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China imposes temporary anti-dumping duty on Canadian canola

CANADA, AUG 12 – China's Ministry of Commerce found Canadian canola imports caused substantial damage to domestic producers and set provisional tariffs at 75.8% amid ongoing trade disputes.

  • On Tuesday, August 12, 2025, China's Ministry of Commerce announced deposits of 75.8 percent will be collected from Thursday on Canadian canola exports as preliminary anti-dumping duties.
  • Chinese authorities began an anti-dumping probe in September 2024, finding Canada's canola industry caused 'substantial damage,' as Beijing said it responded to last year's EV tariffs.
  • Market reactions were swift as ICE November canola futures fell four to a three-month low; China, the largest importer sourcing nearly all from Canada, is affected.
  • The action provides Australia an opening to send test canola cargoes this year, as analyst Even Rogers Pay said the tariffs add pressure on Canada's government to resolve trade frictions.
  • A final ruling due by September could change or withdraw the provisional duties, but analysts warn full replacement of Canadian canola remains unlikely without a sharp drop in import demand.
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Bloomberg broke the news in United States on Tuesday, August 12, 2025.
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