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So what if we axe the carbon tax?

Though Liberal leadership perceived frontrunner Mark Carney vows to ditch the government's carbon tax, it wouldn't be the end of the world. The former carbon-pricing advocate who was also the governor of the Bank of Canada and Bank of England, would have to devise a credible replacement. Photo by  House of Lords/Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Most of Canada’s prime ministerial hopefuls have succumbed to the anti-carbon tax zeitgeist. Liberal Party leadership frontrunner Mark Carney made it very official last Friday. His main rival within his own party, and others across the aisle, have also signalled they would “axe the tax.”

While this might sound like bad news for the climate, it might not be the end of the world.

Though that’s only if the political parties put forward alternative plans to meet the country’s climate targets.

Fortunately, there are numerous and more direct ways for Canada to bring down its national emissions, which would also make life more affordable for its residents. 

The limitation of the national consumer price on carbon is that it leaves climate progress to the invisible hand of the market and individual lifestyle choices. But the slightly higher cost of fuel doesn’t significantly decrease our use of gasoline for vehicles or gas and oil for home heating, because most of us are stuck with these options. 

If we really want to move away from pumping gasoline into vehicles and burning oil and gas to heat homes, then we need to modernize the transportation system and the way we heat buildings. 

That requires proactive and mandatory policies, like requiring that all new buildings come equipped with non-emitting heating systems from the start. Rather than using antiquated and polluting oil or gas furnaces, we can adopt advanced, clean, and more efficient technologies like electric heat pumps to heat the air and water.

For homes that have already been built, the government should require all existing buildings to slowly transition to clean heating sources. This must come with a public funding and installation program that is more ambitious than the current rebate initiative, while making such retrofits accessible and affordable for everyone.  

Implement these policies and you’ve addressed the third-largest source of Canada’s emissions.

As for transportation, the country’s second largest emitter, the next government ought to maintain and strengthen its rule requiring all new light-duty vehicles to be zero-emission by 2035. At the same time, it needs to orchestrate a country-wide effort to add electric vehicle (EV) charging stations from coast to coast, making driving electric feasible. Most importantly, Canada must invest heavily in electric public transportation that would make local and long-distance travel more reachable, affordable, reliable, quick, and green. 

Ditching the carbon tax is not the end of the world. There are more direct and affordable ways for Canada to bring down its national emissions, writes Lana Goldberg

Luckily, all of these measures would also help lower the cost of living. Heat pumps are much more efficient than gas and oil furnaces and use electricity as an input, leading to lower monthly energy bills for both heating and air conditioning. Driving an EV costs a fraction of the amount needed for gas-guzzling ones. Studies show that homes that switch to electricity for transportation and heating can decrease their bills by over $500 a month.

These electric options raise the question of how to meet increased electricity demand without increasing emissions. We have solutions for that, too. 

Tighten clean electricity regulations, so no new gas or coal plants can be built. Prioritize the mass construction of renewables, like wind and solar, which are now the cheapest new source of electricity generation with among the lowest and most stable electricity rates. Simply pair these with existing battery technologies that ensure the energy can be deployed at any time, including during peak demand hours. Add to this, local small-scale electricity generation and household grid integration that allow residents to feed energy into the grid, and we’ll be set to cleanly electrify both heating and transportation for decades to come. 

Collectively switching to fossil fuel alternatives like solar, wind, EVs, and heat pumps should slowly decrease the demand for oil, gas, and coal. But let’s face it — fossil fuel companies won’t soon stop extracting these products voluntarily. And they represent by far the largest source of pollution in Canada.

To address this elephant in the country, we need to force fossil fuel companies to gradually wind down production. Yes, keep and increase the carbon tax on industry, which gives companies an incentive to incorporate green measures. But again, this reliance on market forces isn’t enough, especially given the scale of the industry’s emissions.  

Canada’s next government must proceed with an oil and gas emissions cap that sets pollution limits on the sector. It should make eliminating fossil fuel subsidies a priority and refuse to approve new export pipelines that would make it impossible for Canada to meet its climate targets. We can create more well-paying jobs in the clean energy sector.

These are the kinds of robust policies that would propel us toward a green economy, slash the country’s emissions, and reduce living expenditures for residents. 

Rather than lamenting the axing of the consumer carbon price, let’s demand that all of the parties put forward credible plans for Canada to meet its climate commitments. In this time of overlapping crises, we can address both climate and affordability with bold government action. 


Lana Goldberg is a Toronto-based climate advocate with Stand.earth’s SAFE Cities campaign and is an expert on energy and building policies in Canada. 

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