Poilievre says he’ll repeal carbon price law, including the industrial charge
- Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre stated he will repeal carbon pricing laws if elected, including levies on industries like steel and aluminum.
- Prime Minister Mark Carney recently reduced the consumer carbon levy to zero and aims to repeal the law if elected.
- Poilievre criticized the industrial carbon levy, stating it adversely affects industries already struggling with U.S. Tariffs.
- He plans to expand clean technology tax credits to reduce emissions.
55 Articles
55 Articles


Poilievre says his goal will be to greenlight Ring of Fire permits within six months
Breaking News, Sports, Manitoba, Canada
After Mark Carney ends consumer carbon price, Pierre Poilievre pledges to scrap carbon levy on industrial emitters
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is promising to fully dismantle the federal government’s national carbon pricing regime, going further than Prime Minister Mark Carney by vowing to scrap the industrial pricing system for heavy polluters.
Poilievre Says Conservatives Would Remove Both Consumer and Industrial Carbon Tax
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says his government would completely remove the carbon tax for both consumers and industrial emitters, adding that Prime Minister Mark Carney’s recently signed directive does not go far enough. “A common sense, Canada-first Conservative government will repeal the entire carbon tax, including the federal backstop that requires provinces to impose industrial taxes,” Poilievre said during a March 17 press confer…
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