Canola fields are pictured near Cremona, Alta., Monday, July 15, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS_Jeff McIntosh CANADAHALIFAX news Canadian canola farmers to feel impact from damaging Chinese tariffs by admin 8 مارس، 2025 written by admin 8 مارس، 2025 315 CITYnews halifax / By Kyle Duggan, The Canadian Press OTTAWA — Canadian farmers could take a big hit from China’s sudden retaliatory tariffs that take aim at canola, pork and other food commodities. Chris Davison, president of the Canola Council of Canada, said the tariffs are prohibitively high and the fallout will be felt across his industry. He said China is a top market for Canadian canola that represents close to $5 billion in export value. “The impacts will be widespread and will be felt across the industry, starting with farmers who grow the crop every year and extending beyond there to the companies that provide them with seeds and inputs … to grain companies and processors and ultimately to exporters,” Davison said. “We’re expecting to work with the Canadian government very quickly to address the situation we face but also to pursue a resolution to it as expeditiously as possible.” Beijing announced retaliatory tariffs on select Canadian farm imports in response to Canadian duties levied back in the fall against Chinese-made electric vehicles, as well as steel and aluminum products. China is hitting Canada with 100 per cent tariffs on canola oil and peas, and 25 per cent tariffs on pork and aquatic products — loosely mirroring Canada’s EV and steel and aluminum levies. Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe said in a social media post on Saturday that the province’s canola industry is being “put in the line of fire due to tariffs on Chinese EVs, which nobody wants, to protect North American EVs, which few can afford.” The new tariffs against Canadian agricultural products are expected to kick in on March 20 — widening Canada’s ongoing trade problems as the country seeks to beat back U.S. President Donald Trump’s stop-and-go tariffs. This is not the first time Beijing has put Canadian canola in its crosshairs. In 2019, the country targeted canola export licenses as an economically sensitive pressure point — widely viewed in Canada as a political response to the detention of senior Huawei telecom executive Meng Wanzhou. This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 8, 2025. — With files from The Associated Press. Kyle Duggan, The Canadian Press 0 comment 0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail admin previous post Trump grants auto tariff pause, tariffs on Canada remain after call with Trudeau next post Threats, harassment driving women out of politics, MPs warn You may also like مهرجان السينما الأفريقية في مونتريال يكشف عن برنامجه 12 مارس، 2026 ’’ستقوم كندا بدورها‘‘ للمساهمة في إمدادات النفط العالمية 12 مارس، 2026 إيبي أجرى ’’مناقشة صريحة‘‘ مع السفير الأميركي حول... 12 مارس، 2026 Search for second Annapolis County ice fisher ongoing... 12 مارس، 2026 Nova Scotia Health to replace transformer after power... 12 مارس، 2026 Archeologists discover historical shipwreck on Sable Island 12 مارس، 2026 Politicians and environmentalists call for transparency on N.B.... 12 مارس، 2026 Warmer weather breaks temperature records in N.S. 12 مارس، 2026 Premier Tim Houston reverses some budget cuts amid... 11 مارس، 2026 Budget cuts put seniors and vulnerable Nova Scotians... 11 مارس، 2026