Canada to impose more tariffs on Chinese imports in new year

Canada plans to impose tariffs on a slew of Chinese products starting as early as next year, the government’s fiscal update says — part of the federal government’s wider investigation into imports from China.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has already slapped a 100 per cent tariff on all Chinese electric vehicles and a 25 per cent tariff on imports of Chinese steel and aluminum products. The finance ministry has said it’s exploring options to widen the duties.

The mid-year fiscal update presented on Monday showed that Ottawa has decided to apply tariffs to imports of certain solar products and critical minerals from China early in the new year, with levies on semiconductors, permanent magnets, and natural graphite following in 2026.

“These measures will prevent Chinese non-market trade practices from causing unfair and harmful market distortions in Canada and throughout the North American continent,” the update said.

Trudeau’s government has frequently criticized the Chinese government-funded policy of oversupply and over-capacity. He has said Canada needs to protect local jobs from cheap Chinese products finding their way into the country.

The government has often used its stand against China as a lever to show U.S. president-elect Donald Trump that Canada is aligned with its biggest trading partner in its stand against Beijing.

Trump has vowed to impose 25% tariffs on goods from Canada on his first day in office on Jan. 20 if it fails to stop the flow of drugs and illegal immigrants across its border with the U.S.

The fiscal update, also called the Fall Economic Statement, did not detail the extent of the duties to be imposed or state which products would receive them, but said further details on the measures would be announced soon.

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