


    Scheer is unveiling his long-awaited climate plan later today in a speech in Gatineau, Que.


    It is the last of five big policy pronouncements he is making this spring in the lead-up to the fall election campaign.


    A party official says the Conservatives intend to scrap the federal carbon tax but keep a price on pollution for heavy industrial emitters.


    However their plan won't tax emissions from major polluters, but will require them to invest in clean technology as a penalty for exceeding emissions limits.


    Scheer intends to use his plan to reduce emissions in line with Canada's targets under the Paris Agreement on climate change, but the Conservatives have been hinting that their plan will include taking credit when Canadian products reduce emissions overseas.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Union Says Port Workers Still On The Job In B.C., Despite Lockout Notice

    Automation is a key sticking point in negotiations and Scott said improved automation will protect jobs.

    Union Says Port Workers Still On The Job In B.C., Despite Lockout Notice

    Bulk Of Federal Clean-Energy Investments Go To Remote Haida Gwaii In B.C.

    VANCOUVER — The federal government has announced over $15 million in funding for clean energy projects, with most of the money going to the remote island of Haida Gwaii on British Columbia's west coast.    

    Bulk Of Federal Clean-Energy Investments Go To Remote Haida Gwaii In B.C.

    B.C. Legislature Dress Code Proposal Includes 'Contemporary' Modifications

    VICTORIA — A report by the acting clerk of British Columbia's legislature proposes an updated dress code modelled on what is considered professional and contemporary business attire.    

    B.C. Legislature Dress Code Proposal Includes 'Contemporary' Modifications

    B.C. Post-Secondary Schools At Risk Of Money Laundering: Minister

    VICTORIA — Post-secondary institutions in British Columbia were warned Tuesday to be on the look out for possible student money launderers in the province's ongoing fight against illegal cash.

    B.C. Post-Secondary Schools At Risk Of Money Laundering: Minister

    Report Says Government Policies Weigh On Declining B.C. Housing Market

    VICTORIA — A real estate market outlook by Vancouver's Central 1 Credit Union says tougher federal and provincial government housing policies are behind a drop in demand for resale housing in British Columbia.

    Report Says Government Policies Weigh On Declining B.C. Housing Market

    Life Sentence Appeal By Halifax Mall Plotter Lindsay Souvannarath Rejected By Nova Scotia Court

    HALIFAX — Nova Scotia's top court has rejected the appeal of the life sentence given to an American woman who plotted a Valentine's Day shooting spree at a Halifax mall in 2015.

    Life Sentence Appeal By Halifax Mall Plotter Lindsay Souvannarath Rejected By Nova Scotia Court