
Frustration over Sask. resistance on federal climate plan
Environmental advocates are frustrated for differing reasons by the province’s continued opposition to the federal government’s pan-Canadian climate change framework.
Premier Scott Moe has followed in the footsteps of Brad Wall by refusing to sign on with Ottawa’s initiative, which requires provinces to impose a carbon pricing or tax system. As things stand, the SaskParty maintains, a federal carbon tax would hurt the province’s industry to the tune of billions of dollars a year. Instead of imposing the federal framework, the provincial government said they will work towards implementing their own home-grown strategy next year.
“The premier should sign on, not just for the infrastructure funding that goes with it, but to show we’re part of a unified front as a country to deal with this problem of climate change,” Saskatchewan Green Party Leader Shawn Setyo told paNOW.
Setyo said he’s all in favour of a made-in-Saskatchewan carbon emissions plan, as the SaskParty is, but claimed the governing party’s proposals don’t go far enough. He said the Green Party is ready to help modify those proposals to better reduce pollution while maintaining a sustainable economy.