Canadians are overwhelmingly split on climate change and carbon taxes, a study from Advanis finds.
Over the past year, Advanis asked in excess of 33,000 Canadians about climate change and their level of support for a carbon tax, contributing to the database of opinions to support evidence-based decision making.
Opinions on climate change and a carbon tax vary significantly by several socio-demographic factors, most notably province/territory, but also gender, age, income, and rural/urban residence. Advanis found that a strong majority of Canadians believe humans are the dominant factor in climate change (73%) and Canada should be a leader in reducing global warming (72%), though agreement ranges from 83% of those in Quebec to just over 50% of those in Saskatchewan and Alberta.
Other key findings:
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Despite thinking Canada should be a leader against global warming, Canadians are split as to whether a carbon tax is the answer.
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Nationally, almost the same percentage of Canadians are in favour of as opposed to a tax (46% vs. 44%). The remaining 1-in-10 aren't sure.
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Canadians who think humans are the key reason for global warming show far higher support for a carbon tax (61%) than those who don't (3%).
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There are stark regional differences:
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Only those in Quebec, Ontario, and Nova Scotia have more citizens in favour of a carbon tax than opposed.
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Those in BC, PEI, Northwest Territories, and Newfoundland and Labrador are moderately opposed.
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Those in New Brunswick, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta are strongly opposed.
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The majority of Canadians do not believe a carbon tax will be used by governments to reduce carbon pollution (55% say it won't; 36% say it will; 9% aren't sure).
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Not surprisingly, those who believe the tax revenue will be used to curb pollution are much more in favour of a carbon tax (89% vs. 14%).
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Only 36% of Canadians think a carbon tax will change their personal behaviour (36% say it will; 49% say it won't).
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Half say a carbon tax won't change their behaviour, but 44% of these people say they would change their behaviour (reduce their carbon footprint) to save $250/year.
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Opinions on climate change and a carbon tax vary significantly by several socio-demographic factors, most notably province/territory, but also gender, age, income, and rural/urban residence.
Note: There are two main types of carbon pricing: carbon taxes and emissions trading systems (also known as cap and trade). In this research, we asked only about level of support for a carbon tax. Canada has both carbon taxes and cap and trade systems in place.
Data collection consisted of a random sample of over 33,000 Canadians; overall results accurate to within +/- 0.5%, 19 times out of 20; margin of error is wider among subsets of the population.
Want to know more details?
Read the full report here: http://www.tellcityhall.ca/surveys.html (See Carbon Tax, Selected Results)
Image by Michal Jarmoluk from Pixabay