The Liberals are pushing ahead with their oil and gas emissions cap, a production ban in everything but name, while failing to study how it will impact Canadian families.
Conservative MP Arnold Viersen asked the Liberals to spell out the real-world consequences:
- What will it mean for the price of groceries, gas, and home heating over the next eight years?
- How many jobs will be lost in the oil and gas sector?
- What impact will it have on imports from countries with lower environmental and human-rights standards?
- How will it affect other sectors like construction, manufacturing, finance, and hospitality?
- And how does Canada compete if global rivals like Russia, China, Saudi Arabia, or the U.S. face no such restrictions?
Instead of answering, Environment Minister Julie Dabrusin pointed to modelling in the Canada Gazette. That “analysis” claimed the cost to families would be “minimal” because energy prices are set internationally, but it gave no breakdowns for household bills. Instead, the government focused on industry stats: oil and gas production is projected to rise 16% with the cap versus 17% without, and labour spending to grow 53% instead of 55% — a 1.6% difference Ottawa is holding up as proof Canadians won’t feel a thing.
The government never studied the effect on families’ wallets. By refusing to account for higher energy costs, job losses, or the knock-on impact on food and housing, Ottawa is leaving Canadians in the dark about how much this policy will cost them.
The emissions cap, announced in November 2024, is supposed to cut oil and gas emissions by one-third starting in 2030.
One thought on “Liberals admit to pushing emissions cap without studying impact on Canadian families”