Beijing says it will impose tariffs on Canadian agricultural and food products in retaliation for Ottawa’s levies on Chinese electric vehicles, stoking greater uncertainty over the North American country’s economy.
China’s commerce ministry on Saturday said it would impose 100 per cent tariffs on Canadian rapeseed oil and pea imports and a 25 per cent levy on pork and some seafood imports.
It said it was responding to “discriminatory” tariffs of 100 per cent on electric vehicles and 25 per cent on steel and aluminium that Ottawa announced in August, which followed similar actions by the US.
In response, Beijing filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization and launched an anti-dumping probe into Canadian imports of rapeseed products.
China is an important market for Canadian rapeseed, a crop also known as canola. China bought $3.5bn worth of Canadian canola products, including oil and seeds, making it the largest market behind the US, according to the Canola Council of Canada trade group.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau accused China of “not playing by the same rules” when he announced the tariffs on Chinese EVs and metals in August. Carmaking is one of Canada’s most important manufacturing sectors, with plants supplying the US market.
You get electric vehicles, they get money. What’s the problem?
I think the problem is not just supporting a country with human rights issues, but doing so to the detriment of our own manufacturing industry.
I think it would be very tough for Canada to not support Canada though
Everyone in the comments are taking issue with applying tariffs on Chinese EV’s, and I’m downvoted for saying that maybe we should support Canadian industry first.
Fuck cheap EV’s when the cost is supporting totalitarians and losing Canadian jobs!
Shouldn’t you be off applauding SS members right now?
Does Canada even have EV manufacturing?
Not with that attitude!
J/K we were set to have a couple plants ready to go this year, but who knows now?
https://toronto.citynews.ca/2024/04/25/heres-a-list-of-recent-electric-vehicle-and-battery-plant-announcements-in-canada/