Canada’s Finance Minister Defends Her Plan on Rising Gas Prices: What You Need to Know
If you’ve filled up your tank recently, you already feel it—gas prices across Canada keep climbing, and many Canadians are asking what the federal government is actually doing about it.
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland recently addressed those concerns, defending Ottawa’s approach to affordability. Her message was straightforward: “we did our part.”
But what does that really mean in practice—and is it enough to make a difference at the pump?
The Finance Minister’s Defense: What She’s Claiming
Freeland said the government has already taken steps to ease fuel costs and household pressure. She pointed to temporary tax relief and targeted financial support as evidence of action.
Her main argument: Ottawa has acted where it can, especially for lower- and middle-income Canadians.
Key measures highlighted:
- Temporary reductions in fuel-related taxes in some provinces
- Enhanced GST/HST rebates for households
- Pauses on planned carbon price increases in certain regions
Still, critics question whether these steps meaningfully offset rising fuel costs, which have increased significantly over the past year.
What the Government Has Actually Done
1. Temporary Fuel Tax Relief
Some provinces saw short-term reductions in fuel taxes, saving drivers roughly 5 to 8 cents per litre at peak impact.
However, the relief is limited:
- It is temporary
- Savings can be partially offset by market pricing
- It does not address long-term price drivers
Energy analysts argue this is short-term relief rather than a structural fix.
2. GST/HST Rebate Increases
The government also adjusted GST credits to help households cope with inflation.
For example:
- Low-income families may receive $100 to $200 per quarter
- Payments are income-based, not fuel-use-based
This means support is not directly tied to how much someone spends on gas.
Impact: Helpful for vulnerable households, but uneven for middle-income commuters who drive more frequently.
3. Carbon Price Adjustments
The federal government delayed planned increases to carbon pricing in some areas to avoid additional pressure on consumers.
- Estimated savings: 2 to 3 cents per litre
- Temporary in nature
- Politically and environmentally controversial
Supporters see it as flexibility during inflation. Critics argue it weakens climate policy consistency.
Why Gas Prices Are Still Rising
Even with government measures, most fuel price movements are driven by global forces.
Major factors include:
- Global oil market volatility
- OPEC+ production decisions limiting supply
- Geopolitical tensions affecting oil distribution
- Weak Canadian dollar increasing import costs
- Refinery constraints in North America
In short: Canada has limited control over most price drivers.
What Ottawa Can Actually Control
Federal influence mainly comes through taxes.
Rough breakdown:
- Carbon pricing: ~14–17 cents per litre
- Federal fuel excise tax: ~10 cents per litre
Together, Ottawa controls roughly a quarter of the retail fuel price, while global oil costs make up the majority.
The Carbon Tax Debate
The carbon tax remains the most politically sensitive factor in gas pricing discussions.
Government position:
- Carbon pricing is returned to households through rebates
- Most families receive more back than they pay
- It is intended to support long-term emissions reduction
Critics argue:
- Rural and long-distance drivers pay disproportionately more
- Rising fuel costs still hit commuters directly at the pump
- Rebate timing does not always match price spikes
The result is a persistent political divide over whether the system is fair in practice.
What Happens Next
The government has signaled limited new intervention but may consider:
- Extending temporary fuel tax relief
- Adjusting rebate amounts if inflation remains high
- Increasing investment in clean fuel alternatives
- Strengthening oversight of fuel pricing behavior
However, officials acknowledge that global oil prices remain the dominant factor.
Should Canadians Expect Relief Soon?
The reality is mixed.
- Some relief exists: rebates and temporary tax cuts help certain households
- But it is limited: most measures are short-term and indirect
- Global markets still dominate pricing
For many Canadians, the gap between policy action and real-world fuel costs remains noticeable.
Bottom Line
When the Finance Minister says “we did our part,” she is referring to targeted tax relief and rebates designed to soften the impact of inflation—not a full control of gas prices.
But for drivers facing weekly price swings, the question remains open: whether those measures are enough to meaningfully ease pressure at the pump, or simply cushion a much larger global trend.


