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Carney: Canada wants to have a free trade within Canada that will offset any US tariffs

After meeting with provincial and territorial leaders, Prime Minister Mark Carney said that Canada could offset any U.S. Tariffs by removing its internal trade barriers. He also stated his goal of achieving free trade in Canada by July 1.

Carney told reporters, "We will introduce legislation before the 1st July to allow goods to move freely across the nation... without federal barriers." "We can offset any U.S. Tariffs more than enough by eliminating the internal trade barriers."

Carney's website quotes research that shows removing internal trade barriers could reduce costs up to 15%, and expand the economy from 4% to 8 %.

He said that there are three main ways to achieve this: Harmonizing rules across provinces, mutual recognition between provinces and the creation of national standards.

Business groups have complained for years about the trade barriers between the 10 provinces as well as three territories, and a long permitting process. This can mean that it takes many years to build mines, pipelines of oil and other large resource projects.

In March, U.S. president Donald Trump imposed tariffs of 25% on Canadian imports for steel and aluminum. Additional tariffs will be implemented on April 2.

Canada exports 75% to the United States, and imports from its southern neighbor account for a third. This leaves its economy vulnerable to an extended trade war.

Carney, the newly appointed prime minister, is expected to announce an election in April on Sunday. He has not yet spoken to Trump, nor laid out detailed plans for how he will deal with him.

Carney stated that removing restrictions on labor mobility would be part of the effort to reduce barriers in internal trade.

Carney stated that the government would create a 'one-window process' to speed up approvals for major infrastructure projects. This will eliminate the duplication of requirements between federal environmental assessments and provincial assessments. Carney also said that an oil-and-gas cap would not limit production but rather emissions.

Carney agreed that, with the provinces, the federal government will provide funds for building transportation links to sites of resource extraction and developing a "national energy and trade corridor strategy".

Carney stated that the government would allow businesses to delay corporate income tax payments, remittances and payment of unemployment insurance to help workers and businesses affected. (Reporting and editing by Ryan Patrick Jones, Costas Pitas)

(source: Reuters)