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An Open Letter To Justin Trudeau - Re: Carbon Tax

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    An Open Letter To Justin Trudeau - Re: Carbon Tax

    We have posted this for Jake Leguee of Leguee Farms in SK. To learn more about Jake you can visit his blog at [URL="https://southsaskfarmer.com/2016/10/18/an-open-letter-to-justin-trudeau/"]https://southsaskfarmer.com/2016/10/18/an-open-letter-to-justin-trudeau/

    [/URL]




    Rt. Hon. Justin Trudeau, P.C., M.P. Prime Minister of Canada
    80 Wellington Street
    Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0A2

    Dear Prime Minister,

    My name is Jake Leguee, and I am a farmer in Saskatchewan. I am writing this letter to express my tremendous concern with your plan to impose a carbon tax on my province. I chose to publish this as an open letter so the rest of this nation has an opportunity to understand what a carbon tax could mean to other farmers like myself.

    While I recognize you have environmental goals you wish to pursue, understand that the consequences of a carbon tax may be severe for my farm. Mr. Trudeau, you may not have much experience with agriculture, but let me tell you, it is an amazing career. Not only do I get to run my own business, but I get to run one that is also a way of life. I get to farm alongside my father; my mentor, business partner and friend. My sister and I are the next generation of this business, and our whole family comes together at planting and harvest to get the crop in the ground, and to put it in the bin. My son was born a year ago, and I hope someday he may have the opportunity to farm alongside me, just as I do with my father.

    Farming is, at times, a difficult business. One bad weather event – one storm, one cold night, one windy day – can devastate us. If we don’t get a crop, our bills still have to be paid. And nature does not care one way or the other.

    Not only do we rely on the vagarious disposition of Mother Nature, we are also exposed to the volatility of the markets and – indeed, the point of this letter – politicians.

    A carbon tax has the ability to drastically increase my costs, without creating an incentive to reduce my emissions. In fact, I already have such incentives. Our farm’s move to no-till started in the late 1980’s, as many other Prairie farmers did, to reduce risk of soil erosion, increase soil organic matter, and, ultimately, increase yields. No-till (essentially means that tillage is avoided if at all possible) has been a boon for our farm, and it allows the storage of massive quantities of carbon dioxide.

    As equipment changes and my farm grows, there will be a continuous need to upgrade to newer machinery. Due to the emissions laws already in place, our newer equipment has lower emissions; but that came at a cost. Emissions equipment on our tractors is faulty, unreliable, and expensive to fix. If my tractor’s emissions system has a plugged filter, it can shut down my seeding operation for hours, even days. When you have only two weeks to get your crop in the ground, this is hardly acceptable.

    Adding a carbon tax to my farm’s cost of production will make it less profitable, and ultimately less competitive with my neighbours to the south and across the oceans. I can only take what price is offered to me; I cannot pass along a carbon tax to my customers. I cannot switch to electric tractors, or run all new equipment to have the latest in emissions technologies. Sometimes my field needs to be blackened to clean up sloughs from excess moisture, or to deal with high residue crops. That tillage pass already represents a cost to me, and I don’t need a tax to encourage me to avoid it.

    So, let’s exempt farmers, right? Make it revenue-neutral? While that may seem a simple solution, how will you go about that? I still have to purchase fertilizer, crop protection products, fuel, machinery, and so on. If those industries are paying a carbon tax, you can bet they will pass along that cost. What about my grain buyers? If a craft beer manufacturer has to pay a carbon tax, they may have to reduce what they pay for their malt barley. That also costs my family farm.

    If a carbon tax drives up my farm’s costs without creating an incentive for me to reduce emissions, why have one at all? It does not achieve the required goal of reducing emissions, and hurts my family in the process. I thought your government was going to help the middle class?

    Mr. Trudeau, please reconsider your plans to impose a carbon tax on my province. You speak about working together as Canadians, of uniting us as a country. Your proposed carbon tax will be divisive, ineffective, and detrimental to Canadian agriculture. Your carbon tax will hurt my family’s ability to make a living doing what we love to do – feeding the world.

    Sincerely,



    Jake Leguee


    [URL="https://southsaskfarmer.com/2016/10/18/an-open-letter-to-justin-trudeau/"]https://southsaskfarmer.com/2016/10/18/an-open-letter-to-justin-trudeau/
    [/URL]

    #2
    That is a great piece of writing Jake.

    Thank you for putting it into words so well.

    Comment


      #3
      Nice job, would mimic my thoughts very closely.

      Comment


        #4
        Interesting mention of newer cleaner tractors that I think use more energy to burn cleaner.


        The process it takes to burn more fuel or additives for a clean burn creates more problems at the refineries.

        It would be interesting to mention to Justine that farmers are doing more than their share to clean things up. Less hours on tractors that supposedly burn cleaner.


        And yet at the end of the day farmers will be writing larger cheques to clean up someone else's mess.

        Overall well written...I would like to see him debate Justine on this topic.....I doubt any Canadian would see Justin's plan as remotely reasonable.

        Comment


          #5
          Nice well written letter that I posted on twitter and Facebook.

          Why do we always have to be the ones who have to clean up others mistakes!

          Comment


            #6
            Hope we get to hear JT response, IF ANY to the facts as we all live them.

            Comment


              #7
              Well written letter using common sense.

              Jake would definitely win a debate with the drama teacher on this topic since he is using facts while Justin is using buzz words and warm fuzzy environmentalist feelings to justify his cause.

              Good job Jake!

              Comment


                #8
                Yes, well done but personally I doubt JT cares and any response will be written by a political hack because I highly doubt he has the knowledge of the topic at hand to make an informed response. ....he just wants to save the world environment one Canadian "tax" dollar at a time.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Good job Jake,

                  It is important that we stand up and communicate even though it might land on JT's deaf ears as Farmaholic says.

                  I like your wording and going to send this to others so we can try to make some noise.

                  Keep well everyone,

                  W

                  Comment


                    #10
                    While your at it ask him how much fuel being burnt in Eastern Canada come from countries where they circumcise girls and why cant they support the ROC in a fiscally sustainable way. No carbon (sales) tax necessary!

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Sure wish we had local, provincial and federal representatives that could express an opinion.

                      How about it Andrew Scheer or Ralph Goodale. David Anderson????

                      Comment


                        #12
                        It's a good letter Jake raising some valid questions.

                        I have been reading one proposal this morning of how a carbon tax would be implemented with regard to agriculture that encourages me that some people are at least working on viable solutions to this.

                        In simplest terms implement the tax on all fossil fuel use, acknowledge that all carbon tax costs in the food system will likely be passed onto farmers. Calculate the carbon tax incurred in agriculture (including the above passed on costs from our suppliers). Redistribute this total calculated amount of carbon tax to farmers on a per acre basis with some adjustment for land quality - crop land versus pasture etc.
                        No, or minimal, paperwork or monitoring involved for the farmer. Such a distribution would still result in some "winners and losers" as those using the most fossil fuels would be penalized in that they might still be paying out more for their inputs relative to their reimbursement cheque per acre compared to someone who was farming using less fossil fuel. I think that makes sense though - there has got to be an incentive to reduce fossil fuel use.

                        How about that as a suggestion for a framework to build on?

                        Comment


                          #13
                          My bet is that retailers will raise prices citing carbon tax. Even if it is on ag produce. Plus will offer less to farmers citing same thing.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Anyone trying to promote a carbon tax needs to go back and redo grade 3 and learn the nutrient cycle. It is absolutely terrible that people don't understand what carbon is.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Isn't there already an incentive to use less fuel?
                              It involves no govt expenses at all.

                              Comment

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