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Opinion: Take GST off home heating, offer free heat pumps

NDP tables 3 ‘common sense’ bills to deal with climate crisis and high cost of living
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Last week the federal NDP put forward a motion that sets out a truly fair, common-sense approach to deal with two of the most important issues of our time — the climate catastrophes that we are living through every year across this country, and the struggle that many Canadians are facing just to get by.

In a nutshell, the motion recognized that Canadians are facing increasing costs of the climate crisis and at the same time are facing rising fuel costs for gas at the pumps and in their home heating while the gas and oil companies that are charging those costs are reaping in record profits. And on top of that, both oil and gas heating are contributing to the carbon emissions that are fuelling the climate crisis. It’s a vicious circle.

The NDP motion proposes three straightforward solutions to that situation: take the GST off home heating; provide heat pumps free to lower and medium-income families in an easily accessed program; and fund that program with a windfall tax on the record profits being made by fossil fuel companies.

This motion was a response to both the Liberal’s bungled program to provide relief to some Canadians by taking the carbon tax off home heating oil and the Conservative’s motion to extend that relief to natural gas for home heating as well. Both those ideas fail the fairness test of the federation.

The Liberal program benefits predominantly Atlantic Canadians where many homes are heated with oil while the Conservative motion leaves British Columbians and Quebecois out in the cold, since families in those provinces don’t pay the federal carbon tax.

One of the key steps the NDP included in this motion is to take the GST off home heating bills. The GST is not supposed to be charged on the necessities of life. We don’t pay GST on food. And I think everyone would agree that home heating is a necessity of life in Canada. Removing the GST on home heating bills would save everyone money across the country — helping people to get by in a truly fair way.

At the same time, action on climate change is also a necessity. This was a summer that marked a shift in public opinion about climate change. Public awareness that climate change is not a theoretical event somewhere in the future. We are living it today.

People struggled to breathe across the country this summer. Thousands had to leave their homes in hastily planned evacuations, including the entire city of Yellowknife. People lost their homes. People died.

This year was even worse than 2021. That was the year of the heat dome in late June followed by an unprecedented atmospheric river event in November. What many people forget, or don’t even know, is that 619 people died of heatstroke in Metro Vancouver during the 2021 heat dome. That was the real tragedy of 2021.

Most of those people lived in the lower-income parts of the city, in neighbourhoods with no access to shady green spaces. They died in apartment complexes with no air conditioning. They died with their windows closed against the stifling heat.

Providing people, and especially lower-income Canadians, with air conditioning would save hundreds of lives during future heat events. And if we do that with heat pumps, switching out oil and gas heating units to provide comfortable electric heat in winter as well as air conditioning in summer, we’ll save lives and cut emissions as well. The incredible efficiency of heat pumps will also significantly reduce energy bills, further helping Canadians make ends meet.

Right now, the government incentives to install heat pumps are time-consuming, difficult and almost impossible to afford for lower-income families. We need a simple, essentially free program to bring this benefit to as many Canadians as possible.

Over the past few years, fossil fuel corporations have raked in record profits as the world oil price soared. The five big oil companies in Canada made $38 billion in profits last year alone. The Parliamentary Budget Officer recently reported that a windfall profit tax would bring in over $4 billion — and that could create a fund that would provide for tens of thousands of heat pumps every year.

Cutting the GST off home heating costs, providing free, efficient heat pumps, and funding all that through an excess profit tax on oil companies — these are more common sense solutions from the NDP.

— Richard Cannings, is the MP for South Okanagan-West Kootenay



Monique Tamminga

About the Author: Monique Tamminga

Monique brings 20 years of award-winning journalism experience to the role of editor at the Penticton Western News. Of those years, 17 were spent working as a senior reporter and acting editor with the Langley Advance Times.
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