Monday, January 19, 2026
ADVT 
National

Carney: Canada entering ‘new era’ in relationship with Beijing

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2026 09:44 AM
  • Carney: Canada entering ‘new era’ in relationship with Beijing

Canada is entering a “new era of relations” with China and the stage is set for talks on ways the two countries can be “strategic partners," Prime Minister Mark Carney said Thursday.

The prime minister made the comments as he was welcomed in Beijing by the second and third most powerful figures in China’s political system: Premier Li Qiang and Zhao Leji, chairman of the standing committee of the National People’s Congress.

While most of the talks took place in secret, media were allowed into the room to hear opening remarks at some of the meetings and to observe a signing ceremony for a number of memorandums of understanding.

"From energy to agriculture to people-to-people ties to multilateralism to issues on security, we believe that the spirit and the substance of these discussions, and these agreements, will provide great benefit to each of our peoples," Carney said at the start of one of his meetings.

Carney added Ottawa hopes this renewal will become an "example to the world of co-operation amidst a time globally of division and disorder."

Premier Li hailed what he called a “turnaround” in bilateral ties with Canada, calling it a "new starting point" for the two countries.

Li also said Carney’s meeting with President Xi Jinping on Friday will pave the way for “upward growth” in the relationship, according to the live translation provided by the Chinese government.

Before the trip, Canadian officials told reporters to expect possible movement on — but not an end to — the tariff dispute. China imposed steep tariffs on Canadian agriculture products, including canola and peas, after Canada imposed a 100 per cent tariff on Chinese electric vehicles.

Industry Minister Mélanie Joly said Thursday Carney will have more to say about the state of those tariff negotiations after he meets with Xi.

"There's still negotiation happening and of course the prime minister will be able to answer your question tomorrow," Joly said during a media scrum in Beijing when asked if she thinks a tariff breakthrough is possible.

Carney said Thursday he is "heartened by the leadership of President Xi" and the "speed with which our relationship has progressed in recent months."

Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, whose province is smarting from the canola tariffs, sat at Carney's right during that meeting, alongside several Liberal ministers and senior federal bureaucrats.

In an earlier meeting with Carney, Zhao said China looks forward to “new strategic guidance” from Ottawa to put the relationship on a trajectory of “healthy, steady and sustainable development.”

It's a marked change in tone from nearly a year ago, when — during the spring election campaign — Carney described China as the biggest threat to Canada on the world stage.

But the Carney government is seeking to double non-U.S. exports in the next decade in response to the unstable geopolitical and trading environment ushered in by the re-election of U.S. President Donald Trump.

Carney was also in and out of a marathon of closed-door meetings with businesses throughout Thursday.

He met with top officials from such firms as Alibaba, China National Petroleum, the EV battery company Contemporary Amperex Technology, Primavera Capital Group and ICBC, China’s state-owned commercial bank.

It all signals that economic doors are starting to open between the two countries after nearly a decade of friction on trade, security and diplomacy.

The MOUs signed Thursday included provisions for sanitary oversight of pet food and animal health — areas where Canada has long complained about trade irritants.

Since February 2022, exports of heat-treated dry pet food with poultry have been halted due to China's avian flu trade restrictions. One case of atypical BSE also led to a suspension of beef exports to China in 2021.

Ottawa has been frustrated by Chinese officials' limited willingness to engage on those files, which stymied some agricultural exports.

Canadian officials were not made available Thursday to explain what they hope to accomplish through the animal-related MOUs.

Energy Minister Tim Hodgson said one MOU he signed is expected to lead to more Canadian wood being used in Chinese construction. He said this is just the beginning of Ottawa's efforts to foster deeper economic integration.

"This is not a one-and-done," he said. "We will be back here more, looking for more ways to get Canadian products into this country so more Canadians have good paying jobs."

He also said he heard in his meetings with Chinese officials there's an appetite for more Canadian energy products as China seeks "reliable" trading partners that "don't use energy partners for coercion."

The biggest trade sticking points have not yet been sorted: Canada's electric vehicle tariffs and China's duties on Canadian canola and other agricultural products.

The Liberals are under pressure to convince Beijing to repeal or lower agricultural tariffs that are hurting Atlantic and western provinces.

But that would involve some sort of trade-off with Canada’s levies on Chinese electric vehicles.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford maintains those tariffs are essential to protecting domestic jobs.

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand met early Thursday with her Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi.

Wang said the renewed diplomatic engagement between the two countries will create new prospects in a world facing unprecedented and complex changes.

Anand had said a day earlier that Canada's relationship with China is being "recalibrated."

But she stopped short of calling it a reset and did not directly answer a pointed question about whether Canada still sees China as a disruptive power.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

MORE National ARTICLES

Trust of First Nations 'fragile' as B.C. government considers changes to UN law

Trust of First Nations 'fragile' as B.C. government considers changes to UN law
The chief of a First Nation in the Great Bear Rainforest says B.C. Premier David Eby risks losing the trust of Indigenous people and could fuel racism if he changes the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act. 

Trust of First Nations 'fragile' as B.C. government considers changes to UN law

Canada gets further away from reaching 2030 emission target: report

Canada gets further away from reaching 2030 emission target: report
A progress report on Canada's emissions targets shows the federal government's projection for greenhouse gas emissions in 2030 is higher than it was two years ago.

Canada gets further away from reaching 2030 emission target: report

Toronto—Quebec City high-speed rail could see dozens of daily trains: documents

Toronto—Quebec City high-speed rail could see dozens of daily trains: documents
A planned high-speed rail project between Toronto and Quebec City could dramatically increase the number of trains that travel along the corridor each day, according to internal documents. 

Toronto—Quebec City high-speed rail could see dozens of daily trains: documents

Canada to begin formal talks with U.S. in January on review of free trade deal

Canada to begin formal talks with U.S. in January on review of free trade deal
Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada will enter into formal discussions with the United States in January to review their free trade agreement.

Canada to begin formal talks with U.S. in January on review of free trade deal

Weeks before total insured losses from B.C. flooding are tallied: insurance bureau

Weeks before total insured losses from B.C. flooding are tallied: insurance bureau
The Insurance Bureau of Canada says it will be several weeks before the insured losses are added up for a severe weather and flooding event that deluged parts of southern B.C. 

Weeks before total insured losses from B.C. flooding are tallied: insurance bureau

Mark Carney shakes up roster of deputy ministers heading into the holidays

Mark Carney shakes up roster of deputy ministers heading into the holidays
Prime Minister Mark Carney is shuffling the senior ranks of the federal public service heading into the new year.

Mark Carney shakes up roster of deputy ministers heading into the holidays