Wednesday, December 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada presses on with trade diversification strategy in face of Trump's threats

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Feb, 2025 03:52 PM
  • Canada presses on with trade diversification strategy in face of Trump's threats

As U.S. President Donald Trump continues to hold out the threat of steep tariffs on Canadian imports, the federal trade minister is citing a new deal with Ecuador as proof that its trade diversification strategy is working

Mary Ng told The Canadian Press the free-trade agreement with Ecuador, the sixth-largest economy in South America, is the 16th such deal signed since the government launched its trade diversification push eight years ago.

A lot of the existing trade with Ecuador is agricultural, with the South American nation sending Canada bananas, cocoa beans and seafood, while Canada sends wheat, cereal and lentils.

Statistics Canada says the top products traded between the two nations also include petroleum products, fertilizers and precious metals. Ng said she sees opportunities in services as well.

Canada hasn't had much luck in talks with its traditional trading partners in recent years. The U.K. walked away from trade talks with Canada last year over access to the cheese market.

Ng said that while she would welcome the U.K. back to the talks, she's currently focused on expanding trade with other countries.

"Canada welcomes the United Kingdom back at any time they wish to come back to the to the table," she said.

"But in the meantime, we have concluded an agreement with Indonesia. In the meantime, I've launched exploratory discussions with the Philippines. In the meantime, we are at the negotiating table with the ASEAN group of countries and nations, and we've just concluded Ecuador, and we will continue to take businesses abroad into these markets."

Ottawa is in trade talks with the ten nations in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). It also launched exploratory discussions with the Philippines late last year, around the same time it finalized a comprehensive economic partnership agreement with Indonesia.

Ng said she is considering travelling to Australia and Singapore this month as well.

Boosting trade with ASEAN countries is part of Canada's Indo-Pacific strategy. But that strategy has encountered turbulence as well.

Trade talks between Canada and India, which had been stop-and-go for about a decade, were abruptly put on ice in the fall of 2023 and have not resumed since.

That rupture happened immediately after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stood in Parliament to state that his government had "credible allegations" linking agents of the Indian government to the murder of Sikh leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar, who was shot to death in Surrey, B.C. months earlier.

The U.S. has given Canada a month-long reprieve from Trump's threat to impose steep tariffs in response to what he claims is Canada's inaction on border security and drug trafficking. But the incoming administration also has indicated there are other major sticking points that will come up down the road.

“Canada, as we spoke about, treats our dairy farmers horribly. That's got to end,” Howard Lutnick, Trump's pick for commerce secretary, said at a hearing on Jan. 29. “I'm going to work hard to make sure, as an example, for your dairy farmers — (that) they do much, much better in Canada than they've ever done before, and that is a key focus of this administration.”

Ng suggested Ottawa won't put supply management in the dairy sector on the table with the Trump administration, citing the last major round of trade talks with the U.S. after Trump reopened NAFTA.

"When we negotiated those provisions with respect to dairy and agriculture, they're a part of a balance of a whole number of things that were negotiated at the time," she said, adding it was ultimately Trump's deal. "Agriculture, dairy, supply management was part and parcel of a broader negotiation."

But the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) will be up for review in the summer of 2026.

Ng, who has helped spearhead Canada's approach to the incoming U.S. administration for the past year, said she and Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne have had upwards of 1,300 meetings with American stakeholders and politicians to send the message that it's not worth the pain to squeeze Canada with tariffs.

"I keep reminding people that Canada buys more from the United States than Japan, than China, than the United Kingdom combined," she said. "We are a big customer and tariffs only hurt the American consumer. They hurt them at the grocery stores, at the pumps."

The Canadian Chamber of Commerce has urged the federal government to press for the elimination of internal trade barriers, now that the trading relationship with the U.S. is under threat.

It estimates internal trade barriers act like a 21 per cent tariff on Canadian goods.

MORE National ARTICLES

Man charged in fatal Coquitlam stabbing

Man charged in fatal Coquitlam stabbing
Police say a 32-year-old man has been charged with second-degree murder after a fatal stabbing outside a Coquitlam pub last week. The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says Coquitlam R-C-M-P had responded to a call about a fight outside the John B Pub on Friday night.

Man charged in fatal Coquitlam stabbing

Canada's chief justice decries misinformation as top court turns 150

Canada's chief justice decries misinformation as top court turns 150
Canada's top court is expanding its public outreach to build trust at a time of increasing misinformation as more people get their news from social media. Chief Justice Richard Wagner and other justices of the Supreme Court of Canada launched a cross-country tour in Victoria, B.C., on Monday to mark the court's 150th anniversary.

Canada's chief justice decries misinformation as top court turns 150

Weak loonie signals economy is 'in trouble': currency expert

Weak loonie signals economy is 'in trouble': currency expert
The Bank of Canada's end-of-day exchange rate Monday had the loonie trading at 68.48 cents US, but the Canadian dollar neared 70 cents in the minutes after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the planned tariffs would be paused for at least 30 days. The overall trend for the Canadian dollar however has been weak, which has implications for the economy. 

Weak loonie signals economy is 'in trouble': currency expert

Interprovincial trade barriers: what they are, why they exist and how to cut them

Interprovincial trade barriers: what they are, why they exist and how to cut them
The Trump administration's on-again, off-again threat to impose damaging tariffs has boosted an old idea for driving economic growth in Canada: eliminating interprovincial trade barriers. Here's a look at how interprovincial trade barriers work and why years of efforts to tear them down them have largely failed.

Interprovincial trade barriers: what they are, why they exist and how to cut them

Trudeau says U.S. tariffs on Canada will be paused for 30 days

Trudeau says U.S. tariffs on Canada will be paused for 30 days
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says "proposed tariffs" between Canada and the United States will be paused for at least 30 days while the countries work together on the border.

Trudeau says U.S. tariffs on Canada will be paused for 30 days

Canada's forestry sector faces uncertainty with 25 per cent U.S. tariffs

Canada's forestry sector faces uncertainty with 25 per cent U.S. tariffs
A wide shadow of uncertainty has been cast over Canada's forestry sector by U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to impose a 25-per-cent tariff on its lumber products. Several industry groups have released statements criticizing the tariff as unnecessary and harmful for both sides, a sentiment echoed by British Columbia Premier David Eby who vows full support for the provincial sector.

Canada's forestry sector faces uncertainty with 25 per cent U.S. tariffs