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B.C. ends its carbon tax on consumers after marathon debate in legislature​on April 1, 2025 at 2:02 pm

VICTORIA — British Columbians are waking to a future without a consumer carbon tax for the first time in 17 years, after the early-morning approval of a bill to end the long-standing policy.

​VICTORIA — British Columbians are waking to a future without a consumer carbon tax for the first time in 17 years, after the early-morning approval of a bill to end the long-standing policy.   

VICTORIA — British Columbians are waking to a future without a consumer carbon tax for the first time in 17 years, after the early-morning approval of a bill to end the long-standing policy.

The NDP government fast-tracked legislation in an effort to kill off the tax on Monday, in time to coincide with today’s demise of the federal version of the tax, but it was 1:30 a.m. before it finally passed its third reading in the legislature.

Premier David Eby had said Monday he expected gas prices to fall by about 17 cents a litre today as the impact of the tax’s repeal kicked in, but price-watching websites were mostly showing smaller drops around 7 a.m.

Eby says the province’s utilities commission has the authority to uncover price gouging and British Columbians expect the price difference to show up at the pumps.

The final vote to end the tax came about 15 hours after Finance Minister Brenda Bailey put the bill to the legislature.

It marks the end of a tax that has been in place since 2008, when B.C. became the first jurisdiction in North America to introduce a broad-based carbon levy.

Eby says it played an important role for many years, but it became a “toxic” issue as a result of campaigns by the B.C. and federal Conservative parties.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 1, 2025.


The Canadian Press

 

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