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Senators approve second Bill C-234 amendment

Senators approve second Bill C-234 amendment

The amendment shortens the sunset clause from eight years to three

By Diego Flammini
Staff Writer
Farms.com

Canadian senators voted in favour of a second amendment to Bill C-234.

On Dec. 11, senators voted 44-40 in support of Senator Yuen Pau Woo’s amendment that changes the sunset clause of the bill from eight years to three.

This means three years after the bill receives royal assent, whichever party is in government at the time can decide whether to extend the legislation.

When Sen. Woo introduced the amendment on Dec. 7, he argued the three-year sunset clause puts Bill C-234 in line with the federal government’s carbon price exemption on heating oil.

With this recent amendment passed, the bill heads back to the House of Commons where MPs will debate it.

The first change to the bill removes the carbon tax exemption for barn and building heating.

Senate supporters of Bill C-234 are concerned the legislation won’t receive the time it needs. Because it’s a private member’s bill, the government can decide when to bring it up for debate.

“The Senate has passed a gutted Bill #C234, sending it back to the House of Commons where it could die through process,” Sen. David Wells, who sponsored the bill in the Senate, said on X. “Although Canada’s on-farm grain dryers are one step closer to much-needed relief from this unfair tax, it is another insult to Canada’s farmers, ranchers and growers who need to heat / cool their barns and efficiently run their greenhouses.”

Farmers are concerned too.

Producer groups are urging MPs to reject the amendments.

Lawmakers need “to pass the legislation as originally agreed upon,” Kyle Larkin, executive director of Grain Growers of Canada, said on X.

The National Farmers Union (NFU), which supports carbon pricing, is also calling for the House’s support for Bill C-234.

Farmers can do their part to minimize emissions, but that takes investment. And the carbon tax takes potential investment dollars out of farmers’ pockets.

“The NFU recognizes that farmers can improve building efficiency and switch heating sources to clean technologies like heat pumps, but these renovations are capital intensive and farmers will need extensive financial support to decarbonize the heating of barns and greenhouses,” Glenn Wright, former vice president of the NFU and a Sask. farmer, said in a statement.


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