Editor, The Times:

Editor, The Times:

RE: Canada's carbon tax house of cards is falling down, by Tom Fletcher

Editor, The Times:

I’m disturbed by the tone of Mr. Fletcher’s latest opinion piece, where he dismisses the integrity of B.C.’s carbon tax as “just another sales tax.”

In fact, the majority of revenue continues to go toward protecting households and businesses from rising prices through tax cuts, industry incentives, and low income tax credits.

After this summer’s record smoke and fires, I’m feeling increasingly anxious about climate change. The reality is if we want to leave a liveable world for our children and grandchildren, we need to ramp up our actions.

Other countries like China are leading the charge. At the G20 summit in June, MP Richard Cannings noted the Chinese minister said they’re moving as fast as possible from coal directly to renewables, and “there’s no such thing as clean fossil fuels.” China is joining France and Germany in phasing out sale of gasoline and diesel vehicles.

Globally we have a huge economic opportunity to create a better world. Climate solutions could add $26 trillion to the global economy and create 65 million jobs by 2030, according to a new report by the Global Commission on the Economy and Climate,

They also emphasize the importance of ramping up carbon pricing to accelerate this process. Already 25 per cent of the world’s countries are pricing carbon, but the price is too low in most places to drive transformational change.

In BC, we have a fantastic opportunity to take the lead by increasing our carbon tax because it incentivizes low carbon solutions – the more you pollute, the more you pay.

Let’s get beyond the polarization and get serious about solving the climate crisis. I prefer author Paul Hawken’s message that “it’s not game over, it’s game on!”

Laura Sacks

Castlegar, BC


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