Ottawa Citizen

Alberta to implement carbon tax initiative

- BOB WEBER

Alberta took what it hopes will be the first step toward shedding its status as internatio­nal environmen­tal pariah Sunday by revealing a sweeping climate change plan.

The plan, the result of months of study and public input, will introduce a broad-based carbon tax that would apply across the economy. The government will move to phase out the province’s coal-fired power generation by 2030. And it will introduce a hard cap on greenhouse gas emissions for the oilsands.

“This is the day we step up, at long last, to one of the world’s biggest problems — the pollution that is causing climate change,” Premier Rachel Notley said as she announced her government’s new policy in Edmonton on Sunday.

“I’m hopeful these policies will lead to a new collaborat­ive conversati­on about Canada’s energy infrastruc­ture on its merits and to a significan­t de-escalation of conflict worldwide about the Alberta oilsands.”

Notley made the announceme­nt on a stage packed with representa­tives of groups that have in the past often been at each other’s throats over this issue.

But joining her Sunday were leaders of major energy companies, environmen­tal groups and First Nations.

“The framework announced today will allow the ongoing innovation technology, investment and growth in the oil and gas industry at the same time we are looking to reduce overall carbon emissions,” said Murray Edward of Canadian Natural Resources Ltd.

Said Ed Whittingha­m of the clean energy think-tank the Pembina Institute: “I think the world needs more of this kind of leadership.”

Starting in 2017, Alberta will apply a $20-a-tonne price on carbon emissions that will cover about 90 per cent of the economy, including essentials such as gasoline and home heating fuel. That price will increase to $30 the following year.

That $30 will add about seven cents to the cost of a litre of gas. The total cost of the increases will be about $500 a year for an average family, the government calculates.

That money — about $3 billion in 2018 — will be used in part to rebate middle and lower income families. About 60 per cent of households will have at least some part of their carbon tax bill repaid.

The rest will go to programs to ease the transition away from coal for communitie­s and workers dependent on that industry, as well as to innovation programs and energyeffi­ciency measures.

Eventually, said Notley, the carbon taxes could be dedicated toward paying down public debt.

Mark Jaccard, an energy economist at Simon Fraser University, called the plan a prudent mix of sound economics and real-world pragmatism that creates incentives for emissions reductions.

“I need to look at the details, but I think I’m seeing some real leadership here,” he said. “It’s not the economist’s perfect (model), but it’s real-world. I’m seeing policies I like.”

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