CTA enviroTruck Initiative Gets Boost from David Suzuki
Foundation
(Ottawa, November 30, 2007) --
When it was presented to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance this
week, the Canadian Trucking Alliance’s enviroTruck initiative
received a welcome boost from the David Suzuki Foundation, no less. During the
question and answer period at the committee’s pre-budget hearing held in
Ottawa, Massimo Pacetti, Liberal MP from the riding of
Saint-Léonard—Saint Michel, asked Pierre Sadik, Policy Advisor in
the Foundation’s Sustainability Program, what he thought of CTA’s
enviroTruck proposal. Mr. Sadik’s answer was encouraging and supportive of
the enviroTruck concept: “From what I’ve heard here today, it sounds quite
useful and would be quite helpful. I’m very pleased with the criteria [for]
contaminants that [CTA CEO] Mr. Bradley was talking about, the reduction of NOx
and the particulate matter.”
Mr. Pacetti’s reaction to
this comment showed what CTA hopes is an emerging enthusiasm among lawmakers for
an endorsement of the enviroTruck approach. He said, “I’m just wondering
why you wouldn’t work...more closely with some of the groups like the Canadian
Trucking Alliance...It would be easier for us to help make recommendations to
the government.”
Over the past several months,
since the enviroTruck concept was developed and endorsed by motor carriers
across the country, CTA has recognized that support from respected environmental
activists such as the Suzuki Foundation will be key to its acceptance by
government. The federal government in particular will need to step up to the
plate to provide the right incentives to the industry to help deal with the
increased costs of moving to the new generation of cleaner, more fuel efficient
equipment, which was the main thrust of CTA’s budget proposals. So the
comments by one of the Suzuki Foundation’s senior officials this week were
welcome indeed.
The Foundation’s
presentation to the committee had concentrated on the need for a carbon tax. In
responding to a question on how the environmental community would react to the
removal of the excise tax on diesel fuel by harmonizing it with the GST, a
proposal advanced by CTA to eliminate this regressive form of taxation, Mr.
Sadik said “we wouldn’t have a problem with the removal of excise taxes
that were initially earmarked for deficit reduction.”
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