Northwest Territories Premier wants to abolish one of the environmental taxes

Northwest Territories Premier wants to abolish one of the environmental taxes

The new head of the region considers them inappropriate and too high.

The new non-partisan premier of the Northwest Territories, R.J. Simpson, said that in an ideal world, Ottawa would have to allow the territories to opt out of the carbon tax.

"The costs are already high — higher costs are not the solution up here."

The federal government's carbon pricing system requires provinces to implement their own systems that meet federal standards or use the existing federal system. The Northwest Territories have their own carbon pricing system. The territory had previously revised it to eliminate heating fuel rebates in April.

However, the territorial government was dissolved in mid-October because of the election. That means the territorial government was not in session when the federal government announced at the end of the month that it would stop using fuel oil to heat homes.

Speaking immediately after his election to office, Simpson said the carbon tax simply "doesn't work" for the region because the cost of living — namely heating, electricity — is too high here:

"[If] high costs is what is going to get people to use green energy and green technology, we would have been doing that years ago."

Lack of infrastructure, connections to the southern power grid and other factors have hindered the adoption of green energy, according to the premier. For example, heat pumps, which are being relied on in Ontario, operate intermittently in the winter temperatures of the Northwest Territories. Simpson has indicated that he's going to ask the federal government for help in dealing with these issues. So the premier is gently signaling that if Ottawa wants to see Canada's territories become greener, it will have to invest in infrastructure first.

The full article is only available to members of the Immigrant.Today community.
Log in to your account to read it for free.

Login to the site

Source
  • #environment in Canada
  • #taxes in Canada
  • #Northwest Territories
  • #emissions taxes
  • #carbon emissions
  • #environmental taxes
  • #taxes in Canada's territories
  • #taxes in the Northwest Territories