Re-inventing how Canadians stay in touch.

Governments should scrap carbon taxes and red tape instead of borrowing billions for pipelines

Jul 3, 2026

It takes a special kind of incompetence to ban a project and then force taxpayers to pay billions to build it anyway

OTTAWA, Ont. – The Canadian Taxpayers Federation is calling on Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith to scrap carbon taxes and repeal anti-pipeline laws instead of borrowing billions of dollars for a proposed pipeline.

“Governments are blocking pipelines with carbon taxes and red tape and then wasting taxpayers’ money trying to get projects built,” said Franco Terrazzano, CTF federal director. “It’s unsustainable for taxpayers to keep subsidizing projects because governments are in the way.

Governments are stalling vital pipeline projects with a carbon tax and red tape. It is time to end the debt cycle and let private industry lead the way

Franco Terrazzano
Commentaries

Kris-Sims

Kris Sims
Commentaries

“The real solution is for politicians to stop roadblocking development so job creators can build major projects without taxpayers’ money.”

Smith and Carney announced that the Alberta government is proposing to build a pipeline along the existing Trans Mountain pipeline corridor.

In its 85-page submission to Ottawa, the Smith government estimates that the cost of constructing the pipeline will be between $35.2 billion and $43.7 billion.

The private company’s “economic interest through construction will be 10 per cent” while the federal and Alberta governments “will own equal shares of the balance of the project,” according to the Government of Canada.

The Alberta government signed an agreement with the federal government to hike the province’s industrial carbon tax “six and a half times” higher by 2040, according to Carney.

A Leger poll shows 68 per cent of Canadians believe businesses pass most or some of the cost of the industrial carbon tax on consumers. Meanwhile, just 12 per cent believe businesses pay most of the cost.

Oil companies and economists have stated carbon taxes, the Memorandum of Understanding with Ottawa and anti-pipeline laws are stopping companies from spending private money to build pipelines in Canada.

“We have created a set of national policies and regulations that make resource development and investment in Canada uncompetitive with the rest of the world,” Jon McKenzie, Cenovus Energy CEO, said last month.

“Governments need to scrap all carbon taxes and get rid of red tape that’s getting in the way,” said Kris Sims, CTF Alberta director. “The amount of money being spent on the pipeline could build more than 80,000 houses in Alberta.

“Smith needs to spend her energy fighting Carney’s carbon taxes and standing up to Ottawa so pipelines get built with private company money instead of borrowing money to pay for this government-caused problem.”

For more information & interviews:
Kris Sims, Canadian Taxpayers Federation
Email: [email protected] 

📢 For press release submissions and distributions, click here.

Explore more on Pipelines, Carbon tax, Canadian economy, Federal debt and deficit


The views, opinions, and positions expressed by our columnists and contributors are solely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of our publication.

© Troy Media

Troy Media empowers Canadian community news outlets by providing independent, insightful analysis and commentary. Our mission is to support local media in helping Canadians stay informed and engaged by delivering reliable content that strengthens community connections and deepens understanding across the country.

Troy Media

Independent journalism, free to read and use.

Daily commentary and analysis from Canada's trusted editorial network. All content is free to use, but you need an account to download.

Register for free access Log in to your account

Join the Discussion

We’d love to hear your thoughts. Become a free member to join our discussion threads. Troy Media welcomes civil, relevant discussion. Commenting is a privilege, not a right. All comments are subject to moderation.

By submitting a comment, you agree to our rules and policies.

0 Comments

By commenting, you agree that:

  • Anonymous or false identities are not permitted
  • Personal attacks, defamation, hate speech, threats, spam, or off-topic posts will be removed
  • Comments must address the article, not other commenters
  • Moderation decisions are final

Troy Media may remove comments or close commenting at any time. If you want debate, argue ideas. If you want chaos, comment elsewhere.

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This
Secret Link