Ottawa accepts New Brunswick’s carbon-tax proposal
OTTAWA — New Brunswick consumers will get a break at the gas pumps come April, after the federal government approved the province’s carbon-tax proposal Wednesday.
It is the second time this week Ottawa has found a way to co-operate with a provincial government over pricing greenhouse-gas emissions.
On Monday, as Alberta Premier Jason Kenney landed in Ottawa for a two-day visit, the federal government approved Alberta’s carbon-pricing system for big industrial emitters. On Wednesday, federal Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said New Brunswick’s proposed carbon tax policy meets Ottawa’s requirements for the consumer fuel levy.
So Wilkinson said Ottawa will “stand down” on April 1 and remove the federal carbon price from consumer purchases of fuels like gasoline, natural gas and propane in New Brunswick. At the same time New Brunswick will apply its own levy on those fuels, of $30 per tonne of carbon dioxide emitted from burning them.