Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada seeks deeper trade links with Taiwan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jan, 2022 05:12 PM
  • Canada seeks deeper trade links with Taiwan

OTTAWA - Canada's decision to pursue a foreign investment protection agreement with Taiwan, amid its ongoing tension with mainland China, was greeted Monday with widespread approval in trade and diplomatic circles.

International Trade Minister Mary Ng announced Canada's intention in a statement released by her office on Monday, that disclosed her Sunday telephone call with a Taiwanese minister. She said the island represented a key trade and investment partner as Canada tries to diversify its trade relations in the Indo-Pacific.

"The ministers discussed the need for Canada and Taiwan to continue to work together to further promote supply chain resilience and mutually beneficial commercial opportunities, as well as to increase collaboration on science, technology and innovation, education, Indigenous affairs, and the green economy," Ng's office said of her discussion with John Deng, Taiwan minister-without-portfolio.

Taiwan is self-governing but the Chinese government claims it as part of China and has raised the threat of possible annexation by staging military manoeuvres near the island and buzzing it with war planes.

China is usually critical of countries that trumpet their economic ties with Taiwan, but Meredith Lilly, a trade expert at Carleton University's Norman Paterson School of International Affairs, said the island is a full-fledged member of the World Trade Organization which makes it fair game for Canada to pursue deeper trade.

"Canada is launching an Indo-Pacific strategy that looks at trade prospects in the region that are beyond China and Taiwan is an important part of that," said Lilly. "Part of this is an important sovereignty issue for both Taiwan and Canada."

Lilly said last year's resolution of the Meng Wanzhou-two Michaels affairs reinforces the need for Canada to pursue other trading relationships beyond China. Meng was arrested on a United States extradition request in Vancouver in 2018. Her arrest was followed days later by China's imprisonment of Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor on charges of espionage, which Canada and many allies dismissed as nothing more than trumped-up retaliation.

The matter plunged Sino-Canadian relations to an all-time low. The Trudeau Liberals have joined other allies in speaking out against Chinese sabre rattling towards Taiwan, as well as human-rights clampdowns in Hong Kong and against the Muslim Uyghur population in China's western Xinjiang province.

Since September, when Meng returned to China and Kovrig and Spavor were freed and returned to Canada, the federal government has been continuing work on a new "Indo-Pacific" strategy — a moniker that is commonly viewed in foreign-policy circles as shorthand for a regional approach that excludes China.

"It's very encouraging that Canada is choosing to enhance its relations with Taiwan while that country is facing economic and military threats from their neighbour, China," said Margaret McCuaig-Johnston, a University of Ottawa China expert, who spent more than three decades in the federal public service working on China issues.

McCuaig-Johnston and Lilly say Canada's trade overture to Taiwan is long overdue and could have important economic benefits. In particular, Taiwan is one of the world's leading producers of semiconductors, chips that power computers and mobile devices, and that have been in short supply for the past year and a half.

Guy Saint-Jacques, a former Canadian ambassador to China, said Taiwan plays by international trade rules and makes for a more reliable and predictable business partner than China.

"While China may protest as it is trying to cut oxygen to Taiwan, I have advocated for a while that we have to take steps to show more support to Taiwan, which is home to a vibrant democracy, this despite China's interference activities," he said.

Mark Warner, a Toronto-based international trade lawyer, said China may not be pleased with Canada pursuing a deeper bilateral trade arrangement with Taiwan, but Beijing would be far angrier if Canada supported Taiwan joining the Pacific Rim trade pact known as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP).

"That would really be a shot across the bow."

Neither Taiwan nor China are members of the CPTPP, but they applied separately to join in September. Canada, a member of the pact along with several other countries including Japan, Mexico and Australia, has not publicly endorsed the candidacy of new applicants.

Global Affairs says Taiwan is Canada's six-largest trading partner in Asia with two-way investment between them totalling $813 million in 2020.

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey RCMP locate deceased male inside Surrey home after a shooting

Surrey RCMP locate deceased male inside Surrey home after a shooting
On Sunday evening, Jan 9, 2022  just before 6:00 p.m., Surrey RCMP was called to a residence in the 13500-block of 84Avenue for a report of deceased person located. Upon attendance, an adult male victim was found inside the residence and confirmed to be deceased. 

Surrey RCMP locate deceased male inside Surrey home after a shooting

Survey suggests importance of diversity at work

Survey suggests importance of diversity at work
The survey by the Canadian Hub for Applied and Social Research at the University of Saskatchewan was done by phone between Dec. 1 and Dec. 24. It asked 1,000 people about equality, diversity and inclusion in workplaces and government.

Survey suggests importance of diversity at work

Critics call for feds to boost health capacity

Critics call for feds to boost health capacity
Health experts and government critics are calling on the prime minister and premiers to fix cracks in Canada's health system and improve surge capacity as the COVID-19 pandemic continues.

Critics call for feds to boost health capacity

As storm outages fixed in B.C., new tempest looms

As storm outages fixed in B.C., new tempest looms
BC Hydro says service was restored to the northwestern Vancouver Island villages of Tahsis and Zeballos late Sunday after more than 700 customers lost heat and electricity last Tuesday.     

As storm outages fixed in B.C., new tempest looms

Federal scholarships to honour Flight 752 victims

Federal scholarships to honour Flight 752 victims
The program is expected to disburse scholarships worth an average of $25,000 to 176 students — the same as the number of people who were aboard Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 when it was hit by two missiles launched by Iran's Revolutionary Guard on Jan. 8, 2020.

Federal scholarships to honour Flight 752 victims

B.C. school opening vital for students: top doctor

B.C. school opening vital for students: top doctor
Getting kids back to school is "essential," says British Columbia's top doctor as she and the education minister laid out plans for keeping students safe while COVID-19 infections surge. Dr. Bonnie Henry said Friday that schools need to remain open for the emotional, physical and intellectual well-being of children.

B.C. school opening vital for students: top doctor