Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance to push for free trade despite U.S. tariffs

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Published: March 4, 2025

(File photo by Lorraine Stevenson)

The Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance says it will continue its advocacy for free and open trade in the agriculture and agri-food industries, despite the imposition of U.S. tariffs.

“We will not relent until order is restored to our integrated North American market,” said CAFTA president Greg Northey.

U.S. president Donald Trump’s executive order to hit Canada and Mexico with 25 per cent tariffs across the board, with a 10 per cent tariff on Canadian energy, took effect at 12:01 EST on March 4.

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CAFTA, which comprises several national agriculture and producer groups, advocates for liberalization of agriculture and agri-food trade, including elimination of tariffs and non-tariff trade barriers, the organization’s website says.

CAFTA said U.S. tariffs on agri-food imports from Canada and Mexico is bad news for Americans as well as Canadian and Mexicans.

These tariffs leave businesses and consumers in every country in North America at a disadvantage, Northey said in a news release on Tuesday.

“They increase costs, disrupt supply chains and harm American, Canadian and Mexican consumers and producers,” he added.

The integrated supply chains that are in place in North America are the standard for global trade and provide an avenue for farmers and food producers to remain competitive on the world stage while also keeping the price of products affordable for consumers, CAFTA said.

The tariffs Trump has put in place threaten to dismantle the history of co-operation between North American countries, while also driving up prices, creating instability in the market and putting people’s livelihoods in jeopardy.

The United States’ decision to impose tariffs has weakened all three countries, said Michael Harvey, CAFTA’s executive director.

“CAFTA supports the efforts of the Government of Canada to achieve a lifting of the tariffs and return to focus on a rational, rules-based, free trading system that benefits both producers and consumers, regardless of which side of the border they are on,” Harvey said.

About the author

Miranda Leybourne

Miranda Leybourne

Reporter

Miranda Leybourne is a Glacier FarmMedia reporter based in Neepawa, Manitoba with eight years of journalism experience, specializing in agricultural reporting. Born in northern Ontario and raised in northern Manitoba, she brings a deep, personal understanding of rural life to her storytelling.

A graduate of Assiniboine College’s media production program, Miranda began her journalism career in 2007 as the agriculture reporter at 730 CKDM in Dauphin. After taking time off to raise her two children, she returned to the newsroom once they were in full-time elementary school. From June 2022 to May 2024, she covered the ag sector for the Brandon Sun before joining Glacier FarmMedia. Miranda has a strong interest in organic and regenerative agriculture and is passionate about reporting on sustainable farming practices. You can reach Miranda at [email protected].

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