Carney vows to kill consumer carbon pricing, shift to green incentives
OTTAWA — Liberal leadership contender Mark Carney is backing away from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s consumer carbon pricing regime but will keep industrial pricing in place.
“Since Canada’s current climate policy has become too divisive, it’s time for a new, more effective climate plan that everyone can get behind,” Carney said at an event in Halifax Friday morning.
The plan he outlined largely swaps the stick for the carrot for Canadian households. It includes financial incentives for green purchases — things like more energy efficient appliances, electric vehicles and improvements to home insulation.
Carney, a former Bank of Canada governor who has spent the last several years as a United Nations special envoy for climate action, said he would have big polluters, including oil and gas companies, help cover the cost of allowing Canadians to make those choices while still paying “their fair share for emissions.”


