Canada, inspired by EU and US, considers imposing import tariffs on Chinese EVs
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
China is Canada’s second-largest trading partner, although it trails far behind the United States.
PHOTO: AFP
Follow topic:
OTTAWA - Canada said on June 24 that it was considering whether to impose tariffs on China-made electric vehicles (EVs) as it seeks to align itself with allies against what they see as a heavily subsidised Chinese industry.
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said the domestic auto sector faced unfair competition from China’s “state-directed policy of overcapacity”. Ottawa will open a 30-day public consultation period on July 2 on possible responses.
“Chinese producers are quite intentionally generating a global oversupply that undermines EV producers around the world, including here in Canada,” Ms Freeland told reporters in Vaughan, Ontario, echoing concerns raised by the United States and the European Union.
Ms Freeland, noting a recent crackdown by the EU and the US, said the response could include a tariff on imports.
She declined to detail what Ottawa’s potential action would be, or if EV components like batteries could also be targeted.
“We’re not ruling anything out,” she said, adding: “We are bringing to bear our strongest trade action tools.”
US President Joe Biden in May unveiled steep tariff increases on Chinese imports,
The European Commission plans to impose additional duties of up to 38.1 per cent on Chinese producers such as BYD, Geely and SAIC, as well as Chinese-built Tesla and BMW cars.
China rejects accusations of unfair subsidies or that it has an overcapacity problem, saying the development of its EV industry has been the result of advantages in technology, market and industry supply chains.
An opinion piece in the Chinese state-backed Global Times newspaper ahead of Ms Freeland’s announcement advocated for “Canada to remain strategically rational” and not “sacrifice normal economic exchanges with China for the sake of Washington’s strategic selfishness”.
China is Canada’s second-largest trading partner, although it trails far behind the US. Data from Canada’s largest port in Vancouver shows imports of vehicles from China at the port jumped 460 per cent annually in 2023, when Tesla started shipping Shanghai-made EVs to Canada.
Ottawa, trying to position Canada as a critical part of the global EV supply chain, has come under pressure domestically to act against Chinese EVs.
Mr Doug Ford, the premier of Ontario, Canada’s most populous province and the main auto-making centre, last week urged Ottawa to impose tariffs of at least 100 per cent on the vehicles.
Canada has inked deals worth billions of dollars to woo companies involved in all parts of the EV supply chain to bolster its manufacturing heartland.
The chief executive of Canadian firm Northern Graphite Hugues Jacquemin said that any potential action limited to EVs would not be enough, and Ottawa should also include critical minerals essential for battery production.
The main opposition Conservative party, accusing Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of failing to protect the auto industry, said Ottawa should not allow the dumping of cheap Chinese products.
Industry bodies, including the Global Automakers of Canada and the Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers’ Association, welcomed the announcement. REUTERS

