Climate Policy Canadian-Style

Canada is setting a great example to its southern neighbor.

Despite our geographic proximity and close economic ties, Canada doesn’t get a lot of press attention in the U.S. But unknown to many, Canada has been taking aggressive steps forward in climate policy.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau rejected Trump’s decision in no uncertain terms:

We are deeply disappointed that the United States federal government has decided to withdraw from the Paris agreement. . . Canada is unwavering in our commitment to fight climate change and support clean economic growth. Canadians know we need to take decisive and collective action to tackle the many harsh realities of our changing climate.

Canada actually has taken some important steps toward dealing with climate change, Last year, the Canadian government ordered the provinces to impose at least a $10/ton price on carbon effective at the end of this year. The price is scheduled to increase to $50/ton by 2022. Alberta and British Columbia already have carbon taxes in place. In fact, British Columbia has been an international leader in this regard. (However, as a reader points out,  there is controversial about the effectiveness of its tax in reducing emissions.) Ontario and Quebec have chosen instead to use a cap-and-trade system with auctions of carbon allowances. Quebec has linked its trading system with California, and there is talk that Ontario may follow suit.

For provinces that fail to enact their own measures, the federal government will impose a carbon tax of its own on fuel suppliers. As I understand it, the tax does not apply to fuel that is exported. Industry in those provinces has the option of paying the carbon levy or opting into a fee-and-credit system.

The Albertan approach is especially noteworthy.  It’s often called the “Texas of Canada” because of its fossil fuel production.  In addition to the carbon tax, Alberta has adopted several other key policies. It plans to phase out coal use by 2030, coupled with a program of assistance for coal communities. By 2030, it will also add 5000 megawatts of renewables.  Oil sands are subject to carbon fee and, just to be safe, their emissions are capped.

Because it uses parliamentary government, policy in Canada seems to be more electorally responsive – or to put another way, less stable. A shift in political control could cause a rapid shift in climate policy. But for now, at least, Canada seems to be living up to Trudeau’s promise of “decisive and collective action.”

In the meantime, Canada provides an important example for the United States. Compared with California, it has more diverse regional economies and a broader range of climates, making it more comparable to other parts of the U.S. With any luck, after 2020, maybe we’ll follow the lead of our northern neighbor.

 

 

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Reader Comments

3 Replies to “Climate Policy Canadian-Style”

  1. I love your pieces, but must inform you of some discrepancies in this particular piece. There is no carbon fee that has been ratified in WA State yet, but potentially a ballot initiative in 2018. Further, while BC does have a system in place, there has been much debate over its effectiveness. An excellent analysis by our friends at Food and Water Watch found, among other things that, “During the years that the tax was in place for the entire year, from 2009 to 2014, greenhouse gas emissions from taxed sources rose by a total of 4.3 percent. During this same time period, emissions from non-taxed sources fell by a total of 2.1 percent.” https://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/insight/british-columbia-carbon-tax-failed-experiment-market-based-solutions-climate-change
    I would recommend updating your article and appreciate all of your excellent work and analysis.

  2. Dan, surely you know that we must not hope and pray for salvation in 2020 because of out of control climate changes we are already experiencing that Legal Planet has been informing and educating us about for years.

    You must face the fact that our politicians in Washington, both parties, are the greatest threat to United States of American since the Civil War.

    History should have taught you that our best option to prevent the destruction of our civilization is for intellectual leaders such as you to unite to overcome the challenges of change that now seem to have overwhelmed the human race again.

    Can you make this happen, or is your 2020 dream just another impossible dream that even our best and brightest really cannot achieve because of mental limitations documented by evolutionary biologists in our own CALIFORNIA magazines 2006 “Global Warning” special issue that even you appear to be marginalizing instead at our gravest peril?:
    http://alumni.berkeley.edu/california-magazine/september-october-2006-global-warning/can-we-adapt-time

    1. Dan, I just noticed that you do not appear to have joined in at the “Faculty Share Expertise on the Future of Climate, Energy & Environment” forum:
      http://nature.berkeley.edu/news/2017/06/cnr-faculty-speak-cal-future-forum

      As I said above “History should have taught you that our best option to prevent the destruction of our civilization is for intellectual leaders such as you to unite to overcome the challenges of change that now seem to have overwhelmed the human race again.”

      It is now a known fact of intellectual life that “— so many intellectuals don’t want to take on the sort of complications and impurities that come with being public” as documented by Richard Hofstadter and Nicholas Dirks, but I totally fail to understand why so many intellectuals fail to join together to save the human race from global warming today?

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About Dan

Dan Farber has written and taught on environmental and constitutional law as well as about contracts, jurisprudence and legislation. Currently at Berkeley Law, he has al…

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About Dan

Dan Farber has written and taught on environmental and constitutional law as well as about contracts, jurisprudence and legislation. Currently at Berkeley Law, he has al…

READ more

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