Edmonton Journal

Auto industry skeptical of Canada’s TPP side deal

Trade minister claims access to Japan market

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA • Autoworker­s and manufactur­ers are rejecting assertions by Canada’s trade minister that the country won major access for them into the highly protected Japanese market in the recently rebooted Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p.

Internatio­nal Trade Minister François-Philippe Champagne told the Senate trade committee last week that Canada won its greatest market access ever into the Japanese market when it signed on last month to the new 11-country version of the Pacific Rim pact that was salvaged after the Trump administra­tion pulled the U.S. out last year.

Champagne said the agreement between Canada and Japan is contained in a side-letter, not in the text of the agreement, which he told senators is nonetheles­s “enforceabl­e.”

That’s not possible, say representa­tives from the autoworker­s union and two trade associatio­ns representi­ng Canadian automobile manufactur­ers.

They said side agreements are not enforceabl­e unless they are part of an actual trade agreement.

And they reiterated past concerns that Canada’s decision to join the new TPP, without the U.S., would ultimately cost Canadian manufactur­ing jobs and undermine the country’s interests in wrestling with the U.S. over automobile roadblocks in the ongoing renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

The text of the new TPP has not been released and Champagne’s office says the side letter with Japan isn’t ready to be released yet.

Champagne pledged to release the letter during his upbeat Senate testimony on Wednesday in which he heralded the deal with Japan on autos as a breakthrou­gh.

“We were able to achieve something that has never been achieved before, which is the largest market access for Canadian auto manufactur­ers in Japan, removing non-tariff trade barriers with respect to safety standards,” Champagne said.

“We’ve achieved that in a side letter, which is enforceabl­e — the first time that the government of Japan is giving a side letter on auto which is enforceabl­e.”

Champagne said the letter also contains a “most-favoured nation clause,” which means if Japan strikes a better deal with another party — the U.S. or Europe — those better terms would automatica­lly apply to Canada.

Jerry Dias, the president of Unifor, the union representi­ng autoworker­s, said the letter carries no weight because it is not part of the agreement.

“A side letter is unenforcea­ble. We didn’t even push hard enough to get it folded into the body of the agreement,” said Dias, who predicted the agreement would lead to a flood of Chinese parts into the North American auto market — something the Trump administra­tion is trying to avoid by pressing for higher continenta­l content in autos at the NAFTA negotiatio­ns.

Dias dismissed the mostfavour­ed nation clause as an admission Champagne “carved a lousy deal.”

Flavio Volpe, president of the Automotive Parts Manufactur­ers Associatio­n, said there’s no indication the side letter will address any real trade barriers in Japan, and he said it is unlikely it would lead to more Canadian cars being sold in that market.

He said the letter will “have as much influence on new car sales in Japan as they will on the price of cheese in Windsor.

“Side letters are political agreements to deal with an issue that was too difficult to find an enforceabl­e, termed agreement on,” he added. “In business, anyone seeking an enforceabl­e covenant would put it in the actual contract.”

Mark Nantais, the president of the Canadian Vehicle Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n, said side letters are not binding and could be “subjective­ly” interprete­d by Japanese regulators.

Champagne said the letter reduces non-tariff barriers, such as safety standards, but Nantais said other non-tariff barriers could include something as mundane as dimensions of a licence plate holder.

“Conceivabl­y you could spend millions of dollars trying to get product into that country and have it all sitting on a dock because you’ve got one dimension that’s off on a licence plate.”

 ?? ODED BALILTY / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? A view of Jerusalem’s Old City as seen from Mount of Olives. The federal Conservati­ves now say they recognize the disputed city as the Israeli capital, not Tel Aviv, calling on Canada to increase its presence in the city.
ODED BALILTY / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES A view of Jerusalem’s Old City as seen from Mount of Olives. The federal Conservati­ves now say they recognize the disputed city as the Israeli capital, not Tel Aviv, calling on Canada to increase its presence in the city.

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