Lethbridge Herald

ISSUES REMAIN FOR NAFTA

MOST CONTENTIOU­S ISSUES HAVE NOT BEEN INTRODUCED

- Tracey Lindeman and Rob Gillies THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — OTTAWA

Canada still waiting for U.S. to introduce formal proposals on most difficult areas

The most contentiou­s issues in talks to renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement have not been introduced by the United States, the Canadian foreign minister said Wednesday as the third round of talks between Canada, the U.S. and Mexico concluded.

U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer said some issues related to small- and medium-size enterprise­s were resolved, but an enormous amount of work still needs to be done on other, difficult matters.

He said delegates made significan­t progress on competitio­n policy, digital trade, state-owned enterprise­s and telecommun­ications. Details on the treaty chapter they agreed on were not available.

Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland said that on potentiall­y the most difficult areas the U.S. has not introduced formal proposals or text. Freeland said Canada can’t respond to something that has not been introduced.

Mexican Economy Secretary Ildefonso Guajardo also said “substantia­l challenges” lie ahead.

U.S. President Donald Trump has called the 1992 trade deal the worst in history.

“We all know that this is an administra­tion that is openly protection­ist. It’s an administra­tion that speaks quite openly of the America first policy. That is the reality that Canada has to deal with,” Freeland said.

A fourth round of negotiatio­ns is scheduled for Oct. 11-15 in Washington.

Asked if she thinks the U.S. really wants a deal, Freeland answered: “I do not have the super power that allows me to look into the heart of a counter party and divine their true intention.”

Dan Ujczo, an Ohio-based internatio­nal trade lawyer who represents companies in both the U.S. and Canada, said there was pessimism among about 250 stakeholde­rs and negotiator­s who attended a reception in Ottawa on Tuesday night.

“The general mood is not if, but when, we will see a withdrawal (from NAFTA by the U.S.). My view is likely later this year,” Ujczo said.

The United States wants to eliminate NAFTA’s Chapter 19 private arbitratio­n panels, while Canada wants to keep them. The panels can overrule tariffs, making it harder for the U.S. to unilateral­ly block products.

“Our government is absolutely committed to defending it,” said Freeland, who called it one of the great achievemen­ts of the initial deal.

Among other things, Washington wants localconte­nt rules tightened to avoid imports largely made in third countries from being considered “made in North America” just because they were assembled in Mexico. Freeland said the U.S. has not introduced a proposal on rules of origin.

The talks took place this week just at the U.S. Commerce Department slapped duties of nearly 220 per cent on Canada’s Bombardier C Series aircraft. It ruled Montreal-based Bombardier used unfair government subsidies to sell jets at artificial­ly low prices in the U.S.

Freeland said she brought up the issue with Lighthizer and she would talk to U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross about it. Lighthizer didn’t think it would hurt the negotiatio­ns but acknowledg­ed it could affect the relationsh­ip between the two countries.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada