Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Tools, electronics, sports equipment from the U.S. hit with Canadian counter-tariffs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Mar, 2025 04:53 PM
  • Tools, electronics, sports equipment from the U.S. hit with Canadian counter-tariffs

Many consumer goods could be up to 25 per cent more expensive in Canada due to retaliatory tariffs against the U.S. — including the kitchen sink.

Matching 25 per cent tariffs on $29.8 billion worth of American goods took effect just after midnight in response to U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs on steel and aluminum imports.

Canada's extensive counter-tariff list focuses on American steel and aluminum products, including a wide variety of industrial materials, and is part of a broader counter-tariff package expected to expand to cover $155 billion in goods by the end of the month.

The counter-tariffs aren't just hitting ingots and rolled steel — many common household goods are on the tariff list.

They include a wide variety of kitchenware — everything from coffee cups and steel wool scouring pads to stoves and other large appliances. Ovens and oven parts are also on the list.

Smartphones are being hit, along with video game consoles and audio equipment, including headphones.

The Canadian levies are targeting tools and hardware — saws, shovels and hammers, all the way up to industrial equipment used for drilling — along with screws and other fasteners.

American-made sports equipment like golf clubs and balls, water-skis, beach balls and tennis rackets are now subject to tariffs.

Travelling fairs and amusement parks have been caught in the trade crossfire; Canada is imposing levies on theme park rides like roller-coasters, bumper cars, merry-go-rounds and waterslides.

Even camping trips could be more costly: sleeping bags are being tariffed as well.

These counter-tariffs take effect on the same day that Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc, Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne, Ambassador to the U.S. Kirsten Hillman and Ontario Premier Doug Ford are expected to meet with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.

MORE National ARTICLES

TikTok files legal challenge of federal government's shutdown order

TikTok files legal challenge of federal government's shutdown order
TikTok is challenging the federal government’s order to shut down its operations in Canada. The company filed in documents in Federal Court in Vancouver on Thursday.

TikTok files legal challenge of federal government's shutdown order

Parents plead guilty in 2021 death of burned, emaciated toddler in Calgary

Parents plead guilty in 2021 death of burned, emaciated toddler in Calgary
The parents of a badly burned and emaciated Calgary toddler have pleaded guilty in his death. Court heard on Monday horrific details about the 2021 death of Gabriel Sinclair-Pasqua.

Parents plead guilty in 2021 death of burned, emaciated toddler in Calgary

Premiers to meet with Trudeau Wednesday about trade and tariffs, Ford says

Premiers to meet with Trudeau Wednesday about trade and tariffs, Ford says
It comes two weeks after the premiers' last meeting with Justin Trudeau, where they discussed how to respond to U.S. president-elect Donald Trump's warning that he will impose a 25 per cent tariff on goods from Canada and Mexico when he takes office next month.

Premiers to meet with Trudeau Wednesday about trade and tariffs, Ford says

Passenger from B.C. had 10 kg of Christmas-wrapped meth: New Zealand border agency

Passenger from B.C. had 10 kg of Christmas-wrapped meth: New Zealand border agency
New Zealand's border agency says a woman is in custody after arriving on a flight from Vancouver with more than 10 kilograms of methamphetamine wrapped as Christmas presents. The New Zealand Customs Service says in a news release that the woman arrived in Auckland on Sunday, where she was questioned by officers.

Passenger from B.C. had 10 kg of Christmas-wrapped meth: New Zealand border agency

Family wants answers after Indigenous man's braids cut while in Edmonton hospital

Family wants answers after Indigenous man's braids cut while in Edmonton hospital
Family of an Indigenous man whose braids were cut and thrown away while he was staying in an Edmonton hospital want answers. Eve Adams says this past spring she went to visit her husband Dexter at Edmonton’s Royal Alexandra Hospital only to find the 84-year-old's braids, his eagle feather and some medicine had been put in the garbage can.

Family wants answers after Indigenous man's braids cut while in Edmonton hospital

Stranger sucker-punched in Downtown

Stranger sucker-punched in Downtown
Police in Vancouver say a 29-year-old man has been charged for allegedly sucker-punching a stranger in the city's downtown last month. It happened on November 28th outside the Hudson's Bay on West Georgia Street.

Stranger sucker-punched in Downtown