Categories: Latina America

Canada seeks stronger EU trade ties as both regions threatened by Trump tariffs

BRUSSELS (Reuters) : Canada wants to deepen its economic ties with the EU and uphold global trading rules in the face of threatened U.S. tariffs, its trade minister Mary Ng told Reuters on Saturday.

The EU and Canada have benefited from a free trade agreement since 2017, which has boosted bilateral trade by 65%, and set up a raw materials partnership in 2021.

Ng met EU trade chief Maros Sefcovic for a lunch on Saturday following a meeting with Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the director general of the World Trade Organization in Geneva on Friday.

“Trade agreements are one thing, and we have seen really great numbers, but what more can we be doing to help Canadian businesses enter into any of the 27 member states…and what more can we do to the same in Canada” Ng said.

She said critical minerals and smaller businesses would be among the focus areas with the EU. The EU, in particular, is keen to forge partnerships to secure metals that are key for the energy transition – cobalt, lithium and nickel – to reduce its dependence on China.

Canada is also pushing to diversify its exports and set itself a target in 2018 of increasing non-U.S. exports by 50% by 2025. Ng said the country was on track to meet or exceed the target.

Canada struck trade deals with Indonesia in December and Ecuador last week and is pushing hard in the Indo-Pacific region. The minister is leading a delegation including more than 200 businesses to Australia, Singapore and Brunei next week.

“We are at the table with the countries in Southeast Asia, so the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. I took a very large delegation of Canadian businesses to the Philippines in December, to Indonesia, to markets like Vietnam, Malaysia, Japan, Korea,” Ng added.

Ottawa threatened retaliatory duties and legal action against the United States after President Donald Trump announced tariffs on Canada and Mexico a week ago and before he paused their imposition for 30 days. Ng said Canada could challenge Washington at the WTO if tariffs were imposed.

“We would consider all of the options are available to Canada because Canada is a country that believes in a rules-based trading system,” Ng said.

The Frontier Post

Recent Posts

Putin tells Xi China-Russia ties are at ‘unprecedented level’

BEIJING (AFP) : Russian President Vladimir Putin told his Chinese counterpart on Tuesday that their…

7 minutes ago

20 people missing after deadly Indonesia protests

JAKARTA (AFP) : At least 20 people were missing after violent protests sparked in Indonesia…

9 minutes ago

Belgium to recognize Palestinian state at UN General Assembly

BRUSSELS, Belgium (AFP) : Belgium will recognize the State of Palestine at the United Nations…

43 minutes ago

North Korea’s Kim in China ahead of massive military parade

BEIJING (AFP) : North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was on his way to Beijing…

44 minutes ago

Sudan landslide kills at least 1,000 people, rebel group says

(Reuters): More than 1,000 people were killed in a landslide in western Sudan on Sunday,…

51 minutes ago

Tens of thousands march in Serbia’s capital, demand snap vote

BELGRADE (Reuters) : Tens of thousands of protesters silently marched in Belgrade on Monday to…

54 minutes ago

This website uses cookies.