Bilateral success
for paNOW
For many years, Canada and other nations have invested time and energy into the multilateral negotiations of the World Trade Organization. Despite optimistic proclamations by free trade advocates, the WTO has gone nowhere for years. While the WTO slips into obscurity, bilateral trade agreements are providing tangible benefits for Canadian agriculture.
The most recent example is the launch of free trade negotiations with Morocco, a major market for our durum at a quarter of a billion dollars a year, and an important market for our lentils and peas at about $15 million a year.
Back in 2006, the U.S. and Morocco signed a trade agreement that gradually eliminates duties on American durum and pulses entering Morocco. Without a Canadian agreement, Pulse Canada says our lentils will face a 50 per cent tariff disadvantage. Canadian peas currently face a 25 per cent tariff disadvantage.