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Jean-Denis Frechette, centre, speaks during a meeting on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Oct. 31, 2017.Sean Kilpatrick/The Globe and Mail

A new report from Parliament's budget watchdog says carbon pricing in four provinces could net the federal government more than $500-million over two years in GST revenues.

The report by the parliamentary budget officer, out today, says GST revenues from Alberta, B.C., Ontario and Quebec could total between $236-million and $267-million by the end of the current fiscal year next April, and between $265-million and $313-million in the next fiscal year.

Jean-Denis Frechette's report says the calculations will help Canadians understand the impact of a national carbon pricing policy on revenue from the goods and services tax.

The Liberals are expected to introduce legislation next year to allow the federal government to impose a carbon price on provinces that don't meet the federal standard on their own.

The federal plan calls for a price on carbon pollution of $10 per tonne in 2018, increasing by $10 every year to $50 per tonne in 2022.

The Liberals have said any revenues generated from the system would stay in the province or territory where they are generated – a stance provinces have questioned, since the federal government earns money through the five per cent tax charged in the final cost of a good or service.

Environment Minister Catherine McKenna was set to arrive in Germany on Sunday to attend the COP23 United Nations climate conference. In a recent interview, McKenna said she would be focused on a new campaign to eliminate coal power.

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