Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ottawa says automakers that keep building in Canada will get a tariff exemption

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Apr, 2025 12:00 PM
  • Ottawa says automakers that keep building in Canada will get a tariff exemption

Automobile companies that continue to manufacture vehicles in Canada will get an exemption from Ottawa's retaliatory tariffs as U.S. President Donald Trump attempts to upend the North American industry through steep import duties.

Federal Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne announced Tuesday that auto manufacturers will be allowed to import a certain number of U.S.-assembled vehicles — ones that comply with the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade — free of the countermeasure tariffs Ottawa imposed in response to Trump's levies.

The number of tariff-free vehicles a company is permitted to import will drop if there are reductions in Canadian production or investment.

"The North American automobile sector is the most integrated industrial manufacturing sector in the world, particularly the Canadian-U.S. auto sector," Prime Minister Mark Carney said Tuesday. "And so President Trump's tariffs are an attempt insome degree to pull apart that integration and the benefits that come from that integration."

Carney made the comment in response to a media question while campaigning in Saint-Eustache, Que.

Trump imposed 25 per cent tariffs on all imports of automobiles to the United States on April 3 but ordered apartial carve-out for vehicles built under the continental trade pact, known as CUSMA. In response, Ottawa put similar tariffs on U.S.-made vehicles bound for Canada.

Duties on auto part imports to the U.S. were set to take effect no later than May 3; Carney said he does not believe those tariffs will go ahead now. The Liberal leader said he has been in touch with automaker CEOs in Canada and around the globe.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said earlier Tuesday at acampaign stop in Montreal that "Trump deserves nothing but condemnation for the unfair targeting of Canada."

Trump's duties have rattled the North American automobile sector. Vehicles cross the Canada-U.S. border multiple times before they're finished and experts say the tariffs will drive up prices.

The Canadian and American auto industries officially integrated with the 1965 Auto Pact trade deal.

Mexico became part the industry in the 1990s with the North American Free Trade Agreement. That was replaced during Trump's first administration by CUSMA, which boosted protections for the automobile sector.

Carney said Trump's tariffs already have caused short-term impacts, including temporary layoffs. 

After a report emerged about possible shifts in Canadian Honda production Tuesday, Industry Minister Anita Anand posted on social media that the company has "communicated that no such production decisions affecting Canadian operations have been made, and are not being considered at this time."

The Detroit Three — Ford, General Motors and Stellantis — have been lobbying the Trump administration for months. Trump suggested Monday another pause on automobile tariffs could be coming.

"I'm looking at something to help some of the car companies where they are switching to parts that were made in Canada, Mexico and other places," Trump said. "And they need a little bit of time because they are going to make them here."

On Tuesday, Champagne also announced relief for Canadian businesses affected by the trade dispute.

"We're giving Canadian companies and entities more time to adjust their supply chains and become less dependent on U.S. suppliers," Champagne said in a news release.

Ottawa says it intends to provide a temporary six-month tariffholiday for goods imported from the U.S. that are used inCanadian manufacturing, processing and food and beverage packaging. The temporary exemption also will apply to goods used to support public health, health care, public safety and national security.

Champagne added the large enterprise tariff loan facility, announced in March, is now accepting applications.

Global markets have been in turmoil since Trump launched, then partially paused, his "reciprocal" tariffs earlier this month. A 10 per cent universal import tariff remains in place for most countries, as well as specific duties on sectors like aluminum, steel and automobiles.

Trump slapped 145 per cent tariffs on Chinese imports and Beijing responded with a 125 per cent retaliatory duty on U.S. products.

A new poll suggests Canadians are expressing high levels of concern about the recent stock market volatility linked to U.S. tariffs — and are more worried than Americans about how duties will affect their finances.

The Leger poll sampled 1,630 Canadian adults and 1,007 American adults from April 11 to April 13. Because the poll was conducted online, it can’t be assigned a margin of error.

It suggests 78 per cent of Canadian respondents were worried about stock market volatility. Most Canadian respondents, 87 per cent, said they believed the new tariffs will affect their personal finances, compared to 78 per cent of Americans.

Leger conducts tariff polls weekly and says that more Canadians and Americans reported seeing an increase inconsumer prices in the past week. 

— With files from Kyle Duggan in Ottawa and Catherine Morrison in Saint-Eustache, Que.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 15, 2025.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. port employers issue lockout notice in labour dispute with foremen union

B.C. port employers issue lockout notice in labour dispute with foremen union
Ports in British Columbia are waking up to the possibility of another provincewide labour disruption as employers say they will lock out members of the union representing more than 700 foremen after it served a strike notice. The BC Maritime Employers Association says in a statement that it has issued a formal notice that it will "defensively" lock out members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 514 starting Monday at 8 a.m.

B.C. port employers issue lockout notice in labour dispute with foremen union

Man flees to India in AP Dhillon shooting

Man flees to India in AP Dhillon shooting
Mounties on Vancouver Island say a man has been arrested in Ontario and another is believed to have fled to India after shots were fired at a home in Greater Victoria last month. Property records show the home is owned by Punjabi music star A-P Dhillon, who posted on Instagram after the shooting that he was safe.

Man flees to India in AP Dhillon shooting

Vancouver confirms CRAB Park temporary sheltering area will close next week

Vancouver confirms CRAB Park temporary sheltering area will close next week
The City of Vancouver says the remaining seven residents of an encampment at a Downtown Eastside park have a week to pack up their belongings and leave, or they must remove their tents each day as the area returns to regular daytime use. A statement from the city says people may continue sheltering at CRAB Park overnight, but structures must be taken down by 8 a.m. each day starting Nov. 7.

Vancouver confirms CRAB Park temporary sheltering area will close next week

Suspicious activity with van

Suspicious activity with van
Police in Metro Vancouver say they're investigating two reports of suspicious interactions involving a man driving a white van approaching young girls. New Westminster police say they received the second report after issuing a public statement about the first interaction involving two 12-year-old girls on October 26th.

Suspicious activity with van

Pedestrian dies in vehicle crash

Pedestrian dies in vehicle crash
Ridge Meadows Mounties say a female pedestrian died last week after being struck by a vehicle in one of three crashes involving cyclists or pedestrians in the area in the last seven days. Police say the fatal crash happened on Lougheed Highway on October 25th, when the 49-year-old victim from Pitt Meadows died at the scene despite live-saving efforts from emergency workers.

Pedestrian dies in vehicle crash

Canadian election watchers to gather in bars, homes to watch polarizing U.S. vote

Canadian election watchers to gather in bars, homes to watch polarizing U.S. vote
Canadians engrossed in the drama of the U.S. presidential election expect to gather in bars and living rooms to watch the votes roll in Tuesday, but many say the usual fanfare of watch parties will be muted by anxiety over the especially combative race.

Canadian election watchers to gather in bars, homes to watch polarizing U.S. vote