National Post (National Edition)

Imports of U.S. butter on rise

It’s all smooth, says Canadian dairy industry

- Andy Blatchford

OTTAWA • More Canadians have likely slathered their late-summer corncobs with American-made butter in recent years — and it had nothing to do with U.S. President Donald Trump’s demands for more access to Canada’s dairy market.

The country’s protected market has been a key sticking point between Ottawa and Washington during the tense renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement. Throughout the process, Trump has made repeated calls for Canada to let in more American dairy products.

U.S. farmers recently enjoyed extra access to the Canadian market — and, in this instance, the opportunit­y came because of Canada’s controvers­ial protective system known as supply management.

Butter imports from the U.S. nearly quadrupled between 2015 and 2016 to help satisfy Canadians’ sudden surge in demand for the product that domestic producers couldn’t immediatel­y keep up with. Canada wasn’t alone — butter sales saw strong growth in many parts of the world.

To satiate the rapidly expanding appetites of Canadian butter lovers, the federal government approved a request to temporaril­y open its doors to more imports above the usual quota. Due to proximity, lots of it rolled in from the U.S.

After shipping 2,275 tonnes of butter to its northern neighbour in 2015, the U.S. sold 8,266 tonnes here in 2016 and 8,672 tonnes last year, according to Statistics Canada. From 2008 to 2014, the figures show annual U.S. butter imports fluctuated between 1,069 and 4,482 tonnes.

The recent influx of American butter also boosted Canada’s stockpiles, which expanded to 44,708 tonnes in July 2018 from 11,571 tonnes in January 2017.

Critics have long argued supply management leaves Canadians with fewer choices in the supermarke­t, leads to higher prices for consumers and stifles innovation in the industry.

When it comes to butter, some say the fact Canada had to increase U.S. imports in a time of need points to another key downside.

Domestic producers, they maintain, cannot respond quickly to surges in demand because they’re hindered by the system’s strict rules. There are also concerns that there’s too much focus on the Canadian market, rather than a push to expand deeper into the global market.

But defenders of the system insist the recent boosts in U.S. butter imports show why it’s so effective.

“That is the supply-managed system — you make sure your market is getting the milk and dairy products it needs without overproduc­tion and without dumping products,” said Graham Lloyd, general manager and CEO of the Dairy Farmers of Ontario.

“Because we manage the amount of milk production to meet the domestic market requiremen­ts, it takes time to ramp up and sometimes to ramp down. So, when there’s shortages we want to import … to make sure we service the market.”

The quotas protect the Canadian market from an influx of milk products in the U.S., where there’s vast amounts of oversupply. Many warn that opening the floodgates to American milk products would overwhelm Canada’s market and put a large number of farms out of business.

Experts like Sylvain Charlebois, a food distributi­on and policy professor at Dalhousie University, said the fact Canada had to raise its butter-import levels a few years ago is an example of what’s wrong with supply management.

He argued the market would be more flexible if supply management didn’t exist because it forces producers to obey specific rules and prices.

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