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China hits back at Canada with fresh agriculture tariffs

by Sarkiya Ranen
in Technology
China hits back at Canada with fresh agriculture tariffs
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CHINA announced tariffs on over US$2.6 billion worth of Canadian agricultural and food products on Saturday (Mar 8), retaliating against levies Ottawa introduced in October and opening a new front in a trade war largely driven by US President Donald Trump’s tariff threats.

The levies, announced by the commerce ministry and scheduled to take effect on Mar 20, match the 100 per cent and 25 per cent import duties Canada slapped on China-made electric vehicles and steel and aluminium products just over four months ago.

By excluding canola, which is also known as rapeseed, and was one of Canada’s top exports to the world’s No 1 agricultural importer prior to China investigating it for anti-dumping last year, Beijing may be keeping the door open for trade talks.

But the tariffs also serve as a warning shot, analysts say, with the Trump administration having signalled it could ease 25 per cent import levies the White House is threatening Canada and Mexico with if they apply the same extra 20 per cent duty he has slapped on Chinese goods over fentanyl flows.

“Canada’s measures seriously violate World Trade Organization rules, constitute a typical act of protectionism and are discriminatory measures that severely harm China’s legitimate rights and interests,” the commerce ministry said.

China will apply a 100 per cent tariff to just over US$1 billion of Canadian rapeseed oil, oil cakes and pea imports, and a 25 per cent duty on US$1.6 billion worth of Canadian aquatic products and pork.

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“The timing may serve as a warning shot,” said Dan Wang, China director at Eurasia Group in Singapore. “By striking now, China reminds Canada of the cost of aligning too closely with American trade policy.”

“China’s delayed response (to Ottawa’s October tariffs) likely reflects both capacity constraints and strategic signalling,” she added. “The commerce ministry is stretched thin, juggling trade disputes with the US and European Union.”

“Canada, a lower priority, had to wait its turn.”

The Canadian embassy in Beijing did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in August that Ottawa was imposing the levies to counter what he called China’s intentional state-directed policy of over-capacity, following the lead of the United States and European Union, both of which have also applied import levies to Chinese-made EVs.

In response, China in September launched an anti-dumping investigation into Canadian canola imports. More than half of Canada’s canola exports go to China and the trade was worth US$3.7 billion in 2023, according to the Canola Council of Canada.

“The investigation on Canadian canola is still ongoing. That canola was not included in the list of tariffs this time might also be a gesture to leave room for negotiations,” said Rosa Wang, an analyst with agricultural consultancy JCI.

Beijing could also be hoping that a change in government in Ottawa makes it more amenable. Canada’s next national election must be held by Oct 20.

China is Canada’s second-largest trading partner, trailing far behind the United States. Canada exported US$47 billion worth of goods to the world’s second-largest economy in 2024, according to Chinese customs data.

“To be honest I don’t understand why they are doing this one at all,” said Even Pay, agriculture analyst at Trivium China.

“I expect Beijing will use the election and change of leader as an opportunity to reset relations as they did with Australia,” she added.

China in 2020 introduced a series of tariffs, bans and other restrictions on key Australian exports, including barley, wine, beef, coal, lobster and timber in retaliation to Canberra calling for a Covid origins probe.

Beijing did not begin lifting the bans until 2023, one-year after Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese ousted Scott Morrison, who had called for the inquiry. REUTERS



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Tags: AgricultureCanadaChinaFreshHitsTariffs
Sarkiya Ranen

Sarkiya Ranen

I am an editor for Ny Journals, focusing on business and entrepreneurship. I love uncovering emerging trends and crafting stories that inspire and inform readers about innovative ventures and industry insights.

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