World Byte News

B.C. tabling legislation to kill consumer carbon price for April 1​on March 25, 2025 at 10:27 pm

British Columbia’s government says it will table legislation on Monday that eliminates the consumer carbon tax in the province.

​British Columbia’s government says it will table legislation on Monday that eliminates the consumer carbon tax in the province.   


Environment

Click to play video: 'B.C.  consumer carbon tax revenue impacts'

2:00
B.C. consumer carbon tax revenue impacts

RELATED: B.C. is following the federal government’s lead by scrapping the carbon tax and we’re learning more about what that means for our province’s budget. The tax collects millions of dollars every year on things like gas and home heating. Richard Zussman has more on the numbers – Mar 17, 2025



Share this item via WhatsApp


British Columbia’s government says it will table legislation on Monday that eliminates the consumer carbon tax in the province.

It says in a statement that the tax will be removed April 1, and it is notifying fuel sellers and natural gas retailers now so they stop collecting the tax as of that date.

B.C. Premier David Eby said earlier this month that the province would kill the consumer tax after Prime Minister Mark Carney made the same announcement about the federal tax.

5:04
B.C. alters course on the carbon tax

The statement says that while the government is removing the carbon tax on people, it will continue to ensure big industrial emitters pay their fair share through the carbon-pricing system.

Eby said on March 14 when he made the announcement that people have less money and eliminating the tax will support them.

The government statement issued Tuesday says that while it understands getting rid of the tax requires change, it expects fuel sellers and natural gas retailers to make every effort to ensure that their customers are not charged the carbon tax on purchases as of April 1.

The tax has been in place since 2008 and getting rid of it leaves a $1.5-billion hole in the provincial budget.

When Energy Minister Adrian Dix was asked how that shortfall would be replaced, he said the finance minister would provide further details by Monday.

&copy 2025 The Canadian Press

 

Exit mobile version