Calgary Herald

Canada seeks $ 3B in tariffs if label law not dropped

Ottawa asking WTO for punitive measures if label law isn’t dropped

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

Canada has filed a request to impose more than $ 3 billion a year in tariffs on the United States unless an simmering trade dispute gets resolved quickly.

Ottawa has asked the World Trade Organizati­on ( WTO) to authorize punitive measures against dozens of American products including meat, wine and chocolate.

The tariffs will be imposed by late summer — unless the U. S. Congress addresses Canadian and Mexican concerns, Agricultur­e Minister Gerry Ritz warned Thursday.

The U. S. Congress is currently re- examining the law at the centre of the dispute: A requiremen­t that meat sold in American grocery stores carry a sticker identifyin­g where the livestock was born, raised and slaughtere­d.

And if the law’s not gone within a few weeks there could be retaliator­y tariffs on up to 38 U. S. products that amount to $ 8 billion in annual exports to Canada, with the tariffs potentiall­y totalling nearly half that figure.

“Let me restate that a full repeal is the United States’ only option to avoid retaliatio­n,” Ritz said during a Washington visit. “Hopefully the Americans will see the light and realize that they need to rescind COOL ( country- of- origin- labelling).”

Backers of the labelling rules say consumers have a right to know where their food comes from and resent foreign countries and an internatio­nal trade body ripping up U. S. law.

But industry groups, Canada and Mexico call it a thinly disguised protection­ist measure that complicate­s the supply process and drives up the cost of exporting to the U. S.

They also argued that it was illegal under internatio­nal trade law — and they won.

The WTO has repeatedly sided with Canada and Mexico in the dispute and the last appeal decision set the stage for possible retaliator­y tariffs.

In a race to avoid such tariffs, the U. S. Congress has begun studying a bill that would repeal the labelling rules.

It’s likely to gain easy passage in the House of Representa­tives, but then face a tougher fight in the Senate.

Ritz said the U. S. is out of options, and out of time.

He warned the Senate not to try watering down the law with some other labelling requiremen­t, which he said would be unsatisfac­tory to Canada and Mexico who want full repeal.

He brushed aside the question of whether the WTO might agree that such severe retaliatio­n was deserved.

While Canada has blamed the labelling rules for damaging meat exports, and they did indeed suffer for several years, exports actually shot up significan­tly in 2014 despite the labelling.

Exports of Canadian meat to the U. S. surged in a year when the loonie dropped — rising to US$ 4.99 billion in 2014, from $ 3.86 US billion a year earlier.

Ritz said the retaliatio­n request was carefully worked out and scrutinize­d by Daniel Sumner, an agricultur­e economist at the University of California: “He’s adjudicate­d this number. We didn’t make it up.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/ FILES ?? Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall says his province benefited the last time Alberta reviewed its royalties.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/ FILES Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall says his province benefited the last time Alberta reviewed its royalties.

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