Canada Tariff News and Tracker
Listeners, welcome back to Canada Tariff News and Tracker, where we break down how global trade fights hit home for Canada. Let’s start with fresh numbers that matter directly to Canadian exporters. Trade data analyzed by Expanamarkets shows that all major salmon‑supplying nations currently face a 10% U.S. tariff on fresh salmon, with Canada the sole exception under USMCA. Expanamarkets reports that Chile now controls about 70% of U.S. fresh salmon fillet imports, while Norwegian shipments are down 35% this year as that 10% tariff reshapes the market. For Canadian seafood producers, this exception is effectively a built‑in tariff advantage into the U.S. market, reinforcing how critical USMCA’s zero‑tariff access remains. Beyond specific products, there is a broader U.S. tariff wave building that Canada is trying to stay clear of. According to analysis from the American Action Forum, the U.S. Trade Representative has proposed new Section 301 tariffs of 10% to 12.5% on imports from 86 countries tied to forced‑labour concerns. The study estimates these tariffs would cost U.S. consumers and businesses about 58 billion dollars a year based on 2025 import data. Canada is not the target of this forced‑labour tariff regime, but Canadian firms will feel the indirect effects as U.S. buyers look to shift sourcing away from hit countries and toward trusted partners with trade agreements and strong labour standards. That puts Canadian manufacturers in a position to win business that might otherwise go to Asia or Latin America. The political backdrop is getting louder. Multiple outlets covering the G7 summit in France report that Donald Trump has been using the meetings to revive his tariff‑heavy message, reminding allies that he is willing to hit even close partners with steep duties if he feels the U.S. is being treated unfairly. Industrial Info, for example, notes that Trump’s 50% steel tariffs on Europe have already driven European steel exports to the U.S. down by more than a third. For Canada, this is a reminder that past U.S. steel and aluminum tariffs on Canadian shipments could return if relations sour, despite USMCA. There is also a Canada‑China angle unfolding under the U.S. tariff shadow. CBC video coverage from the G7 captured a hot‑mic moment between senior Canadian officials and Trump discussing Chinese electric vehicles. The clip shows them talking about Canada’s recent agreement with China to allow a small number of Chinese EVs into the Canadian market at a reduced tariff. For Canadian policymakers, that’s a delicate balance: maintaining room to maneuver on China while reassuring Washington that Canada is not becoming a back door for tariff‑hit Chinese goods into the North American market. Taken together, the message for Canadian listeners is clear: USMCA’s zero‑tariff foundation still shields key sectors like seafood from the new U.S. tariff regime, but Trump‑era tariff politics are very much alive, and any future escalation could once again pull Canada directly into the line of fire. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an update on how tariffs are shaping Canada’s economy and your bottom line. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Avoid ths tariff fee's and check out these deals https://amzn.to/4iaM94Q
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