:
I will call the meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting 108 of the Standing Committee on International Trade.
I have a quick message about audio feedback. To all members and people participating in person, you'll see a little card on your desk and a place where you can put your earpiece when not in use. These measures will protect the health and safety of all participants, including our interpreters.
Some of you are participating virtually. This is a hybrid format. To members in the room, raise your hand if you want to speak. For members on Zoom, please use the “raise hand” function. The clerk and I will manage the speaking order as best we can.
Before we get to the witnesses, we have a couple of items we must deal with. I hope we'll deal with them very quickly so we can get on to the study.
You should have received a copy of the revised travel budget from the clerk. Is the committee in agreement to adopt the budget in the amount of $162,031.38 for the committee's proposed travel to Ecuador?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Vice-Chair (Mr. Kyle Seeback): We also have a budget for the study of the CUSMA review. You should have received a copy of that from the clerk. Is the committee in agreement to adopt the budget for the study in the amount of $14,000?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Vice-Chair (Mr. Kyle Seeback): Excellent. We're so agreeable today. Wonderful.
We have two panels of witnesses today.
In our first panel, from the Canadian Steel Producers Association, we have Catherine Cobden, president and chief executive officer, and François Desmarais, director of trade and industry affairs. From Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters, we have Ryan Greer, vice-president, public affairs and national policy. From Unifor, we have Lana Payne, national president, and Angelo DiCaro, director of research.
Welcome, everyone. Thank you for coming to this study, which I think will be an important one.
You will have opening statements of five minutes. I will try to keep you on time as much as possible, but I will give a bit of leeway.
We will start with Ms. Cobden.
I invite you to make an opening statement of up to five minutes.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the standing committee. It's great to be back to address the committee on behalf of the Canadian Steel Producers Association. As mentioned, I'm joined by François Desmarais, our director of trade.
As you all know, CSPA is the voice of the Canadian steel sector and our pipe and tube industry. We have 13 members across the country from Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec and, now, Newfoundland and Labrador. We represent pretty much 100% of the steel production in the country, and we have 123,000 direct and indirect jobs that are part of our industry.
Our steel ends up in a wide range of products. When you look around, steel is everywhere, and our main customers are in the integrated North American automotive, construction and energy sectors, to name some—there are many others. About half of our production, roughly six million tonnes, is shipped to the United States—around $8.5 billion U.S. annually.
These stats help the members of this committee appreciate how crucial it is for the steel industry to maintain access to the United States market and, frankly, the gains that we've made in the previous CUSMA. You will also appreciate that global steel trade plays a strong role in the Canada-U.S. trade relationship; hence, we are here today to reiterate some of our most interesting and important proposals in our hope to see a smooth and successful review of CUSMA in 2026.
First, we believe it's crucial that we keep pace with the United States, our largest trading partner, with a modernized and aligned trade remedy system. We strongly believe this will ensure a better position for Canada as we start discussions on a CUSMA review. An important development is that, in 2019, as part of the section 232 bilateral agreement, Canada committed to implementing a monitoring system of “melt and pour” for the steel industry. I am pleased to say that this past February announced that system, and it will be put fully in place for all steel imports into Canada by this coming November.
Canadian and American steel industries strongly welcome this development. We cannot stress enough that further delay will be unacceptable to full implementation, so we need to get that done.
The prospect of steel transshipment remains a very significant concern to the USTR, the United States trade representative. Transshipment is part of a larger phenomenon called “circumvention”. Canada has anti-circumvention laws to address this issue but, unfortunately, to date, no case has been taken either by the industry or the Canada Border Services Agency. This is an issue that the Americans care about deeply, and really, so does the Canadian steel industry. We feel it's very important that we rank anti-circumvention legislation updates and enhancements highly on our list of things to be done as we proceed into the CUSMA discussions.
Furthermore, the U.S. recently announced trade remedy improvements around very important trade policy, retroactive duties and how one goes about assessing unfair trade policies on state-owned enterprises. We need to keep pace and adopt the same approach. Frankly, these are things that, for many years, the Canadian steel industry has been asking for, and we'd like to see them brought forward. We think that it will be very helpful in putting our best foot forward as we enter those CUSMA discussions. Improving our trade system is how we protect the integrity of the North American market.
Last but not least, Canada has to adjust urgently to the evolving international steel trade order. In addition, in the face of intense challenges with international trade bodies, we need to consider adopting new tools to address industrial excess capacity. The U.S. administration did just that a couple of weeks ago. On May 14, the White House announced the imposition of a broad range of tariffs, under section 301, aimed at Chinese overcapacity, including the imposition of a 25% tariff on all Chinese steel entering the U.S. market. The CSPA believes Canada should and must follow suit.
As our major trading partners move to block or restrict excess high-carbon steel from entering their national markets, we believe Canada remains vulnerable to more Chinese steel. Although Canada currently has 18 tariffs on Chinese steel, China remains the third-largest exporter of steel into Canada. In addition to our domestic market concerns, we also believe the U.S. will be looking for specific leadership from Canada on how to address excess steel capacity from China.
Members of the committee, I'm happy to engage with you on these topics.
:
Thank you, Chair, and thank you, committee members, for having me here today on behalf of the Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters.
Since 1871, CME has been helping manufacturers grow and improve the well-being of their workers and the communities in which they operate. We are pleased to participate in your study on the 2026 review of the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement.
Unlike Canada's other trade relationships, which are primarily about competing for market share, our partnership with the U.S. and Mexico is about working together to compete with the rest of the world. We talk about Canada and U.S. trade, but that trade is really us making things together. Members of this committee will know better than most that the North American manufacturing bloc is world class in the quality and the cost of the things that it makes.
Building on NAFTA, CUSMA has succeeded in providing a solid foundation for North American trade by strengthening our regional economic ties while modernizing the provisions that govern them. While Canadian manufacturers consider CUSMA a success, Canada has not yet realized the full potential of the agreement in the first four years. There are under-utilized features, such as the competitiveness committee and the good regulatory practices committee, that have the potential to help propel Canadian and North American manufacturing even further forward.
For Canada's industrial economy, deeper North American economic integration is not only desirable but a necessity to compete at a time when the global economic and security environment is shifting beneath our feet. There are specific trade irritants, as there always have been and there always will be, that Canada must and should continue to try to address, both through the agreement itself and through sustained and serious bilateral and trilateral engagement with U.S. and Mexican decision-makers.
The ever-present buy American provisions that accompany U.S. federal investments stand out. Just earlier this week, I was speaking with a small manufacturer of large industrial mixing tanks. They do all of their manufacturing in Canada, with two-thirds of their sales into the U.S., which includes government procurement for municipal water treatment systems. They estimate that, because of the most recent “Build America, Buy America” provisions, they've lost approximately 300,000 to 400,000 dollars' worth of business, and they expect that trend to continue.
Unjustified tariffs on softwood lumber products, automobile rules of origin, Line 5 and Keystone pipeline issues, Mexican energy policies and even the ban on GMO corn have all come up and lingered since CUSMA came into force.
We also know that China's neo-mercantilist approach to international trade in the North American market will, as Catherine just alluded to, loom large in this review.
CME is supportive of efforts to improve Canada's trade remedy and import monitoring systems to defend from unfair practices, and we recognize that Canada is going to have to confront the rules-of-origin issues that have strong bipartisan support in Washington.
In addition to these, Canada has its own domestic issues that its CUSMA partners may describe as irritants, which we don't think can be avoided in the context of the upcoming review. One issue that we hear about most commonly from our CUSMA partners and manufacturers, specifically in the United States, is the increase in labour-related supply chain disruptions in our country. That includes, of course, last year's B.C. ports strike and the St. Lawrence Seaway strike, along with the threat this year of a stoppage at the port of Montreal, as well as a potential Canada-wide rail stoppage.
Transportation is the connective tissue that holds the North American trading relationship together. CME recommends that Canada do something to show it is serious about preventing these disruptions. In addition to the immediate direct harm that they impose on Canadian manufacturers, workers and their families, these disruptions undermine North American supply chains and the reputation of Canadian manufacturers with their cross-border partners and customers. CME was disappointed earlier this week that the House of Commons passed Bill , which is legislation that will make this problem worse.
As we approach the 2026 review, Canada will also be faced with ongoing questions regarding its investments in national defence. As we saw from members of the U.S. Senate last week, we should not be surprised if decision-makers in the U.S. do not bifurcate their consideration of CUSMA and other major bilateral irritants, including Canada fulfilling its NATO commitments.
U.S. trade considerations are increasingly being driven by economic, national and supply chain security considerations and this trend will continue no matter who is in the White House. Notwithstanding these challenges, Canadian manufacturers are fortunate to be the participants in and beneficiaries of a regional economic relationship that is envied around the world.
As Canada navigates the next several months in the lead-up to the review, Canadian manufacturers will continue to work closely with governments, our colleagues at the U.S. National Association of Manufacturers and the Confederation of Industrial Chambers of Mexico to offer our support to preserve and promote a trade agreement that is, by and large, working well.
As part of those efforts, in November of this year, just a couple of weeks after the U.S. presidential election, CME will be hosting manufacturing leaders and senior decision-makers from across Canada, the U.S. and Mexico, just a few blocks from here in Ottawa, at a North American manufacturing summit. This will provide an important inflection point for our sector to take stock of the agreement and the political forces influencing it, and to reaffirm our joint commitment to continue to build the manufacturing ties between our countries.
Thank you, and I look forward to your questions.
:
Thank you and good afternoon, Mr. Chair, members of the committee and my fellow panellists, one of whom I will disagree with vehemently on his statement on Bill , but that's not why we're here today.
As you know, I'm Lana Payne, and I'm the national president of Unifor, Canada's largest union in the private sector, representing over 320,000 working people across this country. I'm joined by our director of research, Angelo DiCaro, who is also our in-house expert on trade.
I want to thank you for this invitation to participate on behalf of our members, many of whom—thousands and tens of thousands of them—work in industries affected and impacted by trade.
Let me start by saying that Canada's trade policy is a key aspect of our country's broader industrial strategy. Sadly, since the NAFTA, Canada has suffered from a lack of ambition regarding industrial development. This lack of vision has had governments sleepwalk into a series of unhelpful free trade arrangements and agreements with the voices and concerns of workers largely ignored and dismissed.
All of this changed when the NAFTA was renegotiated. The government deserves credit, not for salvaging a deal that caused immeasurable harm to workers but for presenting a bold, progressive economic vision for this country that underpinned its negotiating strategy with workers' voices at the forefront. This was a welcome break from the past.
The study you've undertaken ahead of the scheduled six-year review of the CUSMA is necessary and timely, and we thank you for it. U.S. officials aren't mincing words right now when they tell us not to get too comfortable ahead of these talks. Long-standing U.S. complaints, whether on Canada's supply-managed dairy or on digital trade, are on the radar. The USTR has already held consultations on the CUSMA auto trade. Canada cannot approach this review on its back foot.
We must remind Americans how interdependent our industrial economies have become, but we can't shy away from communicating our own concerns. There are obvious gaps in the CUSMA and our trinational trading relations that this review can and should address. I'll share some of the ones that are top of mind for Unifor.
With regard to forestry, the softwood lumber dispute has dragged on for eight years, impacting Canadian firms with unjustified tariffs. This sector is currently facing economic and serious headwinds, including mill closures and job losses, and these trade penalties are adding pressure to an already struggling industry. They must be removed.
With regard to aluminum, the monitoring of imports that circumvent and undermine the benefits of our decarbonization efforts must be strengthened. Aluminum is a strategic metal and should benefit from the same processing requirements that apply to steel under the auto rules of origin—you've just heard about those.
With regard to labour rights, much is being done to clean up Mexico's labour system. The CUSMA's rapid response mechanism is helping remediate and deter labour rights violations and also renew Mexico's democratic trade unions. This mechanism works, and it must be extended, including to workplaces in the U.S. and Canada, and I'll tell you why.
A recent union vote at a Mercedes plant in Alabama, in the United States, was strained by threats and intimidation towards workers, not unlike we've seen at Mexican car factories. Canada should demand a full investigation into this trade-distorting behaviour, especially since Canada has a deal to supply Mercedes with lithium, cobalt and other critical minerals. Canada should also clearly signal to the U.S. its intent to revisit a proposal to deem right-to-work laws a violation of the CUSMA labour chapter.
In the auto sector, there is an opportunity to link our trade and industrial strategies. Labour value content rules were set at $16 U.S. per hour in 2020, but they have not increased since. These labour rates must be updated along with the CUSMA's current list of core auto parts to reflect new EV technologies, like e-motors.
Canada must discuss with the U.S. the raising of its WTO tariff on light-duty vehicles, which currently sits at 2.5%, hardly enough to ensure compliance with the CUSMA's complex rules of origin. Canada must also take seriously the threat of Chinese EV imports, which are subsidized through forced labour, excessive subsidies, tech theft and other means. Canada must be vigilant in guarding against transshipments and prepare itself to take action in conjunction with the United States.
Unifor will obviously continue to monitor this review that you're conducting and will remain available for further discussions. We look forward to answering any questions you may have for us today.
Thanks very much.
I'd like to thank the witnesses for joining us today. I'm going to begin with Ms. Cobden.
As we approach the 2026 review period for CUSMA, a number of issues have come to the forefront. For example, in May, U.S. steel producers urged the U.S. administration to update CUSMA with the goal of addressing what they viewed as loopholes in the agreement.
You touched on this with respect to circumvention rules and tariffs. Are these assertions about CUSMA's provisions regarding rules of origin accurate? You also talked about the lack of enforcement by CBSA on transshipment.
What can Canada do better to respond to those issues?
:
Could you please share that with the committee?
Ms. Catherine Cobden: Yes.
Mr. Tony Baldinelli: I'll talk about the sector's competitiveness. You previously appeared when we were studying the Inflation Reduction Act. The U.S. is currently committing about $6 billion for what they say are 33 manufacturing projects for steel and aluminum with the aim of making the U.S. “one of the first nations in the world to convert clean hydrogen into clean steel, bolstering the U.S. steel industry's competitiveness as the world's cleanest major steel producer.” This is according to a quote from President Biden's release.
I'm sure you will agree that it's tough to compete when you're seeing investments such as $6 billion for 33 new manufacturing facilities. In your testimony at our last session on the IRA, you mentioned, to state the obvious, that the IRA takes an enabling approach to the climate change challenge. A carbon price is not envisioned.
In contrast, over the next eight years, the Canadian steel industry faces significant increases in carbon costs, with carbon pricing rising to $170 a tonne by 2030. How does that impact the sector's competitiveness? When you see this IRA and the huge investments taking place in the United States and we have a taxation policy that's not in alignment with the United States, we're almost tying the hands of the sector and putting one hand behind your back. How can Canadian steel producers compete?
:
I really stand by my previous testimony that the U.S. has taken a very strong carrots approach. The more they build up their carrots—their buffet of carrots, as I was calling it earlier today—the more challenging it will be to compete and the more unlevel our playing field will be.
Canadian steel producers have the talent. We have the equipment. We have the modernized facilities, if you will. We have the transportation networks. We have the proximity to the market as well, in both Canada and the United States. However, we do not benefit from the scale of the carrots that exist in the United States.
Furthermore, as per my previous testimony, we have not just carrots here in Canada; we have carrots and sticks. To elaborate further, the carrot that we were discussing was the IRA, but I want to emphasize that there are also additional things in the United States, such as the trade policy I was describing. We have to get the playing field as close to level as possible between Canada and the United States. That means aligning on trade policy. That means aligning as much as possible on carbon policy. This is what it's going to take.
I'd like to go to Mr. Greer, if I could.
Recently Frank Stronach published a story titled “If no one wants to invest in Canada, what does that say about our country?” In this article, the author writes “that foreign investors sold nearly $50 billion worth of Canadian equities in 2023—the largest exodus of securities investment dollars in our history.”
Mr. Greer, last year, for the first time, Mexico passed Canada's position as being the number one trade partner with the U.S. What is your reaction to this?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
My first question will be for Catherine.
Thank you very much for the presentation, and thank you for your leadership for the steel producers.
In 2016, the steel producers came to see me, before you were on board, and talked about some of the measures they wanted to see in place.
In the first budget in 2016, it was happening quickly right after the election, so we were able to get in a couple at first. One was basically keeping the length of the penalty in place longer, which is good, as we were starting to think about these things. Then the second one was the consultation. We consulted heavily, which then informed us in future budgets as to where we would strengthen the trade regime in various ways that you mentioned in your presentation.
In the 2024 budget, there is a commitment and funding and resources for a new market watch unit. Can you describe to us why that's important? What, in your view, would this unit be charged with doing?
:
That's no problem. I'm happy to describe that. That's another development.
Before I discuss market watch in particular, I'd like to say that the thing we have to keep in mind about the trade remedy system is that cheaters keep cheating, and they keep evolving their approach. It's extremely important that we always upgrade and upscale further our trade remedy tools to ensure we're catching the cheaters, frankly.
Market watch is the newest development that was announced in the budget. It's an announcement of $10 million over three years. Obviously, our view is that it needs to be permanent, but it's a really important step forward. It's going to look at upgrading something called the normal values. It's upgrading, on a regular basis, something that currently is discretionary in the trade remedy system. We welcomed it. We want to know more details, but we think it's certainly a step in the right direction with respect to enforcement. I look forward to the consultations with the Canada Border Services Agency to ensure that we get this right.
:
I think that is important. It was developed and we looked at it. The market watch unit is to be reviewed annually. It's systematic. It's proactive. It's not reactive and waiting, per se.
I can't remember what meeting it was, but we had the CBSA. I think this is a tip of the hat to the steel producers and the unions. The steel industry has had, probably, some of the most success in launching and winning cases in dollars and sheer volume. I think the market watch unit, being proactive, as well, will help resource a collaborative effort. I was pleased to hear that.
Tony talked about some tariffs. In steel town, our backs all go up with tariffs, because we know what the intention is. They're to hurt workers. They're to hurt the industry. Both presidential candidates are talking about tariffs. One thing that happened in the last round, I think, was section 232 tariffs driving industry, unions, communities, the country and everyone together in this team Canada approach.
Please explain this for the committee and the witnesses. It's important to get on record that, when America puts a tariff on Canadian steel.... You talked, Catherine, about the integration of our market and 50% of that steel going into the manufacturing or auto sector of the United States, vis-à-vis.... It's a tax on Americans. That 25% is.... They're basically taxing Americans, whether it's aluminum or steel.
Would you not agree with that? That was just one part of the issue with tariffs when the Americans launched them.
My first question is for Ms. Cobden and Mr. Desmarais.
It goes without saying that, in the context of a study on a revision of the CUSMA, we need to talk about the trade relationship with the Americans. I've heard that this issue has been very much on the table. We know they're wary of steel imports that might come through Canada.
Until now, what we've heard, especially from President Biden, has been about Mexican steel. There's an admitted distrust in the official American discourse. However, we also know that there is dumping here. You'll correct me if I'm wrong in a short while, but that's what some pretty important indicators are telling us.
For his part, candidate Donald Trump is already pledging to impose a 10% tariff on Canadian steel if elected. This is coming from Donald Trump, but that doesn't mean that President Biden, if re-elected, wouldn't do the same thing, if indeed there's a transpartisan consensus on this kind of practice.
Currently, 22% of steel imported into the United States comes from Canada. First, are producers here concerned about a possible loss of access to the U.S. market?
:
Thank you for your question.
The U.S. market remains absolutely essential to our producers here at home. Over 50% of our production is sold in the United States. An average of $8 billion U.S. in trade goes to the U.S. every year, not counting all the U.S. steel that comes into the country. It's just as important for them. When you say that Canadian steel represents 22% of the market, it's important to specify that it's 22% of the steel imported into the United States. Canadian producers account for 6% of the total U.S. steel market.
You're also absolutely right when you mention the recent American focus on Mexican practices. Again, to quote Ms. Cobden, our trade remedy system is essential to the discussion, because what the Americans were criticizing the Mexicans for was precisely the absence of a modern control system at their border to prevent the dumping of steel from Mexico into the U.S.
We therefore recommend the same thing to the Canadian government, i.e., to keep the country's trade remedy system up to date to prevent dumping. Indeed, dumping does occur in Canada. It's estimated that 60% of tariffs and countervailing duties today target steel products entering the country. That may give you an idea.
We have to face up to this situation and continually improve our system to prevent dumping.
First of all, I would say, the labour chapter is very important and must be something that we protect. Within that, in terms of what has been happening in Mexico, this mechanism that was set up has been really important. It has in some ways emboldened democratic free trade unions in Mexico. We've had a relationship with some of those unions with respect to making sure they get good collective agreements with, for example, General Motors in Mexico, so that wages and living standards for Mexican workers can be increased. This labour chapter has been very important to how that can evolve.
With the case of what's just happened recently in the United States, we had a situation where the UAW, which is a sister union to us in the U.S., had been organizing at two Mercedes plants. There were very what I would call “anti-union” tactics, intimidation tactics, used by the employer, threatening employees in this case, not unlike what we would have historically seen and still do see in some cases in Mexico. This is not something we should be tolerating.
We should find ways to use and avail of this labour chapter to ensure that this is not happening in the United States or in Canada and that workers are free to be able to join trade unions and to bargain for collective agreements that can lift their living standards.
:
Yes, I have very serious concerns, and this goes beyond any conversations about competitiveness on cost. This is about a country and an industrial model that is built on baked-in subsidies, not just unfair labour but forced labour, things that we wouldn't tolerate in Canada and are certainly against the spirit of what we're trying to build in the CUSMA as a high-road trade agreement.
China is developing this EV space, as president Lana Payne has mentioned, through methods that I think would not be tolerated in other nations. They are intentionally oversupplying—not unlike what's happened in aluminum and steel, as others will tell you—producing an excessive capacity for the express purpose of flooding the global market with cheap exports.
Right now, based on some of the public reports we've seen—things are a bit difficult stats-wise to locate in China—there's an expectation that, put simply, the level of production of EVs in China, the overcapacity alone is larger than the entire North American auto market for sales. This is not something people should be taking lightly, and we're going to have to deal with it.
Catherine, I'm going to pick up on the carrot-and-stick approach.
I've represented my area for almost my entire adult life. In that time, I can say that—having served on the public health board for my entire time on council—thousands of people died in my city prematurely as a result of air pollution. Therefore, the carrot-and-stick approach in Hamilton is very important because it leads to better health. It's not just an investment to combat climate change. It's not just an investment in jobs and keeping those steel companies open. It's actually keeping people alive by improving our air quality.
The carrot approach for many decades didn't work, so I think the stick approach we've talked about here today is an important tool. It's no small coincidence that the climate call to action from the steel producers came out in 2020. It didn't come out in 2014 or prior, so I think the industry read the tea leaves and they're on board. The $400-million investment in Dofasco, in my community, that our government made will go a long way in helping us reach our targets. I know the company, Dofasco, is on board as well.
Can you talk about the importance of past carrots and what future carrots you'd like to see, knowing that your industry is committed to climate change and reducing emissions?
:
For the record, the steel industry is taking action on climate, so I didn't think we were discussing that. We are taking action. We have announced projects that will reduce emissions by a further six million tonnes, so that's significant, while we're already starting from the greenest position out there.
What I need to stress is that we don't get a green premium on this steel, so when our steel is up for bid against high-carbon imports from jurisdictions like China, we cannot compete and we don't get any benefit for our green credentials in those processes. That is a real challenge to the industry.
I understand and take the point on the blend between carrots and sticks and everything, but what I'm trying to say is that the blend isn't there. Right now, it's much more stick than carrot. If we want a carrot-and-stick process, we have to double down on making sure those support mechanisms, like domestic content, are included. That will give at least some help to the industry. Otherwise, it's just a challenge.
My question is for Unifor representatives. I'll be brief.
In 2022, Unifor pointed out in a press release that the trade partnership between Canada and the United States presented several significant challenges. These included, for example, electric vehicles, softwood lumber, of course, lumber tariffs and, naturally, the Buy American Act.
Some of these irritants have evolved, there are new ones, and so on.
What's the state of play today? What challenges remain as we speak?
I have about a minute left, and I have one more question for you.
We know, for example, that there was once a case where Mexico, Unifor and its Mexican allies brought a situation of workplace abuse into the spotlight. This prompted Canada to file an official complaint under the Canada-US-Mexico Agreement, CUSMA's, rapid response mechanism. It was the first time such a mechanism was used, and it worked.
What do you take away from this experience? What about the balance sheet? Can we further improve the agreement to ensure that workers' rights are respected for all partners? Or would you say that the status quo is more than enough? Would you like to make a recommendation to the committee?
:
Welcome back, everyone.
For our second panel today, we have a number of witnesses.
From the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, we have Stuart Trew. From the Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers' Association, we have Brian Kingston, president and CEO. From the Dairy Farmers of Canada, we have David Wiens and Daniel Gobeil.
Welcome back. I think you've all been here before.
You will all be able to make an opening statement of up to five minutes. I'm going to try to keep you as close to that as possible. We will start with Mr. Trew.
We invite you to make your five-minute statement.
:
Thank you very much to the chair and the committee for the chance to be here.
As we've been talking about this afternoon, we're still two years away from a mandatory six-year review of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico agreement, but I think it's a good thing for this committee to be thinking about it and preparing for that process right now.
The federal government and some business associations appear to believe that Canada should seek a smooth rollover of CUSMA rather than risk another potentially messy renegotiation. This is part of the team Canada strategy that we're seeing right now with trips to the United States.
I think a smooth rollover is probably wishful thinking for two reasons. The first is that, no matter who's in office in Washington in 2026, there will be political and industry pressure on the U.S. administration to adjust CUSMA's rules in areas such as dairy market access, energy, agriculture and food policy, automotive rules of origin and, possibly, digital trade. Canada is facing considerable U.S. pressure to drop its Online News Act and its digital service tax, for example, and we know there's a target on supply management.
The second reason a smooth CUSMA review is unlikely is that it was never the intention of the Trump administration when they negotiated the deal, and it's something that I think the current administration agrees with. If we look at Katherine Tai's comments last month, she said the whole point of the review is to maintain a certain level of discomfort, and she meant that for Canada and Mexico, so I think we should just be expecting that we're going to go into something much bigger than what would be a rollover.
A simple reapproval of CUSMA may also be a lost opportunity, given shifts in thinking about trade policy even since we renegotiated a few years ago. All three North American governments acknowledged the unequal benefits of trade for women, racialized workers and indigenous peoples, for example, as well as trade's contribution to biodiversity loss and climate change. The geopolitics of trade, the importance of subsidies and industrial policy have also shifted since we renegotiated CUSMA. For example, does CUSMA help or hinder our efforts to bolster North American manufacturing and supply chain resiliency? There are questions around the rules of origin. I think these are bound to come up, as we talked about in the last session.
The six-year review of CUSMA, while not without significant risks to Canada and Mexico, at least forces us to rethink whether the treaty is delivering substantive, widely shared benefits. We think Canada should seize the moment rather than ducking and weaving. By that, I mean Canada should prepare for the review as if a partial renegotiation were inevitable, whether or not there's a Democrat or a Republican in the White House.
This morning the CCPA published a collaborative report that assesses how CUSMA is operating to date and suggests ways to build on the environmental, inclusive, trade and worker centred novelties in the agreement that built on the original NAFTA. The authors make 25 recommendations for fixing NAFTA's labour provisions, including the innovative rapid response labour mechanism, closing gaps in the rules of origin in the auto sector as well as improving enforcement of the environmental chapter, which is not much improved upon from the original NAFTA, from our perspective.
Other aspects of the agreement can be made more inclusive and worker-focused in the right circumstances. For example, the digital trade chapter is completely out of date with current U.S. thinking on the need to better regulate emerging artificial intelligence; the need to protect people, especially children, from harmful algorithms and workplace surveillance technologies; and the need to crack down on monopolies in the tech sector. CUSMA's cross-border data flow provisions and its prohibition on data localization should be reviewed.
The three CUSMA parties should also find the courage to completely dismantle the vestiges of investor-state dispute settlement between Mexico and the United States. The ISDS regime is incompatible with the achievement of human rights, including indigenous peoples' rights, and the protection of biodiversity. Leaving it intact, even in a limited form, creates unacceptable risks for Mexico and, I think, an unacceptable power imbalance in what should be a more equal North American relationship.
Progress in any of these areas will depend on the political configuration of the continent in the lead-up to the review. Still, Canada would be wise to come to the table with a solid list of proposals as leverage in a potentially stressful negotiation. I just conclude by saying that any review should contain ample opportunities for consultation with civil society stakeholders in the three countries and should not be left up exclusively to trade negotiators or corporate lobbyists.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee members. I appreciate the opportunity to be here and to take part in your study on the CUSMA review.
Since the Auto Pact of 1965, Canada has reaped enormous economic and social benefits by being part of the integrated auto sector in North America. Through common regulations and competitive supports, we manufacture and sell into a market that accounts for annual sales of nearly 28 million vehicles. It's this integration that has allowed Ford, General Motors and Stellantis to make historic job-creating investments into Canada to produce electric vehicles and batteries.
Today, the CUSMA serves as the foundation for the integrated North American auto industry. The agreement provides certainty, reinforces the long-established integration of the auto industry supply chain necessary for its competitiveness and facilitates regulatory alignment of vehicle technical regulations with the U.S. This gives Canadian consumers access to leading vehicle safety technologies, emissions technologies and fuel efficiency technologies at the lowest possible cost.
The CUSMA also provides Canadian manufacturers with duty-free access to the much larger U.S. market. Last year, $51 billion in vehicles was exported to the United States, making this our second-largest goods export. With the upcoming review in 2026, Canada must do everything possible to protect our preferential access to the U.S. market and support the integrated supply chain.
This can be achieved by ensuring that our trade and regulatory policies in the automotive sector are aligned with the U.S. Given the once-in-a-generation transformation to electrification under way right now, as well as threats posed by countries like China, the consistency of automotive trade and regulatory policies across the larger North American market has never been more important. We recommend the following actions.
Number one, enhance regulatory alignment with the United States. Our seat at the North American automotive table and the hundreds of thousands of jobs this industry provides depend on continued regulatory alignment of vehicle safety and emissions standards.
The federal government's recently implemented zero-emission vehicle sales mandate is a significant departure from the long-standing Canadian approach of alignment to the U.S. This is a direct challenge to the integration with the U.S. through CUSMA and our competitiveness as a ZEV manufacturing jurisdiction. By prioritizing zero-emission vehicle sales over the development of a North American supply chain, the mandate opens Canada to subsidized or dumped electric vehicles from China and other non-market economies. This misguided sales mandate must be scrapped in advance of the 2026 CUSMA review.
Number two, strengthen Canada's role in the EV supply chain. With the industry transitioning to electrification, Canada must move quickly to grow and diversify our production of critical minerals. This will strengthen our role in the auto supply chain, enhance North American security and increase trilateral trade. It will also enhance Canada's importance at the CUSMA table as the U.S. moves aggressively to build a domestic EV supply chain.
Number three, we need to improve our transportation system reliability. Automotive companies operate very complex logistical plans that ensure scheduled uninterrupted delivery to and from auto plants across the continent. As a result, the automotive supply chain depends on reliable and efficient transportation logistics.
Over the past few years, transportation disruptions have occurred with increasing frequency in Canada, doing significant damage to the North American economy. In advance of this review, we need to demonstrate to our North American partners that Canada is a reliable jurisdiction for the production and movement of goods.
Before I conclude, I want to take a moment to address the recent increase in U.S. tariffs on Chinese EVs and the implications for Canada and CUSMA. Canada cannot be out of step with its largest trading partner and strongest ally on China as we approach the CUSMA review. There is simply too much at stake for the automotive industry and the broader Canadian economy if Washington perceives Canada as misaligned.
We should be prepared to strengthen our trade defences in response to a surge in dumped Chinese EVs into the market and, at a minimum, we must work closely with our American partners to address potential security threats posed by Chinese-manufactured connected vehicles. Given the highly integrated nature of the North American highway network, the security of Canadian roads is the security of American roads.
Thank you very much for the opportunity. I look forward to your questions.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee members, for this opportunity.
I'm pleased to be able to represent the perspective of our 10,000 dairy farmers from coast to coast in support of your study in preparation for this upcoming review of CUSMA.
My name is David Wiens, and I am a dairy farmer from Manitoba. I am also the president of Dairy Farmers of Canada. I'm joined today by my colleague, Daniel Gobeil, who is also a dairy farmer and who serves as vice-president of Dairy Farmers of Canada. He is also the president of the Producteurs de lait du Québec.
I would like to thank you all for this opportunity and for undertaking this study on this upcoming CUSMA review. As committee members are aware, there are still a number of trade irritants regarding CUSMA that the Government of Canada will need to be cognizant of as it enters into formal discussions. Daniel will talk about an important one in a moment, which impacts Canada's ability to export.
We have heard that one of the outcomes of the next U.S. election may be of particular concern for some. In dairy, I would note that the last two panels initiated against Canada were under the current administration. The attention Canadian dairy gets south of the border is related to domestic U.S. politics, with many of the dairy states being swing states for both Democrats and Republicans. For that reason, Canadian dairy will continue to be of interest for some politicians in the U.S., regardless of their political affiliation.
I'd also like to remind the committee that the combined potential impact of the World Trade Organization, WTO; the Canada-European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, CETA; the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, the CPTPP; and CUSMA amounts to an estimated 18% of Canada's domestic dairy production.
We're greatly concerned that despite the second CUSMA dispute panel ruling entirely in Canada's favour and dismissing all U.S. claims, the U.S. could use the review mechanism in the accord to try to achieve what it couldn't through the complaint process. As we know, CUSMA is based on a system of rules that is subject to a dispute settlement system. We believe that if one of the signatories wants to override panel decisions through the review, it calls the whole agreement into question. It is essential, therefore, that the government ensure that the CUSMA review is not used to create a pretext for more concessions.
Put simply, we expect the Canadian government to advocate for Canadians and oppose any further market concessions.
With that, Mr. Chair, I'm ready to pass it on to my colleague Mr. Gobeil.
Mr. Chair and esteemed members of the committee, thank you.
I want to begin by acknowledging the support given by all parties to protect Canada's supply management system for many years.
As you know, concessions have been made. Mr. Wiens alluded to this. Canada's milk producers also thank you for the compensation that has been paid to producers.
However, there is no doubt that an agricultural model of concessions accompanied by compensation is not viable for us as entrepreneurs. It is in this sense that we must respect supply management.
We want to mention one thing: in addition to the 3.9% of the market that was conceded to the Americans, other important rules were requested, including a ban on Canada exporting any dairy products to all world markets. It's unique for an agreement between three countries to prohibit one of its signatories from exporting anywhere on the planet. At the moment, we're not hearing about a potential reopening of the market for three main products—skimmed milk powder, protein concentrates and infant formula—but, if there is a reopening and if Canada expresses an interest in such a reopening, it's obvious that the sector will have to take this very important element into account.
With that, thank you again. Bill is still on the drawing board in the Senate committee.
Mr. Wiens and I are available to answer any questions you may have about this ongoing matter.
:
Yes. When it comes to critical minerals, I raise this because I think, as we approach this review, one of the things that we want to do is approach the Americans with constructive areas where we can help them achieve their objectives and do so in an aligned North American fashion. Critical minerals are just one of those obvious places.
Right now, the EV and battery supply chain is dominated by China, and Canada happens to have the full suite of critical minerals in our ground here. However, we've done a very poor job of actually getting them developed and processed, so this gives us a huge opportunity to be important to the Americans, have some leverage at the negotiating table and ultimately achieve the EV objectives that have been established by governments around the world.
We're talking about over 380 mines required, yet production of Canada's suite of critical minerals has gone down virtually across the board in every sector over the past decade. That is a huge challenge and we need to reverse that if we want to succeed in this discussion and in this transformation.
On the competitiveness piece, the federal government deserves huge credit for the $40 billion in new investment we've seen in the auto industry. This is unprecedented, a huge success, but what we're seeing is that the government's industrial policy is totally disconnected from its environmental policy. We need investment yet we have an EV mandate that is completely disconnected from our U.S. partners, and it opens us to vehicles from other markets where there could be dumping occurring or illegal subsidization.
That disconnect is a huge problem, and it needs to be fixed before we get to the CUSMA review.
:
I don't know if a signal has been sent, and that needs to be sent clearly and strongly. That's the first priority because as they look at the North American free trade deal in CUSMA, if they view us as a weak link on China, we will have a problem.
That needs to be communicated clearly. There are a number of steps that can be taken. There's obviously the tariff, which is a blunt instrument. You could do what the European Union has done, an anti-dumping or a subsidy investigation. That's another avenue. I think we should be looking at all possible avenues.
The other thing that we should examine, too, is that the White House has launched a security investigation into connected vehicles from China. If it's a security threat to the Americans, I would think it's a security threat to Canada.
Those are the types of things that we should be investigating and making sure the Americans know we are with them on.
:
I'm happy to. Thank you for the question.
My comments were in relation to.... We have team Canada, which obviously I think we have to do. I think most people recognize that. So far it seems to be pushing toward this kind of a smooth or smoother rollover approach.
We put the report out today, and what we're hoping to discuss with our American and Mexican counterparts—if you can call them that—in civil society organizations in those two countries is thinking bigger than that. It's thinking of the review as an actual opportunity to maybe reopen some sectors and some of the chapters to make them more centred on workers and the climate, I suppose, or make them more effective and more beneficial for workers in all three countries. That's where we're coming at it from.
There's no doubt we're looking forward to consultation processes in this country, in the United States and in Mexico over the next two years.
We're also thinking ahead to next year. We don't just have the CUSMA review in 2026, but of course we have a 2025 review of the labour chapter and the environment chapter. We're hoping that maybe this review and the work we're doing in the next year will include working with Mexican and U.S. labour unions and environmental groups on those policies as well.
I will now turn to you, Mr. Trew. You've shared a report from your organization with us; you've even shown it to us. In fact, I invite you to send it to the clerk of the committee so that it can be officially tabled.
You talked about increased labour measures. Earlier, you attended the first hour of the meeting when we heard from Unifor, who said there was a pretty interesting new mechanism. What could we improve in that regard?
You also told us about the environmental issue, which is important. You said there were a lot of commitments and nice principles, which is true. What should we do to make sure it's worth more than the paper it's printed on?
:
Thank you very much for your question.
[English]
With respect, I think the focus is on environmental enforcement. One thing our report recommends is that we take a look at the rapid response labour mechanism and the success of that process. As we've heard, there were 23 uses of that so far in total. Many of them resulted in worker rights being respected in Mexico: workers being reinstated, pay hikes and, basically, democratic votes in these factories.
Let's look at the success there and see how we could apply those ideas to the environment chapter, which is not very enforceable. It basically goes from consultation to consultation to consultation and then a possible recommendation that does not have to be followed by anybody.
Maybe we can find a way to make those elements go more quickly to a dispute panel and have the dispute panel be binding in the same way as we've seen in some of the labour disputes.
:
Thank you for the question.
We have eight recommendations. I won't read them all out. Picking the top three would probably be difficult.
One of them was mentioned already, which relates to making sure that the rapid response mechanism applies in Canada and the United States as well. It currently doesn't. In effect, it's only for Mexico. There were reasons for that, but I think seeing how successful it's been and knowing that there are violations of core labour rights in Canada and the United States, it should be applied here as well.
I think we need to expand the number of sectors that the rapid response mechanism applies to in Mexico, so that it covers more collective agreements in that country.
I think we need to do more in Canada to take a lead in enforcing it in Mexico. We've seen most of that happening in the United States right now. A lot of resources put together in terms of a consultative group within the government that can accept petitions to look into violations in Mexican plants. I think that if Canada were to take on more of that burden.... Because we have significant investments in Mexico in the mining sector, in manufacturing and in energy, we should take on a greater role in that as well.
Very briefly, this is an idea coming out of the United States again. It's a climate peace clause. I think it might have come up at committee before.
The idea would be to agree somehow, whether in the CUSMA review process or perhaps at the level of the free trade commission, to not bother each other about and to not dispute each other's measures that are intended to reduce emissions. Those could be procurement measures. They could be industrial policies or subsidies or anything that's designed to quickly reduce climate emissions and transition to a cleaner economy. Those things should be off limits. That's the idea of a climate peace clause.
I think it's possible they could agree to something like that in the review process. There's a lot of support in the United States, including in the Biden administration, for such an idea.
:
We're on the cusp of these negotiations, which will start soon.
We repeat: We want to feed Canadians. To do so, we're taking advantage of the three main pillars of the supply management system. Of course, the consumer has evolved. Sometimes we can export value-added products or products like protein concentrates or infant formula.
Surely, from a growth perspective for processors, we need to be able to export our products to other markets. As Mr. Trew said earlier, we have to think about sustainability. We're talking about business sustainability. Thanks to the territory, access to water, hydroelectricity and land, there's no other place in the world where milk can be “greener” than in Canada.
:
Obviously it's a concern. First of all, there's an agreement. They challenged us through a panel and the panel ruled in our favour. We know from their reactions to it that they were not very happy with it.
There's also the other element, electorally speaking, that the swing states in the U.S. are also dairy states, so it's to the benefit of both major political parties to focus on that area in terms way beyond its significance to their economy. We're afraid that, if there's an agreement there and you don't get your way during a panel, you will keep poking away at it through a review. That is very concerning.
Certainly if the agreement were to be reopened for negotiation, one of the first things we would have on the table would be to ask why there are these export restrictions on us. They are punitive to Canadian dairy. I don't think such a thing exists in any other trade agreement.
Let's say the U.S. comes along and says they want to reopen it, and then we have our demands. Our concern is that they might simply use this as another way of trying to get what they didn't get before.
[English]
I get to ask questions in both official languages today.
[Translation]
Mr. Gobeil, the next question should be easier, since you've already discussed it over the past hour. Canada has successfully argued, through multiple complaint resolution mechanisms, that its supply management system is not only legitimate, but also in the best interests of Canadian consumers.
Can you explain why we must continue to defend this system and what benefits it has, even today, for Canadians?
:
Thank you for your question.
It's clear that the goal of the system is to provide a quality product to Canadians. We're responding to the needs of Canadians.
We also need to establish a needs-based production to avoid food waste, and not base production on export markets that all countries could aim for.
We often hear that when we compare the prices of Canadian products with those of American products, prices are lower in the United States, except in states close to the border. However, the prices of our products are comparable when it comes to butter, cheese and milk.
The consumer doesn't pay for supply management in Canada. It's a better distribution of wealth among producers who make a decent living from it, processors who are engaged here and have invested in Canada, and consumers who seek out Canadian products.
:
We can do better, and it's something that all three countries want to do better on. This is an area where we don't have to reopen the agreement. We don't have to renegotiate. Mexico, the United States and Canada are already thinking about how to tweak the rapid response labour mechanism to make it more effective.
We have some other recommendations. We need to clarify annex 31-B, the Canada-specific rapid response mechanism, to confirm that it applies to a denial of rights at any covered facility by any domestic legislation in Mexico. It's not just legislation related to the constitutional changes in 2019. We need to clarify and promulgate more specific criteria and requirements for remediation agreements that resolve rapid response complaints, including content such as damages, timelines and requirements for consultations with stakeholders. We need to engage in co-operative capacity building under the CUSMA labour chapter to strengthen the law enforcement and inspection system in Mexico and assist with funding capacity for an arms-length oversight committee with a mandate to collect data and offer training.
I think we can also work with the Canada Border Services Agency, for example, and this comes back to autos. It's kind of related in the sense that we can develop a better idea of how much domestic content is going into automotive products that are crossing borders. In that way, consumers will have a better idea of what they're purchasing when they decide which car to pick.
There are some other recommendations. We do have more, but I don't want to take up too much time.
The Vice-Chair (Mr. Kyle Seeback): You have 30 seconds.
Mr. Stuart Trew: Keep going...? All right.
As I said, we can confirm and expand the economic sectors that it covers beyond those of manufactured goods and expand the definition of denial of rights. I think this is important, and I should have mentioned it earlier. It's not just freedom of association and collective bargaining that we're upholding through the rapid response process. We can include discrimination on the basis of gender, sexual orientation or gender expression; gender-based violence; child labour; health and safety; and minimum standards of work.
Let's build this out so that we can actually enforce a much broader range of labour protections.
Some hon. members: Oh, oh!
Mr. Richard Cannings: Yes, it's slow talkers of America here.
I'm going to continue on with Mr. Trew.
In your report, you have a part where you mention the digital trade chapter and how it undermines workers' rights, privacy and competition policy. I'm wondering if you could, in two minutes, tell us how that can be improved.
:
It's difficult, because it's a complicated chapter. It's one of the more complicated chapters of the agreement.
Digital services are becoming much more important for our economies, but there are areas where there's a lot of surveillance. There's a lot of abuse of children, for example, in the algorithms we see when we're looking at TikTok and other systems. In order to crack down on that and better regulate that, you need access to the source code sometimes. You need access to the algorithms.
CUSMA makes that difficult or potentially impossible. It's not been tested yet, but the language is new. There's a prohibition on governments accessing that information in order to regulate or put products on the market. I think we need to revisit that. There are a lot of cases. Even to help tax the companies or figure out how many of their sales they're generating in Canada, you sometimes need the source code and the algorithms to go through and figure that out.
There are elements of the digital trade chapter that I think are there to completely benefit big tech companies in the States. They don't help our companies or Canadians. We should be revisiting them.