-8 points
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Yes I received a rebate that covers an insignificant fraction of the Carbon taxes that I paid throughout the year.

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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22 points

If that’s truly the case then you’re exactly the kind of person that the tax is made for.

If you’re including a perceived increase in prices in things that’s aren’t petrochemicals then you’re misinformed as the carbon tax accounts for so little of the price increases that it’s not even worth talking about (0.15% of the inflation in 2022 based on a study made by the parliamentary budget officer).

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15 points

I’m interested what you spend your money on that’s so Carbon Tax heavy. I live super far North, use 6000l oil to heat my home every year and the rebate I get would cover around 11000l of oil. So 50% of the annual rebate (it’s 4 payments per year btw) covers my heating, and 50% covers driving and indirect costs. I also take advantage of grants and rebates for upgrading my home where I can (I don’t know if they are funded from Carbon Tax though).

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0 points

Because Even though my wife has to stay home to look after our disabled son and they go by household income , I make over the amount that gets one. Never get a rebate even though I could really fucking use one.

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7 points

I am an old guy who does not have auto banking set up. I get a cheque every few months.

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5 points

Damn, I keep forgetting to set that up. Now I have to go to the bank in 30 below weather. 😠🥶

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3 points
*

You can also deposit cheques by using the smartphone app for most(?) banks.

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2 points

Alberta is rough!

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4 points

I’m assuming you left to go do this.

Now that you’re back set it up for next time before you forget!

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28 points

We love getting the refund. After making a concerted effort to install a heat pump myself and purchase an affordable EV it helps pay for about a month’s worth of electricity each time we get it. We don’t consume any carbon based fuels at our home any longer. So it’s a big bonus for us. Next up is solar panels I think.

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0 points

A month of electricity, won’t even cover that now. If I moved to an EV and electric heating my bill would be more insane then it already is.

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3 points

You get to offset gas for your car with less expensive electricity. We save about $100 or more a month in gas. Electric baseboard heating would definitely be expensive. Our oil bill was getting crazy bad, and with the recent inflation it would have been that much worse. Our heat pump keeps things comfortable at home in the winter and summer. If it gets too chilly we can use a space heater as we need. Overall per year we are still saving hundreds going electric.

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5 points

What do you do for water heating?

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11 points

Electric hot water tanks are a thing. So are electric tankless systems.

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4 points
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I’m aware but I haven’t heard people’s experiences with them. I ask because I’m shopping for water heating right now and debating the expense of getting 240 run to the water heater for a heat pump.

Electric tankless sounds impossible (yes, I know they exist, I just mean they don’t sound like something that should be able to), since the amount of BTUs required to run a gas tankless at peak is absolutely nuts – tankless gas water-heaters run on 3/4" pipe instead of the normal 1/2" since they need to have so much burst heat. That doesn’t sound possible for electric.

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1 point

Electric

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5 points

This is the best summary I could come up with:


The quarterly payments go out to every tax-filing adult household in the eight provinces where the federal carbon tax applies: Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador.

Either these folks are actually missing out because they haven’t filed their income taxes, or they’re simply not noticing the money when it arrives, or they’re mistaking it for some other type of payment from the government.

Underpinning all this is “a failure at the most basic level of retail political communication” by the federal Liberal government about one its flagship policies, says Shachi Kurl, president of the Angus Reid Institute.

She says that may have been a good strategy in 2019, when Canadians saw climate change as a top priority, but the Liberals have failed to adapt their message to 2024, when the cost of living has become a more pressing concern.

In 2022, Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault asked Canadian banks to refer to them as climate action incentive payments, which is the official term the federal government uses.

The money typically goes out on the 15th of January, April, July and October, unless the 15th falls on a Saturday or Sunday or federal holiday, in which case payments are issued on the last business day prior to the 15th.


The original article contains 1,144 words, the summary contains 209 words. Saved 82%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

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