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  1. Here’s what the Trudeau government won’t tell you about its $170 carbon tax

    Cutting emissions by 25 per cent would impose a permanent cost of about 2.0 per cent of GDP. ...

  2. Trudeau carbon tax will cost—not benefit—families

    A tax on businesses is paid by people who own the businesses. ...

  3. Combined provincial, federal deficits will grow by about $22 billion annually due to carbon tax hike

    A $170 carbon tax will also cost the average Canadian worker $1,800 in foregone income. ...

  4. Canada’s carbon tax hampers key industries, may spur ‘carbon leakage’

    Appeared in the Calgary Herald, August 22, 2019 With Canada’s carbon tax set to reach $50 per tonne in 2022, many Canadian industries are bracing for potential cost increases. Not only will they pay the tax on their own emissions, but they’ll pay higher ...

  5. The Impact of the Federal Carbon Tax on the Competitiveness of Canadian Industries

    With Canada’s federal carbon tax set to reach $50 per tonne in 2022 it is often argued that Canadian businesses will become less competitive as a result of higher energy costs. For this reason, firms may relocate to countries where climate-change policies ...

  6. One good thing about the carbon tax

    Introducing a new tax is an unconventional way to kick off an election campaign. Perhaps understanding that, the federal government declines to call its new carbon tax a tax. It calls it a fuel charge instead. Or more precisely, a “ fuel ...

  7. Federal carbon tax falls well short of textbook design

    Appeared in the Calgary Sun, April 3, 2019 On Monday, April Fool’s Day, the federal carbon tax kicked in, in the four provinces that do not have their own carbon taxes—Ontario, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and New Brunswick. The federal carbon tax (technically ...

  8. Concerns remain as federal carbon tax takes effect

    The federal government’s carbon tax comes into effect today in Ontario, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and New Brunswick, the four provinces that refused to impose their own emissions pricing. The federal carbon tax will kick in at $20 a tonne ...

  9. The carbon taxman is coming

    Appeared in the Calgary Sun, October 31, 2018 Last Week, Prime Minister Trudeau continued his fight against climate change with his escalating “pan-Canadian” carbon price, which will kick in at $20 per tonne in 2019 and rise by $10 per year to reach $50 ...

  10. Trudeau government carbon-pricing plan not in line with Nobel Prize-winning analysis

    Appeared in the National Post, October 16, 2018 Earlier this month, Yale economist William Nordhaus won the Nobel Prize in Economics (alongside New York University economist Paul Romer) for developing a class of economic tools called “Integrated ...