China announces the suspension of select tariffs on Canadian agricultural products starting March 1, following an initial trade agreement reached during Prime Minister Mark Carney’s January visit to Beijing.
Tariff Suspensions Detailed
The finance ministry reveals that 100 percent tariffs on imports of Canadian canola meal and peas will end. Additionally, 25 percent tariffs on lobster and crab imports pause through the end of 2026.
This move matches expectations from Carney’s negotiations, though the announcement omits canola seed tariffs. Officials anticipate a reduction from the current 84 percent to around 15 percent by March 1, pending the conclusion of a canola probe on March 9.
Even Rogers Pay, director at Beijing-based consultancy Trivium China, expresses confidence: “Chinese buyers have been booking Canadian canola cargoes for March already. That gives me a pretty high degree of confidence that they’re going to follow through on the reduced tariff rate.”
Outstanding Issues and Market Context
Canola oil and pork tariffs receive no mention, but further adjustments remain possible before the March 1 deadline. China ranks as Canada’s second-largest canola market in 2024.
Broader Trade Developments
These changes occur amid increased visits to Beijing by Western leaders, as U.S. trade policies under President Donald Trump strain traditional alliances. China positions itself as a stable economic partner.
Carney advances beyond European counterparts by securing this deal and pledging access for up to 49,000 Chinese electric vehicles into Canada at a 6.1 percent most-favored-nation tariff rate.

