Saturday, December 6, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. looks at coalition of willing provinces to expand trade within Canada, Eby says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Feb, 2025 05:35 PM
  • B.C. looks at coalition of willing provinces to expand trade within Canada, Eby says

The British Columbia government is willing to enter bilateral agreements with other jurisdictions in order to boost interprovincial trade as looming U.S. tariffs threaten Canada's economy, Premier David Eby says. 

The threat of U.S. tariffs on Canadian goods and services has pushed the need for improved interprovincial trade as provinces look for ways to diversify their markets to protect economies and jobs. Despite the establishment of the Canadian Free Trade Agreement in 2017, many products do not trade freely among provinces and territories.

"What we need to do is start acting like a country where if you're licensed for a particular profession, or if you're producing a particular good in some part of the province, that you're able to sell it without difficulty or sell your services without difficulty," Eby said on Wednesday.

There's a list of exemptions under the free trade agreement that provinces are grappling with to try to remove as many as possible, he said.

B.C. could enter agreements with a "coalition of the willing" provinces to recognize each other's regimes for trade and professions, if an agreement can't be reached by the federal government, he said. 

"British Columbia continues to push at my level, at the First Ministers Meeting level, as well as at the ministerial meeting for a mutual recognition approach," Eby said.

"This is where, if it's good enough for your province, it's good enough for our province."

This could include a limited list of exceptions "but ideally none," he said.

"This is what I understand the approach from Nova Scotia is and it's the approach that we're looking at as well, so that we don't have to wait for the federal government," Eby said.

On Tuesday, Nova Scotia's government introduced a bill aimed at reducing interprovincial trade barriers, with provisions only to be extended to provinces or territories with similar legislation.

The B.C. government is also looking at tabling such legislation and the B.C. public service has already reached out to Nova Scotia to understand its bill's content, Eby said.

"The goal of that was to ensure that British Columbia has tools in place that mesh with and work with the initiatives of other provinces," Eby said.

Premiers spoke with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau earlier Wednesday about trade and many other issues around the threat of American tariffs," Eby said.

The uncertainty created by U.S. President Donald Trump around the tariffs is destabilizing on its own, something that Eby said is a deliberate strategy by the Americans to weaken Canada and reduce the likelihood that people will invest in the country. 

This is why the plan to redouble all efforts to diversify away from the United States and find new customers for B.C. goods will remain, he said. 

The Committee on Internal Trade will meet in Toronto on Friday to discuss interprovincial trade.

When speaking with the prime minister, Eby said he also raised the idea of taxing thermal coal that comes in by rail from the United States to be shipped out of B.C.'s Deltaport, as first suggested by the B.C. Conservatives. Thermal coal exports fall under federal jurisdiction.

"We need to be all hands on deck on this. We shouldn't be divided at the provincial level, at the federal level. If there are things that we can do to respond to the Americans, we should do it. If there are things we can do to strengthen our economy and diversify our markets, we're going to do it," Eby said. 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Trump eyeing spring start for lumber tariffs; could new levy stack on current one?

Trump eyeing spring start for lumber tariffs; could new levy stack on current one?
The list of potential American tariffs that could affect Canada grew Wednesday night when U.S. President Donald Trump dropped the idea of a 25 per cent levy on lumber and forest products. Speaking to the media onboard Air Force One, Trump said his administration was eyeing some time around April for the latest announced duty.

Trump eyeing spring start for lumber tariffs; could new levy stack on current one?

Crashed Delta jet cleared from Toronto airport runway, all 21 injured out of hospital

Crashed Delta jet cleared from Toronto airport runway, all 21 injured out of hospital
Delta Air Lines says all 21 people taken to hospital after one of its planes crashed in Toronto have now been released, as airport officials work to reopen two runways. The airline says it will continue to provide care to those who were on board Delta's Endeavor Flight 4819 when it crashed upon landing Monday at Toronto's Pearson airport.

Crashed Delta jet cleared from Toronto airport runway, all 21 injured out of hospital

Heritage minister proposes banning ads from CBC news programming

Heritage minister proposes banning ads from CBC news programming
The outgoing federal heritage minister says she wants to bar CBC/Radio-Canada from running ads during news programming and from charging subscription fees for digital products such as CBC Gem. In turn, the government would increase the public broadcaster's funding and make it more stable.

Heritage minister proposes banning ads from CBC news programming

Politics and sports set to collide as Canada, U.S. meet in 4 Nations final

Politics and sports set to collide as Canada, U.S. meet in 4 Nations final
Sports and politics will collide tonight in Boston as archrivals Canada and the United States compete in the final of the 4 Nations Face-Off. What might have been initially conceived as an exhibition international hockey tournament in advance of the NHL's return to Olympic competition in 2026 has turned into a must-watch event on both sides of the border due to political tension between the formerly friendly nations.

Politics and sports set to collide as Canada, U.S. meet in 4 Nations final

Feds list criminal organizations as terrorist entities to fight fentanyl trafficking

Feds list criminal organizations as terrorist entities to fight fentanyl trafficking
The federal government says seven transnational criminal organizations are being listed as terrorist entities under the Criminal Code to fight fentanyl trafficking. The move is the latest federal measure to bolster security in response to American criticism.

Feds list criminal organizations as terrorist entities to fight fentanyl trafficking

Old-growth logging was 'goal' of Interfor: B.C. Forest Appeals Commission decision

Old-growth logging was 'goal' of Interfor: B.C. Forest Appeals Commission decision
The commission issued the decision last week, upholding the finding that Interfor committed eight contraventions of the Forest and Range Practices Act with the logging between 2012 and 2016 in the Arrow Lakes area of southeastern B.C. The timber had a market value of about $4.4 million, and the estimated economic benefit was more than $1.8 million after subtracting the company's costs, it said.

Old-growth logging was 'goal' of Interfor: B.C. Forest Appeals Commission decision