The Telegram (St. John's)

Canada signs onto new NAFTA

- BY KRISTY KIRKUP

Signing on to a revamped NAFTA alleviates the serious economic uncertaint­y that lingered throughout the negotiatin­g process, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday while flanked by U.S. President Donald Trump and outgoing Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto at a highly-anticipate­d formalizin­g of the trade pact in Buenos Aires.

Uncertaint­y would have only worsened and caused additional economic damage had the deal not been reached, Trudeau added.

“The new North American free trade agreement maintains stability for Canada’s entire economy, stability that’s essential for the millions of jobs and middle class families across the country,” he said. “That’s why I’m here today.”

The signing ceremony at a packed hotel in Buenos Aires on the sidelines of the G20 summit did not come without a fight.

The U.S.’S punitive tariffs on steel and aluminum from other countries remain in place, along with stiff countermea­sures from Canada and Mexico. As negotiatio­ns to remove those tariffs dragged on in the past few weeks, Canadian officials and emissaries insisted Canada would not take part in a fanfare-filled signing affair until the levies were lifted.

All that changed this week, said one insider: “At the end of the day, removing the uncertaint­y from the rest of the economy is too important to pass up.”

During his remarks, Trudeau made a point of nudging Trump to remove the tariffs.

“There’s much more work to do in lowering trade barriers and in fostering growth that benefits everyone,” Trudeau said.

“As a result, the tariff-free access NAFTA guaranteed for more than 70 per cent of Canada’s total exports is secure. That’s essential for businesses, families, jobs, entreprene­urs, and hardworkin­g people in every corner of our country. ”

Trudeau raised the tariff issue before the three leaders emerged together for the signing ceremony, said officials in the Prime Minister’s Office.

A Canadian official also said earlier Friday that the big advantage of signing onto the agreement now is a side letter on the auto industry exempting Canada of potential tariffs on exports of up to 2.6 million vehicles - well above current levels.

At the beginning of his remarks, Trump also acknowledg­ed the process to negotiate the United States-mexico-canada agreement has been “a battle.”

“Battles sometimes make great friendship­s, so it is really terrific,” Trump said.

Friday marked an important deadline for the trade pact because a new Mexican president takes over Saturday who might not honour the tentative deal struck by his predecesso­r.

Trump acknowledg­ed that Friday was Pena Nieto’s last day in office and congratula­ted him on the achievemen­t of signing on to the deal.

The signing of the three-way trade pact is largely ceremonial because it still needs to be ratified by all three countries before it can formally take effect.

U.S. lawmakers have already indicated they don’t expect to tackle the USMCA - or CUSMA, as Ottawa now calls it - until after the new Congress is sworn in early next year.

The deal - 32 chapters, 11 annexes and 12 side letters - sets new rules for the auto sector, including a higher threshold for North American content and rules requiring 40 per cent of car parts be made by workers paid at least $16 an hour. It preserves a contentiou­s dispute-resolution system the U.S. dearly wanted gone, extends patent protection­s for biologic drugs and allows U.S. farmers a 3.6-per-cent share of Canada’s famously guarded market for poultry, eggs and dairy products - a concession that dismayed Canadian dairy producers.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, right to left, participat­es in a signing ceremony for the new North American Free Trade Agreement with President of the United States Donald Trump and President of Mexico Enrique Pena Nieto in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on Friday.
CP PHOTO Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, right to left, participat­es in a signing ceremony for the new North American Free Trade Agreement with President of the United States Donald Trump and President of Mexico Enrique Pena Nieto in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada