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ER Editor: Some tweets —
Saskatchewan will be the first fully carbon tax–free province in Canada—saving families money and helping our businesses stay competitive amid tariff threats.
Here is what that means for you. pic.twitter.com/qd2k4ezs9F
— Scott Moe (@PremierScottMoe) March 26, 2025
Effective April 1st Saskatchewan will be a completely carbon tax free Province. This is what all of Canada needs to do. pic.twitter.com/35khgavkt2
— Ryan Gerritsen🇨🇦🇳🇱 (@ryangerritsen) March 27, 2025
A Blast from the Past —
SHOCK: Chrystia Freeland won’t rule out jailing Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe for disobeying the Carbon Tax law. pic.twitter.com/gXNrdMBkGx
— Keean Bexte (@TheRealKeean) November 3, 2023
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Saskatchewan becomes first Canadian province to fully eliminate carbon tax
Saskatchewan has become the first Canadian province free of the carbon tax as Premier Scott Moe eliminated both provincial and federal carbon levies effective April 1.
CLAIRE MARIE MERKOWSKY for LIFESITE NEWS
REGINA, Saskatchewan (LifeSiteNews) — Saskatchewan has become the first Canadian province to free itself entirely of the carbon tax.
On March 27, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Mot announced the removal of the provincial and federal carbon tax beginning April 1, boosting the province’s industry and making Saskatchewan the first carbon tax free province.
Sask. Premier Scott Moe announcing end to the carbon tax in his province CBC News Saskatchewan / YouTube“The immediate effect is the removal of the carbon tax on your Sask Power bills, saving Saskatchewan families and small businesses hundreds of dollars a year. And in the longer term, it will reduce the cost of other consumer products that have the industrial carbon tax built right into their price,” said Moe.
Under Moe’s direction, Saskatchewan has dropped the industrial carbon tax which he says will allow Saskatchewan to thrive under a “tariff environment.”
“I would hope that all of the parties running in the federal election would agree with those objectives and allow the provinces to regulate in this area without imposing the federal backstop,” he continued.
The removal of the tax is estimated to save Saskatchewan residents up to 18 cents a liter in gas prices.
The removal of the tax will take place on April 1, the same day the consumer carbon tax will reduce to 0 percent under Prime Minister Mark Carney’s direction. Notably, Carney did not scrap the carbon tax legislation: he just reduced its current rate to zero. This means it could come back at any time.
Furthermore, while Carney has dropped the consumer carbon tax, he has previously revealed that he wishes to implement a corporation carbon tax, the effects of which many argued would trickle down to all Canadians.
The Saskatchewan Association of Rural Municipalities (SARM) celebrated Moe’s move, noting that the carbon tax was especially difficult on farmers.
“I think the carbon tax has been in place for approximately six years now coming up in April and the cost keeps going up every year,” SARM president Bill Huber said.
“It puts our farming community and our business people in rural municipalities at a competitive disadvantage, having to pay this and compete on the world stage,” he continued.
“We’ve got a carbon tax on power – and that’s going to be gone now – and propane and natural gas and we use them more and more every year, with grain drying and different things in our farming operations,” he explained.
“I know most producers that have grain drying systems have three-phase power. If they haven’t got natural gas, they have propane to fire those dryers. And that cost goes on and on at a high level, and it’s made us more noncompetitive on a world stage,” Huber decalred.
The carbon tax is wildly unpopular and blamed for the rising cost of living throughout Canada. Currently, Canadians living in provinces under the federal carbon pricing scheme pay $80 per tonne.
Source
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