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Provincial Politics

Alberta sticking to its gas tax formula as Ottawa announces cut amid high prices

Apr 14, 2026 | 4:28 PM

The Alberta government says it won’t axe its fuel tax yet, after Prime Minister Mark Carney announced federal measures to give Canadians relief at the pumps.

Alberta Finance Minister Nate Horner says he supports Ottawa’s move but that the province is sticking with its existing fuel tax at least until July in part because prices are so unpredictable.

The province’s current relief program would eliminate the tax of 13 cents per litre if the average benchmark North American West Texas Intermediate price remains at or above US$90 per barrel through portions of May and June.

Alberta Opposition NDP Leader Naheed Nenshi has been calling on Premier Danielle Smith’s United Conservatives to drop the levy, since the military conflict in the Middle East sent energy costs soaring.

Nenshi says the province needs to be more nimble in the face of extraordinary price fluctuations but that it appears to be padding its pockets with royalty revenues while Albertans struggle.

The federal fuel tax break is to begin Monday and is expected to save Canadians 10 cents per litre on regular gasoline until Labour Day.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 14, 2026.