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OPINION: Hockey moms, commuters defend pricing pollution in court


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By Paul Kershaw
Guest opinion

The pricing pollution debate heats up as the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal hears arguments about the constitutionality of federal plans to price carbon in provinces that don't establish their own price.

Some express heartfelt concerns that pricing pollution hurts hockey moms, commuters and office workers.

As the founder of Generation Squeeze — a voice for younger Canadians in politics and the market, backed by cutting-edge research — I get it. Our organization represents thousands of hockey moms, commuters and office workers. Many of us feel pinched in the pocket.

By comparison with when our beloved aging parents and grandparents started their careers and families, research shows that younger Canadians earn less (after inflation), despite going to school more, start more often with student debt, pay way more for housing, and accept longer commutes because we are priced out of many places where we grew up.

So the prospect of paying for our pollution as part of the fight against climate change can feel like one more hand in our pocket, reaching for a wallet that is already anemic.

At Generation Squeeze, we are campaigning to adapt policy to make parental time at home more affordable; reduce the costs of child care to no more than $10 a day; rein in home prices; and build more homes, including rental units, closer to where we work and study. We are proud to lead these campaigns.

But we know we can't solve our wallet problems by neglecting climate problems, because that is like playing Russian roulette with our future.

For those who are skeptical about what scientists predict climate change will bring, talk of environmental risks may seem like a revolver empty of most bullets. Spin the cylinder, pull the trigger, and ...

While nothing happens most of the time, you won't find many hockey moms lining up to play Russian roulette with their kids.

Doing too little to prevent the acceleration of climate change is just as risky.

Climate change threatens to swamp our coastal cities, when young people do not have gills to swim.

Climate change threatens to burn our forests, when our skin can't fend off fire, and our lungs can't breathe smoke.

Climate change threatens the fertility of our soil, risking more hunger and malnutrition.

Climate change brings bugs for which our immune systems are not prepared.

Climate change disrupts our economy, making it even more stressful to pay higher home prices with lower earnings and more student debt.

These climate threats are frightening, and the risks to mental health are real.

When Canadian governments do not use all available tools to fend off the worst that climate change has in store, many judge that we discriminate against younger Canadians and future generations. Why? Because not pricing pollution puts at risk our reasonable aspiration to thrive in 2030 and beyond.

The World Health Organization has identified climate change as the greatest risk to human health in the 21st century, which makes pricing pollution an important health intervention. The logic is simple: people pollute more when pollution isn't priced — as demonstrated by Nobel prize-winning research.

For this reason, Generation Squeeze is leading an Intergenerational Climate Coalition into the Courts of Appeal in Saskatchewan and Ontario to support carbon pricing.

We think pricing pollution should be pursued as part of a broader tax shift. The idea is to tax less what we do want (like better earnings for typical people), while taxing more what we don't want (like pollution and crazy home prices), in order to pay for better investments in young and old alike.

Dr. Paul Kershaw is a professor in the UBC school of population health, and founder of Generation Squeeze - a voice for younger Canada in politics and the market, backed by cutting-edge research.

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