Compliance using the Free Trade and Labour Mobility in Canada Act

For over 30 years, NRCan, industry, and provincial partners have worked to harmonize the energy efficiency regulatory regime in Canada. With the passing of the Free Trade and Labour Mobility in Canada Act (“FTLMCA”), that harmonization is gaining further ground.

Goods subject to the FTLMCA

Currently, s.4(1)(b) of the Energy Efficiency Regulations, 2016 allows regulatees to submit provincial compliance as federal compliance, but only where the provincial requirement is equivalent or better. Now, the FTLMCA will allow provincial compliance to be accepted as federal compliance for any comparable requirements without restriction.

However, the FTLMCA will only impact products produced domestically and shipped interprovincially. Products imported to Canada would still be required to comply with the federal requirements without the ability to use the compliance option provided under the FTLMCA and its regulations.

FTLMCA will apply when an energy-using product satisfies all of the following:

  1. manufactured or assembled domestically
  2. shipped interprovincially for sale
  3. subject to both a federal and a provincial energy efficiency standard.

NRCan will accept certified compliance with that provincial standard as compliance with the federal requirement.

For example, if a regulated product is produced in Ontario and shipped for sale across Canada, it would have to certify compliance with the federal requirement in addition to each applicable provincial requirement. The FTLMCA will ensure that the product only has to comply with each applicable provincial requirement.

Regulatees with FTLMCA-applicable products will be free to choose whether or not to utilize the compliance option provided by the FTLMCA. All regulatees will continue to have the option of complying with the terms of the Energy Efficiency Regulations, 2016 through the Compliance Regulatory Energy Efficiency Database (CREED). Regulatees taking advantage of the FTLMCA provisions (i.e. using compliance with a provincial standard as compliance with federal obligations), will be required to report to NRCan before shipping between provinces/territories.

FTLMCA reporting requirements

The process for submitting this certified provincial compliance authorized by the FTLMCA will not be facilitated through the CREED. Rather regulatees seeking to submit certified compliance as authorized by the FTLMCA will be required to deliver the necessary compliance documents directly to NRCan via email.

Regulatees wanting to take advantage of the additional compliance pathway provided by the FTLMCA must:

  • Report regulated models via an email addressed to complianceops-opsconformite@nrcan-rncan.gc.ca. This email must have the subject line “FTLMCA Submission”.
  • Email must contain the information set out below.
  • Attach the required documents demonstrating compliance with provincial standards (see requirements below)

The email must contain the following information:

  • contact information for the regulatee
  • product type
  • manufacturer name
  • manufacturer location
  • brand name
  • model number
  • name and contact information of certification organization or provincial authority issuing supporting documentation
  • energy efficiency number (if any)

Regulatees wanting to take advantage of the additional compliance pathway provided by the FTLMCA must also submit one of two documents set out below.

  1. A certificate of conformity or other similar document that states the subject energy using product (i.e. specifying the brand and model) meets the applicable provincial standard(s). This document must be certified by a Standards Council of Canada-accredited certification body.
  2. A document that (a) states the subject energy-using product meets the applicable provincial standard(s) or (b) is otherwise an authorization to use the applicable provincial verification mark. This document must be either received from or certified by the provincial ministry or provincial agency that administers the subject provincial regulations.

The timing of a regulatee’s shipments will matter. The compliance option provided by the FTLMCA will only apply on and after January 1, 2026. Interprovincial shipments of domestically produced products must occur on or after that date if the regulatee will seek to use the compliance option under the FTLMCA.

Product Scenario

Regulatory Requirements

Compliance and Reporting Options

Internationally Manufactured or Assembled and Imported

Energy Efficiency Regulations, 2016

  1. Federal standards and CREED reporting, or
  2. provincial standards that are equivalent or better and CREED reporting

Domestically Manufactured or Assembled but Only Sold In-Province

Applicable Provincial Requirements

  1. Applicable provincial compliance options and provincial reporting

Domestically Manufactured or Assembled and Shipped Interprovincially

Energy Efficiency Regulations, 2016

or FTLMCA Regulations

  1. Federal standards and CREED reporting, or
  2. Comparable provincial standards and email reporting

Refer to the Guide to Canada's Energy Efficiency Regulations webpage for further details on NRCan’s Energy Efficiency Regulations. If you have any questions, contact Compliance Operations at complianceops-opsconformite@nrcan-rncan.gc.ca.