Parties unitedly condemn China tariffs on Canadian canola

China’s 75.8 per cent tariffs against Canadian canola seed called ‘unjustified,’ spark calls for immediate federal response from Canada’s Liberal government

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Published: 15 hours ago

Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre addresses electric vehicles and China’s recent tariffs against Canadian canola seed at a press event on a Saskatchewan grain farm Aug. 14, 2025. Photo: Janelle Rudolph

Glacier FarmMedia — Political leaders across party lines are demanding immediate action from Ottawa in light of China’s new tariffs against Canadian canola.

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew, Progressive Conservative critics, federal NDP and federal Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre are all calling for urgent government intervention in the matter.

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WHY IT MATTERS

The latest move in the trade dispute between Canada and China risks effectively shutting Canadian producers out of one of their most important canola seed markets.

China’s preliminary 75.8 per cent tariff on all Canadian canola seed shipments, which took effect Aug. 14, is the most recent escalation in a months-long trade spat. Last year, China announced an anti-dumping investigation against Canadian canola seed, a move many considered retaliation for Canada’s decision to impose 100 per cent tariffs against Chinese electric vehicles. In March, China imposed 100 per cent duties against canola meal, oil and peas, as well as 25 per cent duties on pork and aquatic products, pointing to Canadian tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminum.

China has claimed that its investigation found the Canadian canola industry has benefited from substantial government subsidies and preferential policies, a claim that Canadian industry and government disputes.

China has since announced another anti-dumping investigation into Canadian pea starch.

Canola Council of Canada president Chris Davison confirmed the severity of the situation in an Aug. 12 press release.

“With this preliminary determination of dumping for canola seed together with the existing 100 per cent anti-discrimination tariffs on canola meal and oil, the Chinese market is effectively closed to the Canadian canola industry,” Davison said.

Politicians call for federal action

“Yesterday, a billion dollars. That’s what the Chinese tariffs cost Western Canada,” Kinew said at a press conference in Winnipeg on the afternoon of Aug. 13, a day after the new canola tariff was announced. “Today, you’re talking about a further impact, hundreds of millions of dollars, and this is primarily going to be born by the farmer in the field.”

Federal NDP echoed Kinew in a press release Aug. 13. NDP critics for agriculture (Gord Johns) and international trade (Heather McPherson) said China’s move “demands urgent action from the Liberal government.”

Speaking from a Saskatchewan grain farm Aug. 14, Poilievre criticized Prime Minister Mark Carney’s handling of Chinese relations, especially a taxpayer-backed loan for B.C. Ferries to buy Chinese-made vessels.

“Can you imagine that the sign of weakness that Carney is sending to the dictatorship in Beijing? You tax and tariff our farmers, and we’ll give you a billion-dollar loan to create jobs in your country,” Poilievre said.

Canadian canola seed now joins the canola products with active tariffs on them from China. Photo: Greg Berg
Canadian canola seed now joins the canola products with active tariffs on them from China. Photo: Greg Berg

In a post on X Aug. 14, Carney said that he had spoken to Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe on the matter and discussed farm support, although no specifics had been announced as of press time.

Carney also said federal agriculture and international trade ministers had met with industry

“Canada does not dump canola,” the prime minister wrote. “Canadian canola products meet the highest standards and our inspection systems are robust.

“We will advance a constructive dialogue with Chinese officials to address our respective trade concerns, while diversifying our trade abroad and supporting our canola producers at home.”

Farmers worried

The timing couldn’t be worse for Manitoba farmers entering harvest season, according to Manitoba Canola Growers chair Warren Ellis, who joined Kinew at the podium in Winnipeg, along with Keystone Agricultural Producers (KAP) president Jill Verwey.

“We don’t know how long it’s going to last. There’s just so many things we don’t know,” Ellis said. “Farmers are going to harvest their crop and they’re going to have to make a decision. Are they going to store it and wait for calmer times, or are they going to dump it on the market and take their loss, or are they going to end up doing a combination of that?”

China represents the canola industry’s “second-largest customer,” making the market closure particularly devastating, he added.

“All the loans we take out, all the cash flow that we use to finance growing the crop, now paying that back is in jeopardy. It’s really critical that solutions come up. We can’t be left to drift here.”

Verwey, meanwhile, argued for a comprehensive federal strategy that handles trade issues and negotiations deftly.

“The volatility and the prices of our crops places undue strain on our producers, specifically and directly at this point of time when farmers are out taking the crops off right now,” she said.

Left to right: Manitoba Canola Growers Chair Warren Ellis, Keystone Agricultural Producers President Jill Verwey and Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew at a press conference on Chinese tariffs on Aug. 13, 2025 in Winnipeg. Photo: Screen capture/Manitoba Government
Left to right: Manitoba Canola Growers Chair Warren Ellis, Keystone Agricultural Producers President Jill Verwey and Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew at a press conference on Chinese tariffs on Aug. 13, 2025 in Winnipeg. Photo: Screen capture/Manitoba Government

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China trade escalation and EVs

Both Kinew and Poilievre suggested that money from Chinese electric vehicle duties should support canola growers, in light of the economic damage to their sector.

“When we look at what has brought us to this situation, it is the EV tariffs that the federal government chose to apply to the Chinese producers that got this retaliation put in place, and so that’s why we’re asking the federal government to use those revenues that they’ve been collecting,” Kinew said.

Poilievre said that “I think we should look at ways we can penalize the regime in Beijing for targeting our farmers,” but also argued that China’s trade hostility predates the electric vehicle dispute.

“Let’s recognize that China’s tariffs on our canola producers are totally unjustified. They had already targeted our beef producers before there were any EV tariffs imposed on them,” Poilievre said. “So, the Chinese government has mistreated our economy for many years.”

China blocked Canadian beef imports back in 2021, following an atypical BSE case found in Alberta. Beef, pork and canola have all had previous trade hurdles with China in the last decade prior to the latest flare in relations.

The federal NDP also cited a broader pattern of trade escalation, pointing to existing impact from Chinese tariffs on canola meal and oil.

Even footing

Both Kinew and federal New Democrats are demanding Ottawa provide the same level of support for agriculture that other industries have received during trade disputes. The Manitoba premier pointed to comprehensive federal responses to U.S. tariffs, which included countertariffs, strengthened import controls, and a $6-billion aid package for affected businesses.

“We know that agricultural producers are the pillars of their communities, and are a source of strength for the Prairies, and really for all of Canada, and so as they navigate these turbulent waters, we need to see this sort of support from the federal government,” Kinew said.

When asked about federal support for canola producers compared to other industries, Poilievre pointed to what he says is unequal treatment for Western producers.

“The forestry sector received some federal support about a week ago. It’s a similar size to the canola industry,” he said. “I think I’m 100 per cent behind the auto workers, steel workers, aluminum workers and forestry workers. Obviously, we should back them up, because they have faced unfair tariffs from the U.S., but the same support and attention should be given to our farmers.”

The federal NDP is asking for the federal government to increase the cap on cash advances to exceed the current limit of $250,000 under the Advance Payments Program.

In-province criticism

While Kinew has focused his criticism on federal policy, provincial Progressive Conservative opposition members are targeting his government’s handling of agricultural support. The party’s ag critic, Jeff Bereza, asked what the NDP government is doing to support Manitoba canola producers in an Aug. 12 statement.

“I’ve talked with farmers and cattle producers across Manitoba, and they are suffering,” he said. “Drought conditions are plaguing the Interlake. U.S. and Chinese tariffs are causing widespread disruptions and uncertainty to southern Manitoba. 2025 has been one of the worst years for the ag industry and we’re hearing nothing from the NDP.”

He added that “We’ve known these tariffs were coming. We’ve seen them before, and we’ll see them again.”

“What has Wab Kinew’s NDP government done to open up new markets for Manitoba’s ag producers?”

In July, the province and federal government said they were facilitating faster insurance payouts, loan deferrals and were moving the quality line on crop insurance to open up more drought-stricken cereal crops for the feed stream in light of drought conditions.

Kinew pointed to those moves, but argued the scale of the crisis requires federal intervention. The tariff impact extends far beyond individual farms, creating “spillover” effects throughout provincial and national economies, he said.

“When it comes to this relationship, there’s a lot of national security and other dynamics when we’re talking about the Chinese Communist Party, but at the same time, we have to engage. This is the second-biggest economy in the world,” Kinew said.

Weathering the storm

Despite the current issues, Ellis offered a message of cautious optimism.

“This is a problem. It’s devastating,” he said. “But we’ve got good partners in our premier and government, along with KAP, the Canadian Canola Growers. We’ve got numerous people working on this, and I think we need to consider that this will also pass.

“What we have to do is stay together, work together, and understand that this may not be solved quickly, but we’ve got good people on it with good hearts moving in the right direction.”

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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