Carbon tax could mean bad news for Sask. GDP: study
The Saskatchewan government says it now has the numbers and research to prove a federal carbon tax would be bad for the economy.
Environment Minister Dustin Duncan unveiled the results of a study by researchers from University of Regina Institute for Energy, Environment and Sustainable Communities, funded by the provincial government.
The models generated by researchers show a carbon tax could hit Saskatchewan’s gross domestic product (GDP) by almost $16 billion by 2030 while having a very limited effect on emissions.
Duncan said the province wanted to see more specific economic analysis from the federal government on what a carbon tax could to do a resource-based economy like Saskatchewan. He said the only federal numbers provided were vague and didn’t account for an export-based economy linked closely to agriculture, mining and the oil and gas industry.