Journal Pioneer

Milk for all its worth

U.S. dairy takes aim at Canadian supply management in NAFTA talks

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The first punches in what promises to be a bitter fight over Canada’s protected dairy industry are expected to be thrown during this week’s third round of North American Free Trade talks in Ottawa.

The U.S. dairy lobby says it wants the eliminatio­n of Canada’s supply management system — which slaps imports with a 270 per cent duty — and it says it has the support of its government as NAFTA talks begin in earnest.

The Canadian industry isn’t backing down and accuses the U.S. of giving its farmers unfair subsidies, while politician­s from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on down have sworn to protect the muchmalign­ed system that strictly controls the amount of foreign dairy products flowing into the country.

Jaime Castaneda, senior vice-president with the National Milk Producers Federation, said American dairy producers had tolerated the existence of supply management, but Canada went too far when it a created a new class of milk.

Now, Castaneda said, the U.S. industry has formed an alliance with Mexico and their goal is nothing short of the full-scale destructio­n of supply management to solve their problem with that.

The spark was the invention of new milk protein ingredient­s known as diafiltere­d or ultrafilte­red milk. They are not subject to NAFTA tariffs because they are a recent invention, so U.S. dairy producers began exporting them at a low cost to Canadian processors. Canadian producers cried foul, saying that was costing them $200 million a year in lost revenue. The Canadian dairy

industry reached a deal to sell the protein ingredient­s at a discount and Canada created a new class of milk to allow it, undercutti­ng the U.S. efforts.

That enraged U.S. dairy farmers and caught the attention of President Donald Trump, who blamed Canada for driving Wisconsin dairy farmers out of business with unfair practices. “The only way we believe we can address that issue is the complete eliminatio­n of the supply management system, the complete eliminatio­n of all tariffs and the complete free flow of dairy products among the United States, Mexico and Canada,” Castaneda told The Canadian Press prior to his arrival in Ottawa. Castaneda said he realized this is “very political in Canada”

but the time has come to end a system where you “have a cartel imposing higher prices for consumers in Canada,” and that has faced widespread internatio­nal criticism. “Our government has heard us loud and clear about this issue,” he added.

The response from Canada’s dairy lobby was, essentiall­y, bring it on.

Yves Leduc, director of internatio­nal policy for the Dairy Farmers of Canada, said American legislatio­n guarantees tens of billions of dollars in subsidies and support to the U.S. agricultur­e industry.

“It’s double standards here,” he said.

“They’re getting all kinds of subsidies that allow them to be competitiv­e in the world markets.

Having that advantage, they want to have access to our market.” Agricultur­e Minister Lawrence MacAulay and Andrew Leslie, the parliament­ary secretary to Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland for Canada-U.S. relations, are to meet agricultur­al sector representa­tives Monday in Ottawa to discuss the NAFTA talks. “Dairy trade between Canada and the U.S. massively favours the U.S., by a ratio of five-toone,” said Guy Gallant, MacAulay’s spokesman. “Canada is the second-largest export market for U.S. dairy products, surpassed only by Mexico. We will continue to support our dairy farmers, supply management system and all of our agricultur­al interests.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Dairy cows feed in a barn on a farm in Ontario in this file photo. The first punches in what promises to be a bitter fight over Canada’s protected dairy industry are expected to be thrown during this week’s third round of North American Free Trade...
CP PHOTO Dairy cows feed in a barn on a farm in Ontario in this file photo. The first punches in what promises to be a bitter fight over Canada’s protected dairy industry are expected to be thrown during this week’s third round of North American Free Trade...

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