Thursday, March 20, 2025


Canada canola farmers squeezed by trade wars on two fronts


By AFP
March 19, 2025


A newly planted canola field near Davidson, Saskatchewan, Canada in May 2023. Farmers are wavering on what to plant now after major buyer China slapped tariffs on Canadian canola - Copyright AFP/File Geoff Robins

To sow or not to sow? Canola farmers in Canada’s vast western Prairies region have found themselves in the crossfire of trade wars with both the United States and China.

“We have two economic superpowers of the world having a trade war with us at the same time,” Rick White, head of the Canadian Canola Growers Association, told AFP.

“We’ve had our challenges but nothing of this magnitude. This is the worst of all scenarios,” he said, weeks before planting is to begin.

Canada, a major agricultural economy, is among the world’s top producers of canola — an oilseed crop that is used to make cooking oil, animal meal and biodiesel fuel.

But the bulk of canola exports go to just two customers, the United States and China, two countries with which Ottawa is now in standoffs over tariffs.

A few days ago, Beijing announced 100 percent tariffs on canola oil and meal in response to Ottawa’s levies on Chinese electric vehicles, which align with those imposed on China by the United States under former president Joe Biden.

Meanwhile, since coming to office in January, US President Donald Trump has threatened widespread tariffs on imports of Canadian goods into the United States.

The price of canola has plunged as a result of the Chinese tariffs, dragging the price of European rapeseed down with it.



– Seeding soon –



All of this must be sorted out in the coming weeks, fumes Jason Johnson, a farmer from Manitoba province in Canada’s agricultural heartland.

“We’re going to be seeding in about a month and once we do, we can’t change crops,” he said, while waiting for a call from a seed dealer about possible alternative crops.

China accounts for nearly one third of Canadian canola exports, mainly canola seeds, while the United States is the largest market for canola oil and meal.

Johnson believes it was wrong for Canada to impose tariffs on China.

“We should go back to China and say, ‘We’ll lift our tariffs if you lift yours,’ basically doing a Trump by threatening tariffs and then retracting them,” he told AFP.

On his 2,500-acre farm just north of the Canada-US border, he grows canola each year on about 1,000 acres, and feels certain the United States will ramp up tariffs against Canada that will be widespread and hit hard.

Those tariff threats have already sent shockwaves through Canada, as more than 75 percent of its exports go to the United States. A trade war between the two neighbors, with Canada retaliating, would cause significant damage to the Canadian economy.



– ‘Engage with China’ –



Canola Council of Canada chief executive Chris Davison is urging the Canadian government “to immediately engage with China, with a view to resolving this issue.”

Ottawa and Beijing have been at loggerheads for several years, relations having soured after Canada detained a senior Huawei executive on a US warrant in December 2018 and Beijing retaliated by holding two Canadians.

A deal was reached that saw all three detainees released in September 2021, but bad blood remains, with Beijing criticizing Ottawa for aligning itself with Washington’s China policies and Canadian authorities regularly accusing China of interference.

As this goes on Canadians wonder if bright yellow fields of canola will be seen in the Prairies this spring.

Johnson says switching from canola to alternative crops at the last minute wouldn’t be easy.

Markets for other crops are mostly smaller and if canola farmers switch to cultivating them it would lead to an oversupply and a drop in prices for those agricultural commodities too.

He noted also that Canada has “invested a lot in the last 20 years in infrastructure” to crush canola into oil and meal.

Chinese tariffs on Canadian agricultural products kick in


By AFP
March 19, 2025


The fresh tariffs come as both Canada and China face deepening trade tensions with the US, which under President Donald Trump has rolled out blistering new tariffs - Copyright AFP STR

Chinese tariffs on Canadian products including rapeseed oil and pork come into effect Thursday, with an industry lobby warning the new levies will have a “devastating impact” on farmers.

The tariffs — announced this month — follow a Beijing probe into levies imposed by Ottawa on Chinese goods last year.

They hit rapeseed oil, oil cakes, and peas imported from Canada with a 100 percent surcharge.

Canada is among the world’s top producers of canola — a rapeseed crop that is used to make cooking oil, animal feed and biodiesel fuel — and China has historically been one of its largest customers.

Aquatic products and pork, meanwhile, will face a 25 percent levy.

Canadian industry leaders have warned they would be hit hard by the fresh tariffs.

“New tariffs from China on Canadian canola oil and meal will have a devastating impact on canola farmers and the broader value chain at a time of increased trade and geopolitical uncertainty,” said Chris Davison, President of the Canola Council of Canada.

“We urge the federal government to immediately engage with China, with a view to resolving this issue,” he said.

The fresh tariffs come as both Canada and China face deepening trade tensions with the US, which under President Donald Trump has rolled out stiff new tariffs.

Ottawa in August placed 100 percent tariffs on Chinese electric vehicle imports — matching US measures seeking to fend off a flood of Chinese state-subsidised cars into North America.

It also announced a surcharge on imports of steel and aluminum products from China.

Beijing’s commerce ministry said a probe into these measures found that Canadian policies “disrupted the normal trade order and harmed the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese enterprises”.

In Beijing, some residents told AFP they were supportive of China’s tariffs on goods from other countries.

“China has become strong and doesn’t need to rely on others for everything,” Zheng Ruitao, a Beijing resident in his thirties, said.

“For me personally, it has not much impact, the impact might be on the country,” Song Qing, another Beijing resident, told AFP.

Ties between Beijing and Ottawa plunged into a deep freeze for several years from 2018, when Canada detained Meng Wanzhou, a top executive from Chinese tech giant Huawei, prompting Beijing to arrest two Canadian nationals in retaliation.

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