Quebec reimbursing farmers for fuel tax, says measure will help competitiveness
DRUMMONDVILLE — Quebec Premier Christine Fréchette has responded to pressure from the agriculture sector, promising to reimburse millions of dollars to farmers for fuel taxes linked to the province’s carbon market.
Starting in July, more than 15,000 farmers will begin to be reimbursed for the fuel taxes. The government has pledged to transfer a total of $87 million to farmers for the taxes they will pay in 2026 and 2027, with the money coming out of Quebec’s climate change fund.
With Friday’s announcement, Fréchette is fulfilling a commitment she had made and addressing the many complaints that had been raised for several years by the province’s professional agricultural trade union, Union des producteurs agricoles, or UPA.
On the sidelines of a biofood industry event in Drummondville, Que., Fréchette told reporters that despite the reimbursements, she didn’t think farmers no longer had incentives to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions.











