What a carbon price means for consumers
Gasoline, power and heating will all get more expensive to encourage energy efficiency
This story was originally published Oct. 4.
As the political debate rages on about a federally imposed carbon price, it's useful to take a look at how this will affect consumers.
After all, the whole point of a carbon price is to change our behaviour, so that we use less fossil fuel. The price will go up for carbon intensive products like fuel for our vehicles and heat and (non-renewable) power for our homes, to give us incentive to use less energy. The less we use the less we'll pay.
Prices will also rise for items that we don't immediately think about, such as food and other retail goods, since they are often transported by diesel-burning vehicles.
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In practical terms, by looking at Quebec (which has put a price on carbon since 2011), B.C. (which has had a tax since 2008), and Alberta, which is about to impose one, we can see the impact on a litre of gasoline, or a gigajoule of natural gas.
Price at the pumps
In B.C, a carbon tax of 6.67 cents per litre is added at the pump, making B.C. gasoline the second most expensive in Canada, after Newfoundland and Labrador. That is based on a $30 per tonne carbon price. In Alberta, when its $30 per tonne tax is fully implemented in 2018, the gasoline tax will be roughly the same.
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Under the Liberal plan, when the carbon price reaches $50 per tonne in 2022, that will effectively add 11 cents per litre to the price of gasoline.
In Quebec, with its cap-and-trade system, it's a little more difficult to tease apart exactly how much the carbon tax adds to a litre of gasoline, depending, as it does, on the auction prices for carbon. In a blog post in March 2016, Roger McKnight, senior petroleum analyst with En-Pro, found that the tax was around six cents a litre.
Heating and powering your home
How much heating costs will go up with a carbon price will depend on how you heat your home. If it is with hydro-powered electricity, the carbon tax won't have an effect. If it's with natural gas or heating oil, it certainly will.
In Alberta, where most homes are heated by natural gas, it will mean a significant increase. Under the current carbon plan, in 2018, there will be a tax of $1.51 a gigajoule. In October, the price charged to Albertans for natural gas heat was only $2.66 a gigajoule.
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In B.C., the tax was $1.49 a gigajoule. A researcher in Nova Scotia suggested a $30 per tonne carbon tax would add 8.4 cents per litre to the cost of heating oil. Again all these number would increase by two-thirds to capture the cost of a $50 per tonne carbon tax.
As for the cost of electrical power, it depends on the power mix in your province, if it's renewable, it's negligible; if it's coal based, watch out.
Impact on low-income families
In his study, Rivers found that low-income families were disproportionately hit by the carbon tax, which is why provinces typically work to offset the pain. In Alberta, families with a household income of less than $95,000 will qualify for a rebate. In B.C. that threshold is lower, with payments decreasing once income exceeds approximately $38,000 for a family.
"The whole point of a carbon price is to raise particular costs so that it changes our behaviour, said Chris Ragan, chair of the Ecofiscal commission. But we need to be mindful of the impact on, in particular, low-income households.
"Governments are going to be under pressure to make sure they are paying attention."
Corrections
- A previous version of this story reported that B.C. has the most expensive gasoline prices in Canada, on average. In fact, Newfoundland and Labrador has the most expensive gasoline in the country, followed by B.C.Oct 04, 2016 11:06 AM ET