Farm groups from Ontario, Quebec and Atlantic Canada are calling on the federal government to refund farmers “who have borne the extra fees and costs resulting from tariffs on fertilizer in 2022,” the groups said in a joint release Nov. 24.
Representatives from the Atlantic Grains Council, Québec Grain Farmers, Grain Farmers of Ontario, the Ontario Bean Growers Association, Ontario Canola Growers, and the Christian Farmers Federation of Ontario – representing more than 50,000 farmers – have come together to ask the government to ensure the refund of tariff fees goes directly to farmers.
According to Statistics Canada, the federal government collected $34 million in tariff income on fertilizer imported into Canada in 2022. Since last spring, farmers have been paying tariff surcharges on fertilizer purchased to grow their crops. Much of these surcharges were placed on fertilizer purchased in advance of the tariffs being introduced.
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Farm groups have spent months meeting with Members of Parliament to outline the impact the tariffs are having on the Canadian food system and the importance of refunding this money back to farmers.
“We need the government to return the money collected directly back to farmers who paid the tariffs on fertilizer,” said Brendan Byrne, Chair of the Grain Farmers of Ontario, in the release. “Over the past two months, we have met with over a dozen Members of Parliament who have been very supportive of finding a resolution to this matter. We want to ensure decision-makers follow through to see this money is returned to farmers.”
Christian Overbeek, chair of Québec Grain Farmers, said that the tariffs have placed Canadian farmers at a disadvantage to farmers from other countries due to higher production costs. “Our farmers need to know the government is acting on a resolution.”
Thomas Tavani, general manager of the Christian Farmers Federation of Ontario, said farmers continue to take the brunt of yearly rising input costs, and asking them to pay a tariff on top of that for a global product, such as fertilizer, “is simply ridiculous.”
“Forcing farmers to pay a tariff on a global product such as fertilizer just penalizes the farmer and adds additional costs at a time when input costs are already at an all-time high,” said Ryan Koeslag of the Ontario Bean Growers Association. “We look forward to seeing a speedy resolution from government.”