Marc G. Serré
Marc G. Serré
Member of Parliament for Nickel Belt
Letter to the Editor - Offering clarity to Nickel Belt constituents
November 7, 2023

I’d like to take a moment to offer clarity and acknowledge the concerns that I have heard from constituents in my riding. Affordability is top of mind for many based on the feedback I have received. Please know I do hear you, I have been, and will continue to deliver for you and champion your concerns with my parliamentary colleagues. 

This message is echoed by so many Canadians, and the added complexity for those living in rural areas like Nickel Belt. It is undeniable that we have colder winters and that our communities are spread further apart than many. We recognize as a government this can sometimes make it difficult to make greener money-saving choices due to upfront costs. That is why the Greener Home Grant was launched to help financially support Canadians to access more energy efficient options for their homes – from heat pumps to new window-sealing and much more.

There has been a recent campaign launched by Pierre Poilievre, leader of the Conservative party and his team, spreading outright lies concerning some changes made to carbon pricing- namely related to the portion on home heating. He is pushing fear and false information, from denying the science of climate change to misrepresenting details about many government policies and of his own record. I have said it before, I do not choose to play political games for personal gain at the expense of people’s emotions and I am very disappointed that the Conservatives have made fearmongering and disinformation their playbook.   

Here are some facts to help clear the air and dispel falsehoods:

Poilievre likes to claim that much of the increased cost of living is due to the revenue-neutral carbon price (which he calls a carbon tax). He blames inflation and the high cost of food on the carbon price. This is patently false. Poilievre’s big lie about the carbon price is exactly that, a lie. The reality is that Canadians are paying more for energy commodities, some have seen an increase nearing 75% since 2021. This is due to global conflicts, shortages, and other external factors. The Federal Government does not regulate fuel commodities.

When Poilievre says he would “axe the tax”, what he’s really taking an axe to is our planet’s future and to axe the rebates that provide 8/10 families with more than they pay. Since becoming leader of the Conservative party over a year ago, Poilievre has refused to even acknowledge climate change, and fails to present any semblance of a climate plan. As communities across this country were burned by wildfires this summer, Poilievre poured fuel on the fire by spreading disinformation and directing his party to vote against important climate investments. While Canadians were losing their homes to devastating floods, Poilievre failed to rise and quell the concerns with even an attempt at a climate plan.

No one likes taxes, which is why the federal price is revenue neutral. What the Conservatives fail to tell you is that the cost of inaction on climate change is significantly greater than climate action and all of the jobs and economic activity associated with taking action. Over the past five decades, the costs of weather-related disasters like floods, storms and wildfires in Canada have risen. Between 2010 and 2019, insured losses for catastrophic weather events totalled over $18 billion, and the number of catastrophic events was over three times higher than in the 1980s.

When you put a price on something, there will be less of it. By pricing pollution, Canadian innovators have taken initiative to innovate low-carbon alternatives in every sector from transportation to agriculture and industry. This can include things like electric cars and buses to swapping coal furnaces for steelmaking with electric arc technology.

These changes make our industries more attractive to investment, and therefore more competitive in the long term, securing sustainable jobs for workers for generations to come. This also means that our communities do not have to bear the costs of local pollution to our air and waters.

By taking action, we can lead world in the multi-billion-dollar economic opportunity presented by a cleaner and more prosperous economy. In our own community, this looks like leadership in critical minerals and the bioeconomy, along with investing to support Indigenous climate action solutions.

Ultimately, protecting the environment while also tackling national affordability challenges is possible and necessary – which is why we have made great strides in both. Here are just a few examples of those achievements:

Affordability:

Environment:

History has shown that Conservative governments abandon rural Canadians. As someone born and raised in Nickel Belt, I have a deep appreciation for the natural beauty we are surrounded by and the amazing people who live here and I wholeheartedly believe we can both protect the environment which is an instrumental piece to protecting the health of residents while also supporting our economy with measures that create good jobs and drive down costs.

Here are some important links:

Climate Action Incentive payment amounts for 2023-24

The federal carbon pollution pricing benchmark

Climate change: our plan (Federal)

Sincerely,

Marc G. Serré MP for Nickel Belt, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, and Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Official Languages

www.marcserre.ca

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