• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Carbon tax

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #31
    The carbon tax increase is just phase one of the tax grab, the clean fuel standard is up next to kill industry for good.

    But you say wont farmers be able sell canola for biodiesel under that program.

    Not unless you meet with and comply with their land use regulations to be verified by a govt 3rd party.

    This was from their website. Basically if you want to enter the climate change pmt scam, you will need to submit to unlimited regulation by the govt to do so.

    Farmers were always going to get controlled all the way. But you knew that already.

    Most likely that product will get imported, probably from canadian canola crushed in China.

    ----------

    Land-use change
    Direct land-use change happens when a particular parcel of land is converted to grow crops for biofuel production. Indirect land-use change occurs when crops grown for biofuels displace traditional food and animal feed crops, leading to a demand to produce that displaced food crop elsewhere (i.e., land somewhere else is converted to grow the food crop). If new agricultural land expands into areas with high carbon stock such as forests, wetlands and peat land this leads to additional greenhouse gas emissions. If it occurs in a highly biodiverse land, it can lead to lost biodiversity. While it is very difficult to quantify and determine what actions cause indirect land-use change and to separate it from direct land-use change, there is global consensus that it does happen and is an important issue to consider.

    Applying best practices developed in other jurisdictions can help mitigate undesired direct and indirect land-use impacts resulting from the increased use of low-carbon-intensity fuels under the Clean Fuel Standard. To do so, the regulations will account for land-use change in two ways:

    the Fuel Lifecycle Assessment Modeling Tool will account for greenhouse gas impacts of direct land-use change in the carbon intensity of low-carbon-intensity fuels;
    the regulations will define sustainability criteria for biofuels and their feedstocks, related to land-use change – including indirect land-use change – and land management practices. The portion of a fuel made from feedstocks associated with land-use changes that do not meet the criteria will not count for credit creation under the Clean Fuel Standard.
    The criteria referred to in the second bullet above align with the sustainability criteria in the European Union’s Renewable Energy Directive II of December 21, 2018 and the European Union’s Delegated Regulation on high indirect land-use-change-risk feedstockFootnote6 . The criteria will vary depending on the type of feedstock (i.e. agricultural or forest biomass), and will apply to both domestically-produced and imported biofuels and feedstocks.

    For agricultural feedstock, the criteria include:

    feedstocks at high risk of indirect land-use change: the portion of a biofuel comprised of feedstocks at high risk of indirect land-use change will not count towards credit creation for Clean Fuel Standard;
    high biodiversity or carbon stock land: raw material used in the production of biofuels may not come from land that has the status of high biodiversity land or high carbon stock land on or after January 1, 2008; and
    protected areas: raw material used in the production of a biofuel may not come from land that has the status of protected area on or after January 1, 2008.
    For forest feedstock, the criteria include:

    sustainable forest management: forest biomass used to produce biofuels must meet a set of sub-criteria to ensure it is harvested in a country/area where sustainable forest management is practiced; and
    protected areas: raw material used in the production of biofuel may not come from land that has the status of protected area on or after January 1, 2008.
    Details on the proposed criteria are provided in Annex VI.

    The Clean Fuel Standard will require third-party verification or certification to ensure the criteria along with all the regulatory requirements are met. Work is underway to develop these verification and certification requirements.

    Comment


      #32
      I am of the opinion the existing carbon tax costs are not being passed on to the next user, yet. Trucking rates have not changed. It is industrial users of fuel (trucking industry, mining and construction, Ag, etc) that are the big fuel users. I burn 600L a day in the big truck, and there must be hundreds of thousands of heavy trucks running in Canada every day. Like I say I have not seen trucking rates change yet, the costs are still being absorbed, Joe city dweller hasn’t felt the bump yet but at some point that will change. Also how long does it take to burn 600L of fuel for the average driver of a small vehicle living in the city. Month or more?

      Obviously on farm grain drying costs are not being passed on as well.

      Comment


        #33
        Originally posted by wiseguy
        Stop justine and the liberals from destroying western Canada !
        I don't have the eyesight or 20 dollar Italian rifle to do the job.

        Comment


          #34
          Originally posted by Taiga View Post
          I am of the opinion the existing carbon tax costs are not being passed on to the next user, yet. Trucking rates have not changed. It is industrial users of fuel (trucking industry, mining and construction, Ag, etc) that are the big fuel users. I burn 600L a day in the big truck, and there must be hundreds of thousands of heavy trucks running in Canada every day. Like I say I have not seen trucking rates change yet, the costs are still being absorbed, Joe city dweller hasn’t felt the bump yet but at some point that will change. Also how long does it take to burn 600L of fuel for the average driver of a small vehicle living in the city. Month or more?

          Obviously on farm grain drying costs are not being passed on as well.
          Lots of intra-city commuters burn probably a tank a week, maybe tank and a quarter if you averaged out other things. Smaller SUV's are in that 60L range, so say 75L a week, 52 weeks a year, so 3900L a year? When I was long-hauling I burnt 500-700L a day. I could burn their yearly consumption in a week and a half...

          Some local grain haulers were able to pass the costs onto farmers, but all their increased costs have made it more and more economical to park a 5yr old set of supers and a big rig in your own yard. Farm registration and insurance for a whole year is about equal to a high deductible insurance, and pro-rated commercial registration for *one month*.

          Local guys hardly seem to exist around here anymore, as they've had to go long haul to find the work to turn the wheels. The sheer number of trucks competing for long haul work has most of the extra costs getting absorbed by the transport companies. Dry and reefer van business isnt much different. There are a SLUG of trucks looking for work!

          Comment


            #35
            Here is an interesting tidbit that ties directly into Jazz's clean fuel post. I was listening to one of the shows on rural radio yesterday and the topic was China. Their leader, Number 11, has stationed political officers inside a vast majority of the private business in China to ensure that they comply and conform to the CCP party line. If they resist or do not comply with what they are told they are denied access to financing, markets, and in good old fashion communist ways probably disappear.

            Now where did we just hear that song and dance, oh yea in the wording of the clean fuel proposal. If you don't comply to the government's party line you will be denied access to markets, probably financing, the only thing you have going for you is you probably won't disappear, but your business might.

            You tell me where the difference is between our current government and the CCP.

            Comment


              #36
              Opinion: Biden’s victory a win for carbon pricing policy
              Expect opposition to evaporate as one of the world’s largest economies signs on
              D.C. Fraser By D.C. Fraser

              Published: December 11, 2020
              Op/Ed, Opinion

              With Joe Biden as the incoming U.S. president, Canada’s climate policy may end up benefiting farmers. Photo: Carlos Barria/Reuters

              President-elect Joe Biden’s climate strategy will lay waste to the opposition some Canadians have to our country’s carbon pricing policy.

              Biden campaigned on aggressively combating climate change.

              When he becomes president in January, it is expected he will create investment in green technologies.

              Like Canada, the United States will soon be trying to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 and achieve the targets set out in the Paris Agreement.

              How the Americans try to get there will surely differ from Canada’s approach.
              Related Articles

              On top of a US$2-trillion investment in the green economy, Biden is expected to try to impose a “carbon border adjustment” that would tax imported goods, based on their carbon emissions, from polluting countries.

              For years, Canadian producers have decried carbon pricing – arguing it disproportionately impacts operations, disadvantages them competitively on international markets and creates a cost that can’t be passed to consumers.

              There will always be room for Canada’s carbon pricing policy to improve, but the policy is here to stay.

              Around two-thirds of people who voted in the last election cast their ballot for a party that supported or promoted a price on pollution or carbon tax, demonstrating once again a strong climate plan is needed to get elected.

              Most opponents of a carbon tax have turned their attention elsewhere during the pandemic. Lobby groups and politicians criticizing the policy just don’t gain much traction anymore.

              Now, with Biden’s election, Canada’s climate policy may end up benefiting farmers.

              Putting a price on carbon does not make Canada a lone wolf. Neither do policies aimed at combating climate change.

              The European Union is trying to introduce a carbon border adjustment and there is a growing effort on the international stage to standardized credits around a price on carbon.

              Because Canada already has a price on carbon across each of its industries, including those that pollute the most, it has a strong argument to be excluded from carbon border adjustments being proposed by the EU and Biden.

              The United States, in particular, won’t surprise anyone if it excludes Canada from its carbon border adjustment, considering the friendly history between Biden and Trudeau.

              Canada took significant steps to reorganize its economy and put a price on carbon. These difficult steps have put it in a better position to face the future.

              Despite countless challenges ahead, a strong international carbon market means farmers in Canada using sustainable agriculture are already well positioned.

              There will likely be a web of different protocols to generate credits, and markets to sell those credits in as international standards are established.

              Likely there will need to be huge amounts of technology needed at the farm level to properly monitor this.

              But Canadian producers are already ahead of the game.

              In recent years a whole industry has been created out of carbon markets, many of them headquartered near Western Canada’s oil and gas sector.

              If the market grows as many are now expecting it to, at least some American producers will be playing catch-up to Canada.

              Within a few years, Canada’s price on carbon may go from being one of the nation’s most hotly contested policies to one of its most celebrated.

              Perhaps that’s being too hopeful, but it is already clear Biden’s climate strategy will smother Canadian opposition.

              Producers, and other opponents to these policies, should recognize environmental regulations will continue.

              Rather than outright opposing them, or calling for blanket exemptions, they should work to improve them.

              D.C. Fraser

              Reporter

              Comment


                #37
                Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                Opinion: Biden’s victory a win for carbon pricing policy
                Expect opposition to evaporate as one of the world’s largest economies signs on
                D.C. Fraser By D.C. Fraser

                Published: December 11, 2020
                Op/Ed, Opinion

                With Joe Biden as the incoming U.S. president, Canada’s climate policy may end up benefiting farmers. Photo: Carlos Barria/Reuters

                President-elect Joe Biden’s climate strategy will lay waste to the opposition some Canadians have to our country’s carbon pricing policy.

                Biden campaigned on aggressively combating climate change.

                When he becomes president in January, it is expected he will create investment in green technologies.

                Like Canada, the United States will soon be trying to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 and achieve the targets set out in the Paris Agreement.

                How the Americans try to get there will surely differ from Canada’s approach.
                Related Articles

                On top of a US$2-trillion investment in the green economy, Biden is expected to try to impose a “carbon border adjustment” that would tax imported goods, based on their carbon emissions, from polluting countries.

                For years, Canadian producers have decried carbon pricing – arguing it disproportionately impacts operations, disadvantages them competitively on international markets and creates a cost that can’t be passed to consumers.

                There will always be room for Canada’s carbon pricing policy to improve, but the policy is here to stay.

                Around two-thirds of people who voted in the last election cast their ballot for a party that supported or promoted a price on pollution or carbon tax, demonstrating once again a strong climate plan is needed to get elected.

                Most opponents of a carbon tax have turned their attention elsewhere during the pandemic. Lobby groups and politicians criticizing the policy just don’t gain much traction anymore.

                Now, with Biden’s election, Canada’s climate policy may end up benefiting farmers.

                Putting a price on carbon does not make Canada a lone wolf. Neither do policies aimed at combating climate change.

                The European Union is trying to introduce a carbon border adjustment and there is a growing effort on the international stage to standardized credits around a price on carbon.

                Because Canada already has a price on carbon across each of its industries, including those that pollute the most, it has a strong argument to be excluded from carbon border adjustments being proposed by the EU and Biden.

                The United States, in particular, won’t surprise anyone if it excludes Canada from its carbon border adjustment, considering the friendly history between Biden and Trudeau.

                Canada took significant steps to reorganize its economy and put a price on carbon. These difficult steps have put it in a better position to face the future.

                Despite countless challenges ahead, a strong international carbon market means farmers in Canada using sustainable agriculture are already well positioned.

                There will likely be a web of different protocols to generate credits, and markets to sell those credits in as international standards are established.

                Likely there will need to be huge amounts of technology needed at the farm level to properly monitor this.

                But Canadian producers are already ahead of the game.

                In recent years a whole industry has been created out of carbon markets, many of them headquartered near Western Canada’s oil and gas sector.

                If the market grows as many are now expecting it to, at least some American producers will be playing catch-up to Canada.

                Within a few years, Canada’s price on carbon may go from being one of the nation’s most hotly contested policies to one of its most celebrated.

                Perhaps that’s being too hopeful, but it is already clear Biden’s climate strategy will smother Canadian opposition.

                Producers, and other opponents to these policies, should recognize environmental regulations will continue.

                Rather than outright opposing them, or calling for blanket exemptions, they should work to improve them.

                D.C. Fraser

                Reporter
                Actually Chuck2 I wrote an email to D.C Fraser about how B.C.’s carbon tax has not lowered emissions(with accompanying supporting numbers) and that there was nothing in his(this) article that I agreed with. Haven’t heard back. Do you support raising the tax to $170 a tonne?!

                Comment


                  #38
                  Originally posted by caseih View Post
                  Anyone checkout their gas bill for drying grain
                  Carbon tax on ours is 70% of the cost of the gas used ???????????? plus GST
                  HELLO APAS , ARE YOU OUT THERE???????????
                  SASK PARTY , HELLO ???????????
                  Ralph you lying trough licker , good nut kick to farmers
                  Hey Case IH
                  70 percent is nothing. How do you feel about 300 percent by 2030?
                  I did a little bit of math this morning.
                  If you're living in Saskatchewan and paying SaskEnergy for natural gas, the amount you pay to cover the federal carbon tax on natural gas will probably exceed the value of the natural gas itself by April 1, 2022. And by April 1 2028, carbon taxes on NG could be three times higher than the cost of NG. (eg 10 cents a cubic metre for gas and 30 cents a metre in carbon taxes).
                  I won't get into a discussion about whether or not climate change is real of fabricated. That's way beyond my pay grade.
                  But I will say that the climate change hysteria being created by governments around the world has created a convenient opportunity for Ottawa to pull off one of the greatest tax grabs in the history of our country.
                  Over the next 10 years, the $170 per tonne carbon tax hike will generate close to $50 billion in additional revenues from residential natural gas sales across Canada, nearly $2.5 billion of that in Saskatchewan alone. And that's residential NG only, not NG used for agricultural purposes.
                  Unfortunately, that's just the tip of the iceberg.
                  By my calculations, additional tax revenues on sales of gasoline used in passenger vehicles (personal use vehicles only, not business use vehicles) will easily be in the tens of trillions of dollars by 2030.
                  Meanwhile, not a single report on CBC scrutinizing what amounts to a 750 percent carbon tax increase over the next 10 years.
                  Instead, just more hand-wringing about the COVID pandemic and video clips of the PM telling Canadians why they should be happy to hand over trillions of additional dollars to Ottawa between now and 2030.
                  This pandemic has taught us the importance of of global co-operation. And we must translate that lesson into how we deal with the climate crisis, because our kids and grandkids are counting on us.
                  God help us.

                  Comment


                    #39
                    When I hear him go into the "sincere" speech mode I think of him as a snowboard instructor using him much practiced late night hustle to get some 16 yr old ski bunny up to his room for the night
                    .
                    By the next morning all is forgotten and he moves on to some new conquest.
                    What you think B ???
                    Look familiar?

                    Comment


                      #40
                      The biggest reason that this whole carbon tax scam is so over-the-top stupid is because it will make no difference whatsoever in the global CO2 output - our overall contribution of this essential gas is just that insignificant.

                      Even if Canada was to meet its reduction targets - which it won't, our reduction would be completely lost in China's increases over about 1 or 2 days. Note how many coal plants they are building yearly.

                      So the Prime Moron is deliberately orchestrating the demise of Canada's standard of living for no gain toward his stated objectives.

                      And as utterly stupid as this moron is, no one would be able to make a convincing argument that he doesn't know what he's doing.

                      That leaves only one possibility: "price on pollution" hysterics Climate Barbie, the Sock Puppet, his sidekick Buttwipe et all are going to enrich themselves fantastically with the funds they siphon out of the working Canadians pockets.

                      If you are still in any doubt of this, just remember SNC, the Aga Khancer, the WE scandals where he ended up funneling money into the hands of his family and friends.

                      The newest carbon tax will only deepen the trough for these Liberal swine.

                      Comment


                        #41
                        For the most part evolution has been kind to the human race, except for one flaw, if a human doesn't understand the concept of logic or common sense after 30 years, their heart would stop beating.

                        Some departments in Universities would close, but governments would become efficient.

                        Comment


                          #42
                          That’s the beauty of democracy. The majority have accepted or are going along with this climate change ideology. I also feel that the majority subscribe to NIMBY. That means the majority will not push back until it really hits them in the pocket book. Of course it will be somebody else’s problem or responsibility until it isn’t. A lot of damage will be done by then.

                          Have a great day.

                          Comment


                            #43
                            Typical Liberal and Ndp tactics. Keep brainwashing and buying votes. Very few city people are affected right now but the producers are squeezed enormously by such a tax grab. It’s easy to do a search and find out how much money they stole on the corrupt tax but try to find out how this carbon steel is being used to fight climate change and yes crickets. I bet not one dime is going into climate change but rather into general revenue to pay for the reckless spending that the 2 brainwashing parties have joined up to screw western Canada. I can’t wait until food prices double or triple then we will see who supports who. Mind you then the ball babies will blame the farmers for expensive food. What a crock of sh-t. For somebody not to see through this nonsense spells volumes about who they are and their ability to forward think.

                            Comment


                              #44
                              So is that right that the province of Quebec is exempt ?
                              I maybe heard that wrong.

                              Comment


                                #45
                                Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
                                So is that right that the province of Quebec is exempt ?
                                I maybe heard that wrong.
                                No, you are right. All provinces were given the option of setting up their own cap and trade or carbon tax system by the Federal government when the carbon tax was set up. Quebec did and it was recognized as a substitiute for the federal tax. Notley also had instituted a carbon tax system in Alberta which would have superceeded the Federal tax however the UPC scrapped it so now Alberta falls under the federal carbon tax system.

                                Comment

                                • Reply to this Thread
                                • Return to Topic List
                                Working...