B.C.’s Revenue-neutral Carbon Tax

According to Balanced Budget 2008, on July 1, 2008, subject to approval by the legislature, British Columbia, Canada,  will begin to phase in a fully revenue-neutral carbon tax with built-in protection for lower income British Columbians.

The purpose of the carbon tax is to encourage individuals and businesses to make more environmentally responsible choices, reducing their use of fossil fuels and related emissions. The tax has the advantage of providing an incentive without favouring one way to reduce emissions over another. Business and individuals can choose to avoid it by reducing usage, increasing efficiency, changing fuels, adopting new technology or any combination of these approaches.

A higher price for higher-carbon choices also makes greener options more commercially viable, thereby encouraging businesses and entrepreneurs to develop innovative solutions that offer consumers and business affordable, lower or no-carbon emission alternatives.

British Columbia’s carbon tax is based on the following principles:

Broad-based: The carbon tax will apply to virtually all fossil fuels, including gasoline, diesel, natural gas, coal, propane, and home heating fuel, making it among the broadest and most comprehensive in the world.

Phased in: The carbon tax will be phased in to give individuals, businesses, and industry time to adapt, innovate, and reduce the impact of the tax. The carbon tax starts at a rate based on $10 per tonne of associated carbon, or carbon-equivalent, emissions and will rise by $5 a year for the next four years — reaching $30 per tonne by 2012. This works out to 2.41 cents per litre for gasoline, rising gradually to 7.24 cents a litre by 2012. For diesel and home heating oil, it works out to 2.76 cents per litre, rising to 8.27 cents over the same five-year period.

Protection for lower-income households: To help offset the cost of the carbon tax, lower-income British Columbians will receive an annual Climate Action Credit of $100 per adult and $30 per child; the credit will be paid quarterly along with the federal Goods and Services Tax Credit.

Revenue-neutral: The carbon tax will be revenue neutral. Legislation will require a plan to be tabled in the legislature each year, showing how the revenue raised will be returned to taxpayers. All revenue generated by the carbon tax will be returned to individuals and businesses through reductions to other taxes. None of the carbon tax revenue will be used for expenditure programs.

Integrated Approach: The carbon tax is one of several key building blocks to help government reduce B.C.’s greenhouse gas emissions by 33 per cent below 2007 levels by 2020. The carbon tax and complementary measures such as the cap and trade system will be integrated to avoid unfairness or double taxation.

B.C.’s Climate Action Dividend
Separate from and in addition to the tax reductions made possible by the revenue-neutral carbon tax, every British Columbia resident will receive a one-time, $100 Climate Action Dividend to encourage the transition to a greener lifestyle.

It is the government’s hope that British Columbians will apply the funds toward purchases that can help reduce their greenhouse gas emissions and, by doing so, also reduce the amount of carbon tax they would otherwise pay.

Grow Your Own Herbs in Your Dish Drainer

Do you want to grow your own herbs in your kitchen? Here is a cool idea by students at Holon Institute of Technology in Israel. It is a dish drainer where you can make your kitchen greener :-)

Dry-Dishes-and-Grow-Herbs-with-Dish-Drainer

Use Green Materials in the Work Place

Start from your work place to make your office greener by using green materials on a daily basis:

  • Some paper use can’t be avoided, so use recycled paper and envelopes that have been processed and colored using eco-friendly methods.
  • Pens and pencils can also be made of recycled materials, and refillable pens and markers are preferable to disposable ones.
  • Use biodegradable soaps and recycled paper or cloth towels in the bathroom and kitchen, and provide biodegradable cleaners for the custodial staff.
  • Buy office administrative appliance in bulk so that shipping and packaging waste are reduced, and reuse the shipping boxes.
  • Recycling printer cartridges is often free, and recycled replacements are cheaper than new ones.

Small Green Tips, Big Difference for the World

TheGreenTips.com is dedicated to collecting and sharing small green tips with everybody to make big difference for our planet.  Feel free to share your green ideas and opinions to improve our environment. Thank you!