China-Canada canola deal faces fragility test as USMCA trade talks loom, insiders warn
Initial shipments bring hope, but ‘Fortress North America’ threat and lack of long-term guarantees leave producers wary of Beijing’s commitment

Beyond the initial shipments, some insiders said, there remained “no public assurance” that imports would continue uninterrupted, as the United States was likely to turn the region, through a renewed trade pact with Canada and Mexico, into a “fortress”.
Canola is an oilseed crop used to produce cooking oil and animal feed. And Canada is a dominant force in this market, producing nearly a quarter of the world’s canola supply while accounting for roughly 60 per cent of its global trade in recent years, according to Alberta Canola, a non-profit organisation representing producers.
But for Masood Rizvi, a Saskatchewan-based specialist in agricultural tech and canola breeding, the deal is far from a complete fix, and he remains sceptical about the long-term outlook.
“I would be cautious about characterising the canola trade between China and Canada as having fully ‘returned to normal’,” he said. “What we are seeing now is a measured resumption, not yet a structural reset.