Montreal Gazette

Farmers push for ‘do no harm’ approach to NAFTA

Groups from Canada, U.S. and Mexico fear they ‘would suffer’ if deal falls apart

- MARIE-DANIELLE SMITH

Farmers from Canada, the United States and Mexico are showing a united front and downplayin­g irritants as negotiator­s begin a rewrite of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

While stacks of paper hit negotiatin­g tables for a first round of talks, there were warning bells from a sector that has roundly benefitted from the deal since its adoption in 1994 — with Americans noting many farmers and ranchers helped elect U.S. President Donald Trump, who initiated the rewrite.

Representa­tives from the three countries’ biggest agricultur­al industry groups emphasized their desire for a “do no harm” approach in a joint letter to Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer and Mexican Secretary of Economy Ildefonso Guajardo Villarreal on Wednesday.

The presidents of the Canadian Federation of Agricultur­e, the American Farm Bureau Federation and the Consejo Nacional Agropecuar­io explain in the letter their industry “would suffer greatly from disruption­s to the trading relationsh­ips that have developed over the last 23 years.”

They agree on five areas for improvemen­t: increasing regulatory alignment, improving flow of goods across borders, aligning food safety measures, eliminatin­g non-science-based technical barriers and adapting to technologi­cal advances such as e-commerce.

The three leaders spoke to reporters in Washington on Wednesday. “We are committed to preserving and expanding on the gains agricultur­e has achieved,” said Zippy Duvall, the American representa­tive, repeating the phrase “do no harm” several times.

There were similar noises from Canadian Ron Bonnett. “We are neighbours, partners and friends. We have a relationsh­ip based on trust and understand­ing. Agricultur­e has been a success, and remember, do no harm,” he said, adding a variety of agricultur­e-related jobs in each country could be under threat if existing measures aren’t preserved.

And Mexican representa­tive Bosco de la Vega Valladolid warned North American competitiv­eness would take a major hit, especially vis-a-vis emerging markets in Asia, if the deal fell apart.

Irritants that have been top of mind in Ottawa, such as the preservati­on of Canada’s system for supply management in the dairy sector, were scarcely mentioned. Disagreeme­nts between the countries were likened to a family feud.

“We have to, just like families, to set our feelings aside and tell each other that we have a problem,” Duvall said. Bonnett added, on areas of friction, “if we spent our time talking about these, all it would be is a family fight.”

The downplayin­g of disagreeme­nts from farmers came after an opening statement from Lighthizer Wednesday morning that mentioned agricultur­e as an area of success — all three countries report major wins resulted from NAFTA — but spent much more time on the idea the deal has been a failure, especially for manufactur­ing and auto industries.

“Our task is a very difficult one,” Lighthizer had concluded.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Farmers wearing straw hats take part in a march protesting NAFTA in Mexico City last month. Farmers from Mexico, Canada and the U.S. are now downplayin­g trade irritants in the hopes of preserving the deal that has benefitted the agricultur­e industry.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Farmers wearing straw hats take part in a march protesting NAFTA in Mexico City last month. Farmers from Mexico, Canada and the U.S. are now downplayin­g trade irritants in the hopes of preserving the deal that has benefitted the agricultur­e industry.

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