Ontario dairy farmers disappointed with new USMCA trade deal - Action News
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Ontario dairy farmers disappointed with new USMCA trade deal

Some Ontario dairy farmers are expressing disappointment as details begin to emerge about the provisional deal to replace NAFTA, which contains a major concession from Canada on dairy.

'We can't compete on a level playing field,' says Graham Lloyd, CEO of Dairy Farmers of Ontario

Milk is displayed in the dairy aisle of Giant Tiger on 22nd Street West in Saskatoon.
Dairy farmers in Ontario are expressing concern about the new USMCA trade deal. (CBC)

Ontario dairy farmers are expressing disappointment as details begin to emerge aboutthe United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) the provisional deal to replace NAFTA which contains a major concession from Canada on dairy.

The new deal would give U.S. farmers greater access to Canada's dairy industry, worth about 3.6 per cent of Canada's current dairy market, according to the Dairy Farmers of Canada.

The U.S. had negotiated access worth about 3.25 per cent of Canada's market in the Trans-Pacific Partnership, but then withdrew, leaving that share of Canada's market now available to dairy products from the countries that remain in the agreement, like New Zealand and Australia.

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said Monday that farmers will receive compensation from the federal government, but details weren't immediately available.

Adjusting won't be easy

"It definitely feels like a loss for the dairy industry today," said Peter Ruiter, a dairy farmer in Nepean.

Ruiterrecently jumped back into the industry after a barn fire last year. If he knew about this change beforehand, he said, it mighthave affected his decision.

The immediate impact is that he won't be able to produce as much milk, he said.

Dairy, poultry producers to be compensated under USMCA

6 years ago
Duration 0:44
Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland says Canada's supply-managed agriculture producers will be fully compensated under the USMCA trade agreement.

"And now today I feel smaller and I'm going to have to adjust and it will not be easy," he said.

"It just goes on and on, like you keep whittling away, and there won't be much left."

Deal means less local milk production say farmers

Graham Lloyd,CEO of Dairy Farmers of Ontario, agreed,saying the deal will result in reduced milk productionbecause the markets will be filled with subsidized products from the U.S., and Canadian farmers won't be able to compete fairly.

Lloyd said about 18 per cent of Canada's dairy marketis open to tariff-free imports. He also saidthe U.S.overproduces milk products, and that Canada has provided amarket to dump them in.

"We can't compete on a level playing field with those products because their governments have massive subsidies for that, and then in this new deal Canada has been limited to some extent on even how much you can export," said Lloyd.

"Our first reaction is we're quite disappointed."

Nepean dairy farmer Peter Ruiter says he wanted the Canadian government to protect the industry, but feels it continues to give up access to the market. (CBC News)

Lloyd said another significant development is the dismantling of Canada's class 7milk ingredient pricing strategy,a solution to Canada's skim milk surplus that was negotiated between Canadian farmers and processors.

The more people consume butter, as they have in recent years, the more skim milk is generated. The co-ordinated price cut had made American equivalents uncompetitive byremovingthe incentive for dairy processors to use American diafiltered milk products,

Lloyd said this change will significantly affectfarmers and processors because that class was created to find a competitive level of milk production.

"And so we lose that opportunity to be competitive against that, those products. There's some indication that they will permit some of that product, but the details are still to be determined," he said.

Lloydalso believes thedeal will create no price differencefor consumers.

Changes beneficial, professor says

Ian Lee, anassociate professor at Carleton University'sSprott School of Business, said that although there will be a short-term adjustment, the deal will benefit the dairy industryand consumersin the long term.

Lee said there's increased prosperity when aneconomy is opened up to competition, noting that the poorest countries in the world are the most protected and closed.

Canada's dairy industry, he argued, has been protected from competition and therefore hasn't challenged to grow and change.

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said Monday that farmers will receive compensation from the federal government, but details weren't immediately available. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

"It's going to be beneficial because they have had zero, zero incentive to be innovative," Lee said.

"It's the only industry, by the way, that isn't exporting. If you look at all our agricultural sectors, the beef agricultural sector export market is booming, so are hogs and the other markets. The only one that isn't is supply management.

"It's turned them into a very, very uninnovative and non-competitive sector."

Ian Lee is a professor at Carleton University's Sprott School of Business. (CBC)

While U.S. farmers have greater access to the Canadian market, supply management overall has been maintained. But that doesn't cut it for David Wiens, vice-president of Dairy Farmers of Canada.

"What the prime minister needs to explain to Canadian dairy farm families and the other 200,000 people involved in this industry is how this deal is supporting supply management. That is not at all clear to me, nor will it be clear to other farmers as they realize what's happened here," said Wiens.

Canada's supply management system puts quotas on the amount of milk farmers are allowed to produce, eliminating over-production, which can drive down prices. It also puts high tariffs on foreign producers trying to sell in the Canadian market, limiting foreign products on Canadian shelves.

With files from CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning