Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada Wins Round In Trade Battle With U.S. Over Meat Labelling

The Canadian Press , 20 Oct, 2014 11:08 AM
    Canada has won a battle in an ongoing trade dispute with the United States over meat-labelling laws that have hurt the beef and pork industries.
     
    The World Trade Organization released a ruling Monday that said U.S. country-of-origin labelling (COOL) rules discriminate against exports from Canada and Mexico.
     
    The rules, which went into effect in 2008 and were updated last year, are blamed by the Canadian meat industry for reducing exports to the U.S. by half.
     
    The WTO compliance panel said COOL breaks trade rules because it treats Canadian and Mexican livestock less favourably than U.S. livestock.
     
    The panel said changes the U.S. made to the rules last year made the policy even more detrimental to livestock exporters.
     
    "The compliance panel concluded that the amended COOL measure increases the original COOL measure's detrimental impact on the competitive opportunities of imported livestock in the U.S. market," the panel said.
     
    "It necessitates increased segregation of meat and livestock in the U.S. market, entails a higher record-keeping burden and increases the original COOL measure's incentive to choose domestic over imported livestock." 
     
    The federal government hailed the ruling Monday and called on the United States to comply with the WTO decision.
     
    "Today's WTO compliance panel's report reaffirms Canada's long-standing view that the revised U.S. COOL measure is blatantly protectionist and fails to comply with the WTO's original ruling against it," Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz said in a statement.
     
    "The WTO's clear and consistent findings in support of Canada's position effectively supply a clear message to the U.S. — end this protectionist policy that creates economic harm on both sides of the border and comply with your international trade obligations."
     
    Ritz has said that he expects the U.S. may appeal the ruling before the trade battle is finally resolved.
     
    COOL rules require all packaged meat to identify where the animal was born, raised and slaughtered.
     
    Supporters of the law say it better informs U.S. consumers, while opponents argue that segregating animals and tracking them adds costs and violates free-trade agreements.
     
    International Trade Minister Ed Fast has said the legislation undermines North American supply chains and costs the Canadian pork and beef industries about $1 billion a year.
     
    Some U.S. companies have said they can't afford to sort, label and store meat from Canada differently than meat from domestic animals.
     
    Ritz has said the federal government would consider imposing retaliatory tariffs measures on some U.S. goods as early as next year if Washington doesn't comply with WTO COOL rulings.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Pastor at Lutheran church in Edmonton faces child porn charges

    Pastor at Lutheran church in Edmonton faces child porn charges
    EDMONTON - Police in Edmonton say a Lutheran Church pastor faces child pornography charges.

    Pastor at Lutheran church in Edmonton faces child porn charges

    Small earthquake rocks Banff in Alberta; no injuries, damage reported

    Small earthquake rocks Banff in Alberta; no injuries, damage reported
    BANFF, Alta. - What was that?

    Small earthquake rocks Banff in Alberta; no injuries, damage reported

    Judge reserves decision in robocalls sentencing; Sona to learn fate Nov. 19

    Judge reserves decision in robocalls sentencing; Sona to learn fate Nov. 19
    GUELPH, Ont. - Michael Sona will have to wait another few weeks before learning whether he'll face jail time for his role in the 2011 robocalls scandal.

    Judge reserves decision in robocalls sentencing; Sona to learn fate Nov. 19

    Magnotta jury watches so-called murder video published on the Internet in 2012

    Magnotta jury watches so-called murder video published on the Internet in 2012
    MONTREAL — Luka Rocco Magnotta hunched as low as he could in the prisoner's box Thursday as the jury hearing his murder trial viewed a graphic and gruesome video depicting the death of Jun Lin.

    Magnotta jury watches so-called murder video published on the Internet in 2012

    Luka Rocco Magnotta's murder trial hears from Karla Homolka's sister

    Luka Rocco Magnotta's murder trial hears from Karla Homolka's sister
    MONTREAL - Luka Rocco Magnotta's murder trial has heard from the sister of Karla Homolka.

    Luka Rocco Magnotta's murder trial hears from Karla Homolka's sister

    Hurricane Gonzalo storms towards southeastern Newfoundland, flooding possible

    Hurricane Gonzalo storms towards southeastern Newfoundland, flooding possible
    HALIFAX - The Canadian Hurricane Centre says hurricane Gonzalo is accelerating towards Newfoundland, with the possibility of making landfall in the southeastern tip of the province Sunday morning.

    Hurricane Gonzalo storms towards southeastern Newfoundland, flooding possible