if, as widely expected, pierre poilievre and the conservatives win a majority government in that election, the liberals will then claim, in opposition, that they had a plan to meet canada’s emission targets which the conservatives abandoned by scrapping trudeau’s carbon tax, as poilievre has promised to do.
this argument will be nonsense, because the liberals have never had a realistic plan to achieve their unrealistic emission targets.
that is the shell game the liberals have been playing with canadians on emissions since they were elected in 2015, all of it to justify trudeau’s carbon tax which, on april 1, will increase by 19% to $95 per tonne of emissions, up from its current $80 per tonne, on its way to $170 per tonne in 2030.
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a report released last month by federal environment commissioner jerry demarco that audited the liberals’ canadian net-zero emissions accountability act concluded the government’s lack of transparency in implementing this legislation made it impossible for the average citizen to understand, much less believe, the trudeau government’s emission targets.
for example, when demarco’s auditors examined 20 of the government’s 149 measures to reduce emissions, it found only nine were on track to achieve their goals, while nine others were faced with challenges and two had encountered significant barriers, such as delays in setting and meeting targets.