An Act to amend the Income Tax Act (heat recovery tax credit)

Sponsor

Greg McLean  Conservative

Introduced as a private member’s bill. (These don’t often become law.)

Status

Second reading (House), as of March 19, 2026

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Summary

This is from the published bill.

This enactment amends the Income Tax Act to provide a tax credit to certain businesses that acquire qualifying heat recovery equipment to recover heat produced by industrial processes and convert it in order to generate energy.

Elsewhere

All sorts of information on this bill is available at LEGISinfo, an excellent resource from Parliament. You can also read the full text of the bill.

Bill numbers are reused for different bills each new session. Perhaps you were looking for one of these other C-269s:

C-269 (2022) An Act to amend the Telecommunications Act (suicide prevention)
C-269 (2021) An Act to amend the Fisheries Act (prohibition — deposit of raw sewage)
C-269 (2016) An Act to amend the Criminal Code and the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (sentencing) and to make consequential amendments to another Act
C-269 (2013) An Act to amend the Income Tax Act (community service group membership dues)

Income Tax ActRoutine Proceedings

March 12th, 2026 / 10:05 a.m.

Conservative

Greg McLean Conservative Calgary Centre, AB

moved for leave to introduce Bill C-269, An Act to amend the Income Tax Act (heat recovery tax credit).

Mr. Speaker, I am introducing a bill today that would fill an oversight that the government has left open in its latest investment tax credits for clean energy production and also for emissions reduction. We have to take the two hand in hand.

Waste heat to power is the most important method we have to make sure we have emissions-free power coming forward. It is low-hanging fruit, quite frankly, and the fact that it has been missed by the government in its investment tax credits is a shame. I am here to correct that today by putting it on the page and making sure that we debate in the House of Commons how we can attain more efficiency in our energy production in Canada and reduce our emissions for that power that is already being produced.

With waste heat to power, an industrial process, we lose 30% to 50% of the heat in the process. Having an investment tax credit to capture that heat would capture about 30% of what is lost and effectively give more power to Canadians with no new emissions, which is the main thing here. It would be a strict win all the way along. The fact that it has not been included, at this point in time, in the government's approach to investment tax credits is purely because most of these industrial processes involve hydrocarbons. Hydrocarbons are a part of our present and a part of our future.

We need to debate this very clearly. I hope the government takes this on and makes it an even better bill.

(Motions deemed adopted, bill read the first time and printed)