To get the carbon tax/Alberta talk back in this thread, I'll post the following link.
http://news.nationalpost.com/news/wo...where-on-earth
	Quote:
	
	
		| The average 1 megawatt-plus ground mounted solar system will cost  US73 cents a watt by 2025 compared with US$1.14 now, a 36 percent  drop, said Jenny Chase, head of solar analysis for New Energy Finance. That’s in step with other forecasts. 
 
 GTM Research expects some parts of the U.S. Southwest approaching  US$1 a watt today, and may drop as low as US75 cents in 2021, according  to its analyst MJ Shiao. The U.S. Energy Department’s National Renewable  Energy Lab expects costs of about US$1.20 a watt now declining to US$1  by 2020. By 2030, current technology will squeeze out most potential  savings, said Donald Chung, a senior project leader. The International  Energy Agency expects utility-scale generation costs to fall by another  25 percent on average in the next five years.  The International  Renewable Energy Agency anticipates a further drop of 43 percent to 65  percent for solar costs by 2025. That would bring to 84 percent the  cumulative decline since 2009.
 
 
 The solar supply chain is experiencing “a Wal-Mart effect” from  higher volumes and lower margins, according to Sami Khoreibi, founder  and chief executive officer of Enviromena Power Systems, an Abu  Dhabi-based developer.
 
 
 The speed at which the price of solar will drop below coal varies in  each country. Places that import coal or tax polluters with a carbon  price, such as Europe and Brazil, will see a crossover in the 2020s, if  not before. Countries with large domestic coal reserves such as India  and China will probably take longer.
 | 
	
 
Assuming this  article is correct, and the all-in cost of new solar-driven grid capacity (i.e.  with backup power/storage all included) will be cheaper than coal by the  mid-late 2030's for sunny places like Alberta, I would recommend the following (given my assumption that GHG emissions are a serious problem that should be dealt with in a serious but efficient manner):
1)  Keep the carbon tax, and continue to escalate it as planned (i.e. +10$/T  CO2 per year until it reaches >$100/T CO2 or so, where real drops in  emissions will have happened; keep increasing it as needed). This drives efficiency and encourages  market and individual migration away from GHG-emitting energy sources. This would also drive development into CO2 capture and sequestration, which would become cheaper than paying the tax at some point here as well.
2)  Don't have governments spend carbon tax revenues on green power  generation or capital projects or efficiency programs or transit on our  behalf. With the cost of said generation slated to go down, let the cost  crossover happen and let private industry make the decision when and what to invest  without spending public capital to do so. Basically, don't spend money  now for something that will cost 2/3 or 1/2 as much in a decade just to signal virtue. This goes for  other costly regulatory changes like closing coal generating plans - scrap those plans and  let the market decide once carbon is priced. 
If utility companies find it cheaper to build transmission capacity and buy green power from BC, fine. If they want to build solar/wind/nuclear plants, fine - let their shareholders bear the risk of those decisions, but incent them to make that decision by moving the domestic power market through pricing.
3) Reinvest all of the revenues in broad tax relief back to the sectors from which the tax was taken. 
For  individuals, divide the expected revenue paid by individuals by the  population and increase the Alberta basic income tax  exemption appropriately to offset the tax take (with a credit for minors/non-taxpayers in a household). For those whose incomes fall below the old income tax  exemption line, refund the same savings as every other Albertan gets, using the existing GST rebate system; for those between the old and new exemption lines, reimburse them proportionally. Consider rebating a little more for rural people since we need rural people to have a well-developed province and because their individual expenses are higher than urban folk.
Owing to treaty obligations, indigenous Albertans on reserve would get the same rebate as all other non-tax paying Albertans, but would still pay the tax up front (which would also drive efficiency for that population).
For  companies, determine the expected total tax to be paid by corporations  and divide that by the total corporate tax collected to get a single tax reduction. If the expected intake works  out to 0.5% off the small and large business rates, apply it equally to  both rates. There is no sensible reason to discriminate against large companies who pay large amounts of business tax and hire large numbers of people to make the small business tax number lower.
High efficiency companies will flourish and others will come here for  the low tax rate, low efficiency companies will struggle and will be eaten up by high efficiency ones, middling efficiency  companies will do as well as before.
4) For trade, apply a  tariff on incoming goods equal to the non-taxed carbon emissions intrinsic to the  goods from jurisdictions without carbon costing. Refund the tax on  goods going to non-carbon cost jurisdictions by the difference in the carbon price (100% rebate for those destinations that have no price).  
Basically, don't make exported oil or wheat or manufactured goods more expensive for the buyer than  imported oil/wheat/goods because of the hidden CO2 in its production and  transportation. Don't shoot ourselves in  the foot, don't make special exemptions for special industries -  Farmers would pay but since a certain percentage of their product is destined for export (and wouldn't be competing against non-taxed domestic crops),  they would be reimbursed depending on where how much of each crop was shipped.
==========
The trouble with our  NDP plan is it is heavy on the wasted bureaucracy-driven central  planning and wedge-politics socialist wealth-distribution, and  lean on the tax relief part. This paradoxically makes the carbon tax  easier to repeal for future governments, because if future governments were  forced to raise taxes significantly to repeal a carbon tax (rather than to cancel mostly wasteful capital and wedge-politics spending), it would be  much harder politically for them to do so.