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Catherine McKenna: Provinces have one more year to submit carbon pricing plans

Catherine McKenna talks with media in Ottawa. Matthew Usherwood/CP

OTTAWA — Environment Minister Catherine McKenna says a national price on carbon won’t be imposed on any province for at least another year.

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McKenna says carbon pricing legislation will be introduced sometime in 2018 and provinces will have until the end of that year to submit their own carbon pricing plans before a national price is imposed on those that don’t meet the federal standard.

READ MORE: New Brunswick defends climate change plan as McKenna raises concerns

A year ago, McKenna said provinces would have to impose at least a $10-per-tonne carbon price in 2018 but it appears some provinces will make it all the way to the end of the year before they have to actually do it.

WATCH: PM Trudeau accused of undercutting provinces on carbon pricing

The price has to rise at least $10 per tonne a year until it hits $50 per tonne by 2022.

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Alberta and B.C. already meet the threshold and Manitoba intends to introduce a carbon price of $25 next year.

READ MORE: Clean fuels standard coming soon but maybe not this fall, McKenna says

Ontario and Quebec’s cap and trade systems likely meet the threshold but the rest of the provinces either haven’t yet got a plan in place or what they do have doesn’t mesh with Ottawa’s standard.

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