Canada green-lights latest Gulfstream business jets after Trump tariff threat
MONTREAL — Canadian regulators have now given the thumbs-up to all Gulfstream business jets, less than a month after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened fresh tariffs over the planes’ status north of the border.
According to a departmental document, Transport Canada certified the Savannah, Ga.-based company’s G700 and G800 jets on Monday, eight days after green-lighting two older Gulfstream models. The move allows the jets to be sold in Canada and opens a new commercial door for the plane maker, a major rival of Montreal-based Bombardier Inc.
Trump warned last month he would decertify and place tariffs on all Canadian-made planes unless the government approved the four Gulfstream luxury aircraft, marking the latest escalation of trade tensions between the two countries.
The go-ahead from Transport Canada comes despite de-icing concerns flagged by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, which has granted the G700 and G800 conditional certification.


