Search

Search results

  1. Trudeau government’s new climate target much more costly than Biden plan

    If Canada removed all fossil-fuel cars from the roads, emissions would only drop by 5 per cent. ...

  2. Despite court ruling, Ottawa’s carbon tax remains fundamentally flawed

    The carbon tax will increase by $15 per tonne until it reaches $170 per tonne. ...

  3. Trudeau’s ‘Clean Fuel Standard’ will likely do more harm than good

    Appeared in the Calgary Sun, November 11, 2020 The Trudeau government’s proposed “ Clean Fuel Standard ” (CFS) aims to reduce annual greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from fuels by 30 megatonnes by the year 2030. According to the government’s website, the ...

  4. Carbon Pricing in High-Income OECD Countries

    Most economists consider human-made greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions an unintended negative externality of production and consumption. A negative externality occurs when the effects of producing or consuming goods and services impose costs on a third party ...

  5. Federal government’s carbon-pricing system violates basic tenets of efficient carbon pricing

    In a highly anticipated announcement, the federal government today revealed details of its carbon-pricing system, which will impose a federal carbon tax on provinces that have chosen to forego a provincial policy. The system violates ...

  6. Canada’s Climate Action Plans: Are They Cost-effective?

    Four provinces in Canada (Alberta, British Columbia, Ontario, and Quebec) have promulgated “action plans” to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. These plans have several broad components. There is a carbon pricing component; there are assortments of energy ...

  7. Canada’s carbon pricing—bait and switch

    Appeared in The Hill, May 14, 2017 Canada is being touted as a potential “international beacon” of greenhouse gas (“carbon”) pricing, as several provinces, and the Canadian federal government, have implemented it in several forms. In The Hill recently, ...

  8. Carbon tax—flawed implementation across Canada

    Appeared in the Calgary Sun, May 5, 2017 Governments across Canada—including Quebec, Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia—have all implemented forms of carbon pricing. The federal government has also announced it will implement a carbon price “floor,” a ...

  9. Poor Implementation Undermines Carbon Tax Efficiency in Canada

    Provinces across Canada have implemented some form of carbon pricing, either through carbon taxes or emission-trading schemes. These taxes are touted as being the most “efficient” way to control greenhouse gas emissions, yet be economically benign ...

  10. Canada’s carbon sticker shock shouldn’t shock anyone

    Appeared in the Calgary Sun, April 8, 2017 According to a recently revealed document, Environment Canada told Liberal government officials in 2015 that Canada would need a carbon tax of $200 to $300 per tonne of greenhouse gases emitted by 2050 to meet ...