Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Farmers Face Uncertainty After China Escalates Canola Feud

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Mar, 2019 07:06 PM
  • Canadian Farmers Face Uncertainty After China Escalates Canola Feud

Canadian farmers are facing an uncertain future after China escalated its feud over canola on Tuesday.

 

"There is a lot of confusion amongst farmers about what is able to be exported," said David Quist, executive director of the Western Canadian Wheat Growers. China blocked canola shipments from a second Canada-based producer on Tuesday over alleged contamination issues.


A statement on China's General Administration of Customs website said officials detected several hazardous organisms in canola shipments from Regina-based Viterra Inc. Viterra, which is part of Glencore Agriculture, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Winnipeg-based Richardson International Ltd. had its export permit revoked in March due to hazardous organisms allegedly found in the company's product.


Since then, the Canola Council of Canada said all of its members have reported that Chinese importers are unwilling to purchase their products.


The result is uncertainty at the cusp of planting season, which begins in mid- to late-April for many farmers.


Quist said farmers have a lot of questions: "Therefore, a lot of people are saying: 'What should I be planting? What should I be putting in the ground? Is there going to be a market for my product by the end of harvest season when it's coming off the field?"


The canola council echoed that concern.


"When China injects uncertainty, it makes growers question whether they should grow food for Chinese people, said Brian Innes, vice-president of public affairs with the council.


Canadian producers will make decisions that are best for their farm, he said.


One canola farmer, David Reid, told The Canadian Press late last week that the reports of a purchasing block by China on Canadian canola will make him think about other options.


"We don't want to grow something we can't sell," he said, adding there aren't many other crop options in the part of Alberta where his farm is located. Other options available to him tend to sell for less than canola traditionally has, he said.


Both the wheat and canola groups called on the government to send a delegation to China to address the issue.


China — a major market for Canadian canola that accounts for about 40 per cent of Canada's exports of canola seed, oil and meal — is the sole country to raise a technical issue with the product, said Innes.


Authorities in Canada's other export markets, including the U.S., Mexico, the European Union, India and Japan, have not raised any issues, he said.


"We're very perplexed because we're confident in the quality of our Canadian canola."


But China raised a technical concern and there needs to be a technical solution, he said.


Prime Minister Justin Trudeau mentioned the possibility of sending a delegation, in response to questions from reporters during a stop in Winnipeg on Tuesday.


"We're very much looking at the possibility of sending a high-level delegation to China," he said.


"We know that the canola produced here in Canada is top quality, and the oversight, inspection and science that surrounds what we do here is top-notch and world-class, and that is certainly something that we are going to continue to impress upon ... our Chinese interlocutors on this issue."


Some have suggested the canola ban is connected to the Canadian government's decision to arrest a top Chinese tech executive in December at the behest of the United States. Canadian authorities arrested Meng Wanzhou, the chief financial officer of Chinese tech giant Huawei, in Vancouver and the government has since approved for her extradition case to proceed.


"But we are taking very seriously this situation around canola as well," said Trudeau.

MORE National ARTICLES

Abbotsford Gang Member PASHMINDER BOPARAI On The Run Since Last Month Nabbed In Kelowna

Pashminder Boparai, the subject of a nationwide arrest warrant, was apprehended late last night near Kelowna and is in custody.

Abbotsford Gang Member PASHMINDER BOPARAI On The Run Since Last Month Nabbed In Kelowna

Youth Worker Charged With Child Pornography, Sex Assault In Maple Ridge, B.C.

A man who worked with children and youth at several schools in British Columbia's Lower Mainland is facing sexual assault and child pornography charges.

Youth Worker Charged With Child Pornography, Sex Assault In Maple Ridge, B.C.

Tory Leader Andrew Scheer Issues New Statement On Attacks Including Mention Of Muslims

The statement does not mention Scheer by name but he is the only Canadian political leader whose public response to the attacks did not mention either Muslims or mosques.    

Tory Leader Andrew Scheer Issues New Statement On Attacks Including Mention Of Muslims

Quebec City Mosque Shooter Alexandre Bissonnette 'Very Affected' By New Zealand Massacre: Lawyers

Lawyers for the Quebec City mosque gunman say their client is troubled his name is being associated with the mass killings at two New Zealand mosques Friday that claimed at least 49 lives.

Quebec City Mosque Shooter Alexandre Bissonnette 'Very Affected' By New Zealand Massacre: Lawyers

Team 4549B: The future of Robotics

In early March, the team won the BC provincial championship; they were named Tournament Champion and Robot Skills Challenge Champion, and won the Excellence Award. The team will soon be taking part in the World Championship in Kentucky, Louisville in USA. 

Team 4549B: The future of Robotics

28-Year-Old White Supremacist Australian Man Kills 49 In New Zealand's Christchurch Mosques Massacre

At least 49 people were killed when gunmen said to be whites opened indiscriminate fire at two mosques in Christchurch city on Friday in what a shocked New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said was a terror attack.

28-Year-Old White Supremacist Australian Man Kills 49 In New Zealand's Christchurch Mosques Massacre