The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Canada says war, climate concerns show need for supply chain shift

- STEVE SCHERER REUTERS

OTTAWA — The Russian invasion of Ukraine shows that authoritar­ian regimes are not reliable trade partners and future supply chains should run through countries like Canada that are concerned about carbon emissions and human rights, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Wednesday.

Trudeau recently returned from an official trip to the G20 and other summits in Asia, where he pitched Canada as a dependable global supplier of critical minerals and energy. Canada also launched an Indo-pacific strategy on Sunday meant to counter Chinese power in the region.

“What we’re focused on now is very much ensuring that our economies — our open, free economies — don’t rely on authoritar­ian leaders like (Russian President) Vladimir Putin,” Trudeau said in an interview at the Reuters NEXT conference, which is taking place on Wednesday and Thursday.

Europe has quickly pivoted away from Russian energy, Trudeau noted, and countries should be looking for alternate suppliers like Canada that have “high environmen­tal standards” and respect for human and labor rights, Trudeau said.

China now dominates the criticalmi­neral portion of the electric vehicle supply chain. In recent months, Canada has also been reminding its top trading partner, the United States, of its value as a neighbor.

“Protection­ism against Canadian investors or Canadian companies actually ends up hurting U.S. companies and U.S. workers in significan­t ways,” Trudeau said when asked if he was concerned about protection­ist trade policies again being an issue in the 2024 U.S. elections.

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