Cape Breton Post

Trudeau government to pay dairy farmers hurt by trade

- ROD NICKEL

WINNIPEG, Manitoba (Reuters) The Canadian government will spend C$1.75 billion ($1.32 billion) over eight years to compensate dairy farmers who face greater competitio­n after free trade deals were struck with European Union and Trans-Pacific nations, Agricultur­e Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau said on Friday.

The support to dairy farmers, who form one of Canada’s most influentia­l lobby groups, comes two months before Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government faces an election.

Bibeau, speaking on a dairy farm in Compton, Quebec, said the Liberal government would not make further dairy market-access concession­s in other trade negotiatio­ns.

Canada’s 11,000 dairy farmers are concentrat­ed in the vote-rich provinces of Quebec and Ontario, which will be key battlegrou­nds for the governing Liberal party and its main opponent, the Conservati­ves.

The trade pacts have eroded Canada’s system of production quotas and high tariffs that is designed to support prices of dairy, poultry and eggs. As part of the European and Trans-Pacific trade deals Canada signed, it agreed to allow greater imports into the Canadian market, although the supply management system remains in place.

Of Canada’s aid to dairy farmers, C$345 million will be paid directly to farmers in the first year according to the size of their production quotas, Bibeau said.

Ottawa gave further access last year under a new North American free trade deal that has not yet been ratified. Bibeau said when it is in place, the Canadian government would give dairy farmers further compensati­on.

Compensati­on for poultry and egg producers is still being negotiated, she said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A farmer feeds calves in a barn at a dairy farm in South Mountain, Ont., June 29, 2018.
REUTERS A farmer feeds calves in a barn at a dairy farm in South Mountain, Ont., June 29, 2018.

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