fbpx
Print this page
Tuesday, 13 September 2016 09:56

DCANZ urges challenge to Canada dairy protectionist move

Written by 
DCANZ executive director Kimberly Crewther. DCANZ executive director Kimberly Crewther.

The Dairy Companies Association of NZ (DCANZ) has joined with US, Australian, European, and Mexican dairy organisations in requesting a WTO dispute settlement proceeding be initiated against Canada if it continues with a planned extension to its dairy trade protections.

A joint letter, sent to trade ministers, sets out concerns that a recently concluded agreement between Canadian dairy producers and processors would provide an incentive to substitute Canadian dairy ingredients for imported dairy ingredients and would unfairly subsidise exports of Canadian dairy products.

The agreement would provide a guaranteed price for milk used to manufacture ingredient dairy products, including skim milk powder and milk protein concentrate, which is below Canada’s cost of milk production, and which matches the lowest globally traded reference price for these products.

“This will result in trade diversion and global price suppression” said DCANZ executive director Kimberly Crewther.

“It contravenes Canada’s WTO obligations and undermines the intent of the TPP agreement that Canada signed earlier this year”.

DCANZ considers Canada to be amongst the most protectionist countries in global dairy trade, with tariff rates of up to 300% prohibiting most trade outside of limited quota volumes. New Zealand has previously taken and won a WTO case against Canada for use of illegal export subsidies.

The potential for trade to support economic development and stability for all countries continues to be widely recognised by global leaders, including in the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. G20 countries, including Canada, made a commitment to avoiding new trade restrictions in the final leaders’ communique following their September 4-5 summit in Hangzhou, China.

“The economic and stability benefits of trade will only be realised if all countries back political rhetoric up with action. This starts with honouring existing commitments under the WTO and other agreements” says Crewther.

More like this

Featured

AgriSIMA 2026 Paris machinery show cancelled

With the current situation in the European farm machinery market being described as difficult at best, it’s perhaps no surprise that the upcoming AgriSIMA 2026 agricultural machinery exhibition, scheduled for February 2026 at Paris-Nord Villepinte, has been cancelled.

NZ tractor sales show signs of recovery – TAMA

As we move into the 2025/26 growing season, the Tractor and Machinery Association (TAMA) reports that the third quarter results for the year to date is showing that the stagnated tractor market of the last 18 months is showing signs of recovery.

National

Machinery & Products

New pick-up for Reiter R10 merger

Building on experience gained during 10 years of making mergers/ windrowers, Austrian company Reiter has announced the secondgeneration pick-up on…

Krone EasyCut B1250 fold

In 2024, German manufacturer Krone introduced the F400 Fold, a 4m wide disc front mower, featuring end modules that hinge…