Manitoba seeking legal advice on federal government’s carbon pricing plan
WINNIPEG — Manitoba became the second province Thursday to raise the spectre of a court challenge against the federal government’s carbon-pricing plan.
Premier Brian Pallister said he is seeking a legal opinion on whether the federal government has the constitutional authority to force provinces to either impose a price on carbon or set up a cap and trade system.
“In particular, that legal opinion will focus on whether the federal government can limit the exercise of provincial jurisdictions to only two options — cap and trade, and carbon tax — without accommodating other provincial measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions,” Pallister said.
The premier said Manitoba should get credit for billions of dollars spent building up a hydroelectric system that provides 98 per cent of the province’s electricity. Had Manitoba adopted cheaper, fossil-fuel power generation like some other provinces have, he said emissions would be more than double the current 21 megatonnes a year.


