Liberals are looking at trying to buy off voters
$2B federal fund for water infrastructure announced in Regina Tuesday
Justin Trudeau Denies Trolling Doug Ford With Carbon Tax Event On Premier's Turf
Trudeau gambles Canadians will take the long view on climate: Don Pittis
I think this article just called Canadians Idiots
$2B federal fund for water infrastructure announced in Regina Tuesday
Climate change has an undeniable effect on Saskatchewan and water management is essential to adapting to warmer temperatures across the globe, according to civil engineer Wayne Clifton.
Clifton said the frequency of rain and water runoff is also much more variable and requires human intervention. He added that 95 per cent of the water flowing through Sask. is not benefiting the province.
"Adaptation to our changing world will require management systems to contribute water for the environment, water for the communities, water for the economy," Clifton said on Tuesday.
Clifton spoke as Federal Safety Minister Ralph Goodale announced the Canadian government's plan for carbon pricing in Regina.
Goodale also announced $2 billion dollars in federal funding for water infrastructure, which he said is a huge opportunity for Saskatchewan to transform and diversify its infrastructure.
The fund will "help build major transformative infrastructure projects to advance flood proofing, drought proofing and water-based economic development," Goodale said.
Justin Trudeau Denies Trolling Doug Ford With Carbon Tax Event On Premier's Turf
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau took to the heart of Ford Nation to explain how money raised through a carbon tax will go directly back to Canadians in provinces that are fighting his climate plan.
Trudeau held the press conference Tuesday at Humber College in Doug Ford's home turf of Etobicoke — but denied that his choice of scenery had anything to do with the Ontario premier.
"I don't see provincial premiers as opponents, I see them as partners," Trudeau said when a reporter asked if Ford — whose rumoured national ambitions are already sparking chatter — is now his biggest political adversary.
"This has been [Science Minister] Kirsty Duncan's riding since we both got elected together way back when in 2008. And this is an issue that is both perfectly suited to Humber College with its leadership on environmental issues and perfectly suited to Kirsty as our minister of science," the prime minister said.
Ford moved to scrap Ontario's cap-and-trade system, which would have exempted the province from a federally-imposed carbon tax, just four days after taking office.
Trudeau said Tuesday that Ontario — as well as Saskatchewan, Manitoba and New Brunswick — will now get a national carbon tax plan. Ford has promised to take the federal government to court.
"We will not take this lightly," the premier said in a statement Tuesday. "We will take this fight all the way to the Supreme Court if necessary."
Ford said the scheme, which he regularly calls "the worst tax ever," won't do anything to help the environment.
Trudeau was asked to respond to that argument at the press conference in Etobicoke.
"We know, and it's basic economics, that if you start putting a price on something you don't want, people will look at ways of not having to pay that price," Trudeau said. "But don't take my word for it. Take the word of the Nobel Prize in economics winner."
In early October, Nobel Prize winner Paul Romer said a carbon tax is a simple way of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
"People will see that there's a big profit to be made from figuring out ways to supply energy where they can do it without incurring the tax," Romer told CBC's As It Happens. "The problem is not knowing what to do. The problem is getting a consensus to act."
Trudeau gambles Canadians will take the long view on climate: Don Pittis
When Prime Minister Justin Trudeau threw down the gauntlet with his national carbon plan in Ontario Premier Doug Ford's riding yesterday, the word "tax" did not pass his lips.
With talk of "incentives" and euphemisms such as "a regulatory charge on fuel" Trudeau began what is widely seen as a plan to make fighting climate change a key issue in fighting the next federal election.
But whatever it's called, the Liberals could face an uphill battle against the economic and political forces of short-termism that behavioural economists say guide the decisions of most Canadians.
© Mark Blinch/Reuters Carbon tax opponents like Ontario Premier Doug Ford have warned that carbon taxes will raise the price of gas and will cost families an extra $260 dollars a year.
When Prime Minister Justin Trudeau threw down the gauntlet with his national carbon plan in Ontario Premier Doug Ford's riding yesterday, the word "tax" did not pass his lips.
With talk of "incentives" and euphemisms such as "a regulatory charge on fuel" Trudeau began what is widely seen as a plan to make fighting climate change a key issue in fighting the next federal election.
But whatever it's called, the Liberals could face an uphill battle against the economic and political forces of short-termism that behavioural economists say guide the decisions of most Canadians.
Don't say tar — or tax
As someone old enough, and nerdy enough, to have used the term "tarsands" before it picked up its negative baggage and been forced to change, I fear I may soon find myself in the same position on carbon taxes.
But for many of us who have been steeped in resource economics for decades, in pollution pricing, "tax" is not a bad word. To most economic thinkers, carbon taxes forces us to take account of something that will come back and bite us in the end.
Just a few years ago, before the recent conservative backlash against carbon pricing, the carbon tax was celebrated by politicians who understood it as a clever economic tool that would smoothly and painlessly aid in the transformation to a low-carbon economy.
But as Ford and other conservative-leaning premiers weigh in against carbon taxes — just as President Donald Trump has done south of the border — it is not at all clear that putting a price on carbon will be an easy political win.
In trying to convince Canadians to think decades into the future, and accept short-term pain for long-term gain, Trudeau's Liberals will come up against the twin obstacles of behavioural economics and the principal of laissez-faire, both of which stand in opposition to planning for the very long term.
'I'll be dead soon'
"It is known from behavioural economics research that people are often driven by short-term gratification — that is, people tend to choose the immediate, albeit smaller reward," says a scientific article on the psychology of economic decision-making.
In behavioural economics, based on experiments that show we fail to follow the "rules" of standard economics, it's hard to trace the evolutionary logic that has led us to accept a small reward now rather than a larger reward later.
Perhaps it is because when humans were evolving the complex set of internal rules that now govern our impulses, people who waited too long died before getting their reward.
"Climate change? That's a you problem," says a woman addressing potential voters in a humorous video that tries to convince young Americans to take voting seriously, "I'll be dead soon."
Those who think climate change is fake news are welcome to add their comments below. But if you trust the view of the vast majority of scientists who insist that climate change will eventually bring economic ruin to vast swaths of humanity, then an Ontario government news release promising the financial benefits of doing nothing certainly proves the behaviourialists' point.
"Eliminating carbon taxes will save the average family $260 per year and help reduce gas prices by 10 cents per litre," says the release
The fact is, humans, as well as wanting our rewards now, are in general very poor at planning for future crises. While almost everyone would certainly escape from the path of a flooding river, people commonly build in low areas known to flood every few decades despite the inevitable future cost.
Most people fail to save for retirement unless forced, even when the alternative is an old age of misery. Even on a shorter time scale, people commonly refuse to evacuate homes in front of a hurricane, having to be rescued after the fact.
Have it all now
But in their latest campaign, the Trudeau Liberals appear to have enlisted the help of their own behavioural economists.
"We will send a climate change action incentive directly to Canadians to help them adjust to an economy in which pollution is no longer free," said Trudeau yesterday.
Short-term thinkers afraid of losing Ford's $260 will get a cheque for $307 to cover the cost of the carbon tax in advance, rising to $718 by 2022. The long-term benefits of saving the planet from destruction are tossed in for free.
While such a strategy could bring some voters onside, business groups opposed to the carbon tax may be harder to convince.
The principle of laissez-faire — the free-market idea that business does best without government interference — has proved itself to be a winner in the past. Of course, that argument is ignored when the government interference involves things like bailing out a pipeline with taxpayer cash.
But if the voters can be convinced, economists insist that businesses, by necessity, will learn how to be just as successful within the new carbon tax regime. Oops — I mean carbon pricing system.
I think this article just called Canadians Idiots