National Post (National Edition)

Canada and U.S. must find `common ground'

Liberals will avoid combative response

- KAIT BOLONGARO

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is rejecting calls for a more combative response to U.S. protection­ism, hoping a conciliato­ry approach will mend relations damaged during Donald Trump's presidency.

Trade Minister Mary Ng said in an interview this week she is focusing her efforts with the new Biden administra­tion on mutual U.S.-Canada interests despite early policy hiccups that risk further fracturing ties between the two nations, whose commercial relationsh­ip is worth US$725 billion a year.

The rocky start began when President Joe Biden cancelled permits for the Keystone XL pipeline, a move that prompted Alberta to threaten a challenge under the old North American free-trade pact. Tensions grew when the new administra­tion strengthen­ed Buy American provisions for government procuremen­t contracts.

“I don't think that getting into a trade war with the U.S. is in the best interests of Canadian workers or the energy sector,” Ng said. “What we've got to do is find that common ground where Canadian interests are viewed and seen as American interests as well.”

The trade minister's comments highlight Trudeau's decision to sidestep flashpoint­s with Biden and instead channel energy into goals such as fighting climate change and fostering an economic recovery.

Trudeau's officials welcomed Biden's arrival at the White House after the Trump era, which upended years of relative stability.

The two countries exchanged almost US$2 billion in goods and services every day in 2019.

Biden's Buy American rules are intended to boost the U.S. economy by pushing federal agencies to source goods and services from domestic businesses. The government spends nearly US$600 billion annually on such contracts.

“Canadian contributi­ons — our business contributi­ons, our exporter contributi­ons — into those supply chains and value chains are absolutely important to American workers and American businesses,” Ng said when pressed on how the government will push back against the president's plan.

A key part of Trudeau's strategy is to convince the president that protection­ism will hurt U.S. businesses that rely on Canadian products.

“It's the outcome that's the important thing here,” Ng said. “The outcome is that Canadian businesses and Canadian workers aren't impacted and that we continue to have access to that market, that our supply chains don't get disrupted.”

The two countries are also divided on how to power North America's greenenerg­y transition. Trudeau tried unsuccessf­ully to convince the new administra­tion that Canadian crude is a cleaner option due to his government's carbon tax and stringent environmen­tal regulation­s.

TC Energy Corp.'s Keystone XL would ship more than 800,000 barrels of crude a day from Alberta's oilsands to U.S. refineries. Premier Jason Kenney, who poured $1.5 billion of taxpayer money into the project, called on Trudeau to impose trade sanctions in response to Biden's decision.

Biden's move, however, is part of a bigger reshaping of perception­s in Washington around the energy relationsh­ip with Canada. For decades, energy security was seen as a continenta­l affair, with Canadian oil producers enjoying market access while the U.S. gained security of supply.

But the boom in shale oil production in recent years has made Canadian energy dispensabl­e. That's going to be a major problem for a country that relies heavily on crude exports to the U.S. for its prosperity. Canada has shipped $838 billion worth of oil and gas to the U.S. over the past decade, representi­ng 16 per cent of total exports to all countries.

Trudeau's government is toying with new trade strategies that focus less on selling commoditie­s and more on tapping the global market for other goods, particular­ly consumer-related. The opportunit­ies afforded by electronic commerce — particular­ly for smaller businesses — is one area that officials like to highlight.

It's an emphasis for Trudeau that was made explicit in 2019 when the prime minister — upon naming Ng to the job — rebranded the cabinet post as Minister of Small Business, Export Promotion and Internatio­nal Trade.

The focus on “small” isn't lost on Ng, an immigrant from Hong Kong who moved to Toronto with her parents at age seven. In the interview, she highlighte­d how she spent her childhood working in her parents' restaurant and keeps a picture of its menu in her office.

Nor has the pandemic slowed her efforts to promote the nation's exporters: Ng has made virtual trade missions central to her work. “I'm not going to let COVID-19 stop me from helping businesses do business,” she said.

But there's no denying COVID has hit the nation's trade sector hard. Exports fell by 12 per cent in 2020, Ng's first year on the job, one of the biggest annual drops in the past century.

The other potential remedy for Canada's export troubles is China, but relations with the Asian giant soured sharply after the 2018 arrest of a top Huawei Technologi­es Co. executive on a U.S. extraditio­n request. China subsequent­ly locked up two Canadians and halted billions in agricultur­al imports.

“I don't believe the conditions are there right now for trade discussion­s,” Ng said when asked about China. “The government's priority is on working on securing the release of Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor.”

 ?? JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? One potential remedy for Canada's export troubles is turning to China, but Trade Minister Mary Ng says
she doesn't believe the conditions are there right now for trade discussion­s.
JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES One potential remedy for Canada's export troubles is turning to China, but Trade Minister Mary Ng says she doesn't believe the conditions are there right now for trade discussion­s.

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