B.C. carbon tax an effective model for national climate change approach: report

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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I thought this was obvious but ok.. We need a report on everything these days.

B.C. carbon tax an effective model for national climate change approach: report

Canada could come close to hitting its 2020 greenhouse-gas emission targets by nationally adopting strategies British Columbia, Ontario and Quebec already have in place, a new study has found.

The report comes as world leaders convene in Lima at a United Nations climate-change conference and follows the release Monday of an Environment Canada update that confirms Canada is far behind targets set by Prime Minister Stephen Harper in 2009.

Canada’s goal is to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions by 17 per cent from 2005 levels, but Environment Canada projects the country will only get half way to that goal under current practices.

However, the David Suzuki Foundation report, released Wednesday, states that by using provincial strategies that have been shown to work, Canada could come within 5.6 per cent of meeting its emission targets.

“The main finding is that if we had a unified approach to climate change, we would be within reach of meeting our target and upholding our climate-change commitment to the world,” said Ian Bruce, science and policy manager for the foundation.

Mr. Bruce said the study is the first to analyze what would happen if several key provincial climate-change strategies were applied nationally.

Mr. Bruce said B.C.’s carbon tax, Quebec’s cap on emissions and Ontario’s elimination of coal-fired power plants have all been effective in reducing greenhouse-gas emissions provincially without harming the economy.

“The report addresses some of the myths out there that it’s too difficult for a northern country like Canada to take action,” he said. “These are not radical new ideas in this report. They are proven solutions that work and they are being implemented right in our own back yard.”

Mr. Bruce said, over all, Canada continues to fall behind on its greenhouse-gas emission targets, however, because there is no national climate-change strategy.

“As far as how progress is being made right now in Canada, it has been a piecemeal approach,” he said. “I would say the main obstacle to Canada in meeting its target is a lack of leadership at the national level by the federal government.”

The Environment Canada report states the federal government “is focused on a pragmatic approach to addressing climate change that will reduce emissions while continuing to create jobs and encourage the growth of the economy.”

Mr. Bruce said if Canada wants to start making significant progress in reducing greenhouse-gas emissions, the country should adopt the successful provincial policies now.

“We have made-in-Canada solutions that are proven to work,” he said. “For example, adopting best-in-Canada policies on renewable energy, staged phase-out of coal power and pricing carbon pollution in Saskatchewan and Alberta would be three times more effective in reducing carbon pollution than current policies.”

In an interview from Peru, where she is attending the UN’s COP20 climate-change conference, B.C. Environment Minister Mary Polak said British Columbia and other provinces are leading by example and she hopes Ottawa takes note.

Ms. Polak said B.C.’s carbon tax has been a popular topic at the conference, and she was pleased to be able to tell delegates that B.C. is on target to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions 33-per-cent below 2007 levels by 2020.

“It’s great to have B.C.’s climate leadership recognized so publicly on the international stage,” she said. “Just [Monday], World Bank president Jim Yong Kim said B.C.’s carbon tax is, and I’m quoting here, ‘one of the most powerful examples of carbon pricing.’”

In 2008, B.C. became the first jurisdiction in North America to introduce a carbon tax.

Ms. Polak said there is “recognition globally that carbon pricing is necessary to reduce GHG emissions and that B.C.’s broad-based, revenue-neutral carbon tax is a successful model other jurisdictions could follow.”

B.C. carbon tax an effective model for national climate change approach: report - The Globe and Mail
 

captain morgan

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Mar 28, 2009
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My understanding of the BC experience is that the use of fossil fuels has not changed.

That said, the title if the OP should read:

B.C. carbon tax an effective model for adding revenues into the provincial coffers: report
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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My understanding of the BC experience is that the use of fossil fuels has not changed.

That said, the title if the OP should read:

B.C. carbon tax an effective model for adding revenues into the provincial coffers: report


Ms. Polak said B.C.’s carbon tax has been a popular topic at the conference, and she was pleased to be able to tell delegates that B.C. is on target to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions 33-per-cent below 2007 levels by 2020.
 

Walter

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Jan 28, 2007
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Carbon trading/tax is a fool's errand from start to finish.
 

lone wolf

Grossly Underrated
Nov 25, 2006
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Was the tire tax ever used to find a use for scrap tires? If they'd use the funds for what they claim the taxes are for, maybe they wouldn't be seen as just more cash cows
 

Praxius

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Dec 18, 2007
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Australia's last govt brought it in, didn't do anything except make business pass the expense onto the consumer and thus people were paying the carbon tax, not business..... The current govt abolished it.

Report from David S. Group? They'll grab onto anything and say crap is gold if it sounds like it's good for the environment. They're grasping for straws.
 

B00Mer

Keep Calm and Carry On
Sep 6, 2008
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Australia's last govt brought it in, didn't do anything except make business pass the expense onto the consumer and thus people were paying the carbon tax, not business..... The current govt abolished it.

Did the prices go back down after the current govt abolished it??

BC government brought in the HST, that didn't last.. no reason this next retarded money grabbing scheme will.. might cost them votes, and maybe their jobs (I hope).
 

captain morgan

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Mar 28, 2009
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Ms. Polak said B.C.’s carbon tax has been a popular topic at the conference, and she was pleased to be able to tell delegates that B.C. is on target to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions 33-per-cent below 2007 levels by 2020.

The measure of reducing ghgs would mean something if they could (and would) measure the reduction exclusively from gas/diesel contributions.

Right now, there are tons of people crossing the border into Washington State to fill up whilst they buy cheap food, booze and smokes.

No doubt it's a popular topic at the conference, more money-grubbing politicos looking for a way to fleece their constituents
 

Tonington

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Oct 27, 2006
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My understanding of the BC experience is that the use of fossil fuels has not changed.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-debate/the-insidious-truth-about-bcs-carbon-tax-it-works/article19512237/
B.C.’s tax, implemented in 2008, covers most types of fuel use and carbon emissions. It started out low ($10 per tonne of carbon dioxide), then rose gradually to the current $30 per tonne, which works out to about 7 cents per litre of gas. “Revenue-neutral” by law, the policy requires equivalent cuts to other taxes. In practice, the province has cut $760-million more in income and other taxes than needed to offset carbon tax revenue.

The result is that taxpayers are coming out ahead. B.C. now has the lowest personal income tax rate in Canada (with additional cuts benefiting low-income and rural residents) and one of the lowest corporate rates in North America. You shouldn’t need an economist and a mining entrepreneur to tell you that’s good for business and jobs.

At the same time, it’s been extraordinarily effective in tackling the root cause of carbon pollution: the burning of fossil fuels. Since the tax came in, fuel use in B.C. has dropped by 16 per cent; in the rest of Canada, it’s risen by 3 per cent (counting all fuels covered by the tax). To put that accomplishment in perspective, Canada’s Kyoto target was a 6-per-cent reduction in 20 years. And the evidence points to the carbon tax as the major driver of these B.C. gains.​

That looks like a pretty big change to me, and BC now has the lowest income tax in Canada, not sure why Walter would bitch about that...