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|    mtl.general    |    Ahh Montreal, home of good strip joints    |    39,416 messages    |
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|    Message 39,277 of 39,416    |
|    =?UTF-8?B?Z2xhZCB3ZSdyZSB1bmFuaW1vd to All    |
|    Carbon tax opt-out not to be a provincia    |
|    18 Sep 16 17:31:33    |
      From: brewnoser2@gmail.com              This move will take some pressure off provinces like Alberta and Saskatchewan       - by placing the 'blame' for any tax onto the feds. But if the current carbon       taxes out there - as in BC, Alberta, Ontario and Quebec - are not high enough       to make a        difference, they'll be adjusting theirs upwards as well.              Takes courage to be the 'big bad tax imposer' as the Trudeau government is       doing - but then it's early in the 4-year mandate and this is the best time to       deliver sour milk.       ______________________________________              National Post/Reuters | September 18, 2016                     Ottawa will impose a carbon tax on any province that doesn’t adequately cut       emissions, minister says                     The federal government will impose a carbon price on provinces that do not       adequately regulate emissions by themselves, Environment Minister Catherine       McKenna said on Sunday without giving details on how the Liberal government       will do so.              She said the government will have a “backstop” for provinces which do not       comply. She did not elaborate or address questions on penalties for defiance.              Canada’s 10 provinces, which enjoy significant jurisdiction over the       environment, have been wary of Ottawa’s intentions and have said they should       be allowed to cut carbon emissions their own way.              Prime Minister Justin Trudeau persuaded the provinces in March to accept a       compromise deal that acknowledged the concept of putting a price on carbon       emissions, but agreed the specific details, which would take into account       provinces’ individual        circumstances, could be worked out later.              Canada’s four largest provinces, British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario and       Quebec, currently have either a tax on carbon or a cap-and-trade       emissions-limiting system.              But Brad Wall, the right-leaning premier of the western energy-producing       province of Saskatchewan, has long been resistant to federal emi       sions-limiting plans.              McKenna said the government requires some uniformity in emissions reductions,       but provinces can have different regulation methods.       “We have two systems,” she said. “We’re going to need to figure out       equivalency on those systems.”              McKenna did not address questions on whether the government will update its       emission targets, which were set by former Conservative government.              The previous government had pledged to cut greenhouse gas emissions to 30       percent below 2005 levels by 2030, a target that official figures show is out       of reach in the absence of radical measures.              McKenna had called the prices “a floor, not a ceiling,” but said on Sunday       only that the government will meet the previous targets “at least.”              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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