Northern residents need bigger rebates to offset carbon tax: Nunavut premier
OTTAWA — Canadians living in the North should receive higher rebates to compensate for the federal carbon tax than people in Southern Canada, the premier of Nunavut said after meeting Thursday with the prime minister.
The Trudeau government introduced the carbon tax in 2018 and gave itself the authority to implement a carbon-pricing system for provinces and territories that did not their own adopt carbon-pricing models that reached the federal standard.
The tax started at $20 per tonne of carbon-dioxide emissions this year and will rise by $10 per tonne each year until it reaches $50 per tonne in 2022.
The federal government calls the tax revenue-neutral because all of the money collected through carbon pricing is supposed to be returned directly to the jurisdictions where the federal system is imposed. Most of it is to come through direct rebates to residents when they file income taxes.