Carbon tax poised to hurt farmers, says Sask. elected leaders
A farmer and reeve in the Shellbrook area, west of Prince Albert, is fearing an impact on both the municipal operations as well as his own, following a ruling from the Supreme Court Thursday that finds the federal government’s carbon tax plan constitutional.
Doug Oleksyn explained the cost of fuel on the farm, as well as the transportation costs related to getting the grain to market (both by truck and rail), will most certainly be going up.
“And I don’t know going forward what’s going to happen on the rebate side,” he said. “It’ll definitely change the way we market stuff.”
The carbon tax, known legally as the Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act, was passed by the federal government in 2018. It sets a minimum price on carbon emissions and imposes a federal pricing system in provinces that don’t meet that price with a system of their own. Oleksyn said he has been encouraged in recent months to see prices increases, but acknowledged everything will catch up.