Canada faces huge price tag for reducing carbon emissions by 20 percent
A C$200 a metric ton tax would of course double all this, but note that even this won't come close to producing the 65% cut in emissions desired by 2050. The WSJ has this:
Canada needs a carbon price of C$100 a metric ton to help meet national emissions goals by 2020, a policy group said Thursday, as it set out recommendations for unifying Canada's fragmented environmental rules.
The high carbon price - well above the federal government's $20 estimate - is essential to meet Canada's target of slicing a fifth of 2006 greenhouse-gas levels by 2020, the National Round Table on the Environment and the Economy said in a report.
Prices would be capped at C$200 a ton in 2025 to relieve the cost pressure on participating industries, bringing in other measures to meet the 2050 goal of a 65% cut in emissions.
Existing provincial policies should be harmonized with a Canada-wide cap-and-trade system by 2015, the report said, which would set a fixed emissions limit allowing participating facilities to buy and sell emissions credits as needed.
These emissions credits, initially handed out for free, would be fully auctioned off by 2020, raising C$18 billion that would primarily be used to boost clean-technology development. Part of the revenue would also go toward cutting corporate and personal taxes.
Canada's federal government has chosen to target emissions intensity - the ratio of greenhouse gases to gross domestic product - instead of an overall limit, saying that adhering to stricter rules would devastate the economy. But U.S. moves to toughen up domestic climate-change policy may force the Canadian government's hand, said NRTEE chairman Bob Page. . . . .
The proposed cap-and-trade system could shave up to 2% off Canada's projected growth for 2020, and up to 6% off estimated growth for 2050, according to the report. . . .
Waxman proposes a 20 percent cut in carbon dioxide from 2005 levels by 2020, an even larger reduction than that proposed for Canada. He promises a 83 percent reduction by 2050.
Labels: Environment, GlobalWarming
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