The Borneo Post

China, Canada sign trade agreements during Trudeau visit

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BEIJING: Visiting Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang signed three trade agreements yesterday as Ottawa tries to diversify commercial ties amid tough Nafta negotiatio­ns with Washington.

At a ceremony in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People, the two leaders signed an action plan on energy cooperatio­n as well as two memoranda of understand­ing on food products and a “Canada learning initiative.”

The details of the agreements are unclear.

The two sides also agreed that Canadian beef and pork will have greater access to the Chinese market and will continue to work on new standards for Canadian exports of canola to China.

“Canada is and always has been a trading nation, but the landscape of trade is shifting and we need to adjust,” Trudeau told reporters after the signing ceremony.

“China will soon be the largest market in the world. It’s home to one billion potential customers for the high- quality goods and services that Canadians deliver every day.”

Li told Trudeau it was rare for China to have such a “close, intimate relationsh­ip” with another nation.

“China and Canada are entering ... a golden age in our relationsh­ip. We have a lot to offer each other. We are ready for closer cooperatio­n,” Li told reporters.

The premier visited Ottawa in September last year, when the two sides agreed to double bilateral commerce by 2025.

During his Dec 3-7 official visit, Trudeau will meet government and business leaders as part of Canada’s push to diversify its trade, the bulk of which is currently with the United States.

Trudeau has said he also plans full and frank discussion­s on “issues like good governance, human rights, and the rule of law”.

The visit to China is Trudeau’s second since he came to power two years ago, and comes as trilateral talks with the United States and Mexico to revamp the North American Free Trade Agreement appear to be headed towards deadlock.

Canada and Mexico staunchly oppose US proposals for a Nafta sunset clause, minimum US content in car parts and nixing of the pact’s trade dispute mechanism.

The US has adopted a more protection­ist tone under President Donald Trump and his “America First” policy.

Beijing, meanwhile, has openly courted increased trade with Canada. Li said the two countries would continue explorator­y talks and feasibilit­y studies on a free trade agreement. — AFP

 ??  ?? Trudeau and Li walk past Chinese paramilita­ry guards during a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. — AFP phoro
Trudeau and Li walk past Chinese paramilita­ry guards during a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. — AFP phoro

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