
Canada’s Trade Minister Anita Anand. (Photo by EVARISTO SA / AFP) (Photo by EVARISTO SA/AFP via Getty Images)
The number of federal exceptions in the Canadian Free Trade Agreement (CFTA) will be reduced by 20, from 39 to 19. The majority of exceptions removed relate to government procurement, and are meant to provide Canadian businesses with a “greater opportunity to compete across the country,” said a government release.
“The removal of these federal exceptions from the CFTA is yet another step towards eliminating barriers to internal trade, reducing costs for Canadian businesses, increasing productivity and foreign investment, and adding billions to the Canadian economy,” Anand said in the Feb. 24 statement.
The emphasis on removing interprovincial trade barriers comes as U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened to impose 10 percent tariffs on Canadian energy imports and 25 percent tariffs on all other Canadian goods. While these measures were set to take effect on Feb. 4, he and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau worked out a last-minute agreement to pause the tariffs until March 4.
Trudeau promised additional border security measures to address U.S. calls to stop fentanyl and illegal immigrants from crossing the border. The U.S. president had said the tariffs would be paused while the United States and Canada worked out what he called a “final economic deal.”
Ottawa has since launched some related measures such as appointing a “fentanyl czar” and listing of several organized crime groups as terrorist organizations.