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.
40 Articles
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Beyond Local: China slaps Canadian canola with nearly 76% tariff
The new canola tariffs are still considered temporary until China makes a formal decision on the matter. The tariff may also be an attempt to pressure Canada to get trade concessions in other areas.
China announces 75.8% tariffs on Canadian canola
China announced a 75.8 per cent preliminary tariff on Canadian canola on Tuesday, following an anti-dumping investigation launched last year in response to Canada’s tax on Chinese electric vehicles. China’s Ministry of Commerce published the details of the plan on Tuesday, claiming the “dumping” of Canadian canola into the Chinese market is hurting its domestic […]
CP China announces 75.8 per cent tariffs on Canadian canola (Business)
China has announced preliminary tariffs on Canadian canola following an anti-dumping investigation launched last year in response to Canada's tax on Chinese electric vehicles. Canadian canola exports to China will face a 75.8 per cent duty beginning on Thursday. The move comes nearly a year after Ca...
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