| McGuinty Says One of Canada's Largest Polluters 
    Won't Be Looking at Carbon Tax   Feb 21 - Canadian Press
 Ontario won't join British Columbia in creating a carbon tax to reduce 
    greenhouse gas emissions, Premier Dalton McGuinty said Thursday, adding his 
    province's name to a growing list that have vetoed the idea in favour of 
    other alternatives to tackle climate change.
 
 The tax, a North American first, is "well-suited to B.C., its economy and 
    the direction it's pursuing," McGuinty said after touring a high school in 
    Guelph, Ont.
 
 "But we're doing something differently here in Ontario that suits our 
    economy and the direction that we're pursuing."
 
 Ontario's strategy includes a renewed commitment to shutting down the 
    province's biggest polluters - coal-fired generating plants - which the 
    McGuinty Liberals failed to accomplish during their first term in 
    government.
 
 "It is not an easy thing to do because you've got to convert to cleaner 
    sources of electricity and you've got to convince people to use less 
    electricity," said McGuinty, whose brother David is the Liberal environment 
    critic in the House of Commons.
 
 The province is also investing heavily in public transit, particularly in 
    the Greater Toronto Area, McGuinty added.
 
 The premier wouldn't say whether he would consider a carbon tax in the 
    future, but said it definitely won't be in the next provincial budget, 
    expected in the spring.
 
 British Columbia became the first jurisdiction in North America to introduce 
    a carbon tax on consumers when Finance Minister Carole Taylor tabled her 
    provincial budget on Tuesday. But it's failed to take off in other 
    provinces.
 
 Alberta, by far the largest greenhouse gas emitter in Canada, opposes a 
    carbon tax, and Manitoba also said it won't consider it. Federal Environment 
    Minister John Baird has nixed the idea as well.
 
 Nova Scotia Premier Rodney MacDonald has said he may consider a carbon tax 
    in the future, but that he needs more convincing information proving that a 
    carbon tax actually results in lowering greenhouse gas emissions.
 
 Quebec, however, introduced a form of carbon tax last year that directs 
    revenues to initiatives supporting green technology.
 
 The Quebec tax collects just under one cent per litre from petroleum 
    companies in the province, raising about $200 million a year to pay for 
    energy-saving initiatives.
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