Chinese complaint to third canola firm not a recent escalation: minister
OTTAWA — A spokesman for federal Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau says China’s move to issue a non-compliance complaint against a third Canadian canola-seed exporter was not a recent escalation of an ongoing trade dispute because the notice was delivered in January.
Speaking to a parliamentary committee Tuesday, Bibeau told lawmakers she had been informed that a third Canadian canola company had received a non-compliance notification from China over quality concerns with its product.
Hours later, Bibeau’s spokesman Oliver Anderson said it’s important to add that the non-compliance notice against the third firm — which asked the government not to be identified — should not be viewed as a new intensification of the countries’ feud.
Chinese authorities also issued non-compliance notices to major Canadian canola-seed exporters Richardson International Ltd. and Viterra Inc. in January — and in early March it suspended both companies’ licences to sell canola seed in China.