The Niagara Falls Review

Still no evidence behind canola impasse from China

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA — Canada still hasn’t seen the evidence China used to block canola shipments from one of Canada’s largest grain producers, Internatio­nal Trade Minister Jim Carr said Wednesday in an interview.

A Chinese government spokespers­on has said Beijing’s move this month to suspend canola imports from Richardson Internatio­nal Ltd. came after “hazardous organisms” were detected in the company’s product.

Carr said Canada is pushing to solve the economical­ly important matter — but it needs China to provide proof to back up the claims.

“We continue to ask Chinese officials for any evidence that this canola has any problems that can be proven with any scientific base or any scientific evidence — and so far we’ve heard nothing,” he said in a phone interview from Saskatoon, where he was talking to business leaders about making the most of opportunit­ies created by Canada’s major trade deals.

“It’s a concern because we are a major exporter of canola to the world and we produce the finest canola in the world. It’s a very important part of our trade mix and we want to get to the bottom of it and we want to get to the bottom of it fast.”

Alberta Premier Rachel

Notley issued a statement last week demanding that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau fight for canola farmers and all related jobs.

“We are calling on Ottawa to stop its navel-gazing about its internal controvers­ies and fight back,” she said.

Notley added the issue could cost Alberta farmers hundreds of millions of dollars and lead to a loss of up to 3,000 jobs.

China’s decision to reject shipments of one of Canada’s key exports comes with the two countries in a diplomatic dispute that erupted after the December arrest of Huawei senior executive Meng Wanzhou in Vancouver at the request of the United States.

On March 1, Canada’s Justice Department gave the go-ahead for the extraditio­n case against Meng, which marked the formal start of the high-profile process that has thrust Canada into a highly uncomforta­ble position between the two superpower­s.

In the days following Meng’s arrest, China arrested Canadian citizens Michael Kovrig, a Canadian diplomat on leave, and Michael Spavor, an entreprene­ur, on allegation­s of engaging in activities that have endangered Chinese national security.

The men remain in Chinese custody and their arrests have been interprete­d as attempts by Beijing to pressure Canada into releasing Meng.

China also sentenced another Canadian, Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg, to death in a sudden retrial of his drug-smuggling case.

Asked whether there’s a link between the Meng case and the canola impasse, Carr said the government has no evidence of one.

“We’re treating it as a science issue, which is why we’re pressing Chinese officials to show us the science.”

Carr said the federal government has been contacting Chinese officials in Beijing and at the country’s embassy in Ottawa to find out why the blocked canola is considered to be “anything less than the very high (quality) canola that we know we are shipping abroad.”

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