Withholding carbon tax from Ottawa could cause 'significant errors' in Sask.'s future financials: auditor - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 11:19 AM | Calgary | 6.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatchewan

Withholding carbon tax from Ottawa could cause 'significant errors' in Sask.'s future financials: auditor

Earlier this year the provincial government said it would no longer remit the federal carbon levy on natural gas. It would later extend that decision toelectricity used to heat homes.

Provincial government did not respond, but said it believes its taxes are paid in full

A man in a dark suit and a white shirt stands in front of a podium. The Saskatchewan flag is in the background.
The Saskatchewan government says its position remains that the federal carbon levy should be 'removed from everything for everyone.' (Alexander Quon/CBC)

Saskatchewan's auditor has warned that the province's decision to not collect and remit part ofthe federal carbon tax could cause "significant errors" in the province's futurefinancial statements.

Earlier this year the provincial government said it would no longer remit the federal carbon levy on natural gas. It would later extend that decision toelectricity used to heat homes.

Saskatchewan implemented the change in response to the federal government's decision toexempt home heating oil, which is primarily used in Atlantic Canada.

The province said Ottawa's decision tonotsimilarly exempt natural gas was unfair.

According to the province, approximately370,000 residential SaskEnergy customers use natural gas to heat their homes. That's 85 per cent of homes in Saskatchewan. Thirteen per cent of households heat their homes using electricity, according to the province.

'Materially misstated'

Provincial auditor Tara Clemettwrote in her office's annual audit that between January and March 2024, the province did not pay all charges required under thefederal government'sGreenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act, the legislation that lays out the carbon levy.

Although it did not have a significant impact on Saskatchewan's financial statement forthe 2023-2024 fiscal year, it is cause for concern, Clemett wrote.

"[Saskatchewan's]consolidated financial statements may become materially misstated in future periods from continued non-compliance with[theGreenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act]," Clemett wrote.Her office clarified that material misstatements are "significant errors."

LISTEN| Carbon tax and conspiracy theories in Saskatchewan:

It's not clear how much money was not remitted to the federal government as part of the province's policy shift.

As part of the 2022-2023 fiscal year,SaskEnergyremitted $172 million in carbon taxto the federal government. The carbon tax rate has increased since then.

The provincial government did not directly respond to the auditor's findings. Instead, itprovided a statement saying it believes the province's taxes are paid in full.

"Our position remains that the carbon tax should be removed from everything for everyone," the province said in a statement.

Saskatchewan'sOpposition NDP similarly did not answer questions about the auditor's findings. Instead, ittargeted Premier Scott Moe's financial record.

"We've seen wild fluctuations in our financial position this year alone swinging from a billion-dollar projected surplus to a half a billion-dollar deficit to now a sudden modest surplus propped up by his large tax and cost-of-living hikes," said Trent Wotherspoon, the NDP's finance critic.

With files from Pratyush Dayal, Kevin O'Connor