Dairy farmers to be compensated by time trade deal comes into force, Freeland says - Action News
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Dairy farmers to be compensated by time trade deal comes into force, Freeland says

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland says compensation for Canadian dairy farmers is "justified" after Canada, the U.S. and Mexico negotiated a new trilateral trade deal that gives the U.S. access to Canada's dairy market.

Foreign affairs minister says amount still to be worked out under USMCA

Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland says compensation for dairy farmers will be "full and fair" after a new trade deal granted the U.S. access to the Canadian dairy market. (Carolyn Kaster/The Associated Press)

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland says Canadian dairy farmers will be compensatedfor losses under a new trade deal negotiated by Canada, the U.S. and Mexico by the time the agreement takes effect.

"By the time it entersinto force, our dairy farmers can be very, very confident that they will have fair compensation," Freelandtold CBCRadio's Metro Morning on Tuesday.

Freeland said compensation for farmers is "justified" because the deal, known as the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA),gives the U.S. access to Canada's dairy market.

"I want to start by saying to dairy farmers that compensation is justified. And compensation will be full and fair. We are doing the calculations now. It's going to be fair and the key thing is we have some time."

The deal, which replacesNAFTA,still has to be signed by leaders of all three countries and must be ratified by their respective governments. Itgrants U.S. milk producers access to 3.6 per cent of the Canadian domestic market.

"That was one of the central elements whichwas necessary for the deal to come together," she said.

Farmers aredisappointed in how the deal will affect theirindustry, according to Graham Lloyd, CEO of Dairy Farmers of Ontario, an industry group that represents more than 3,500 dairy farms.

"They're obviously concerned about the continuing erosion of our marketplace and the true loss of revenue and income," he said.

Thousands of dairy farms in Canada will be affected by the new trade deal. (Nicole Williams/CBC)

Ontario Premier Doug Ford called for compensation on Monday, saying farmers need the support of the federal government because access to their market was a concession in negotiations.

"If our farmers are being abandoned because of one-sided concessions from the federal government, they must take immediate action to support the families and livelihoods that are now at risk," Ford said in a tweet.

The new deal also imposesunprecedented export controls and endsa dairy ingredient pricing system that was helping dairy processors compete without using cheapAmerican imports.

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland speaks to the media in Washington D.C. (Carolyn Kaster/The Associated Press)

Freelandsaid she "agonized over a lot" in negotiations, including the dairy concession, but the deal is good news for Canada.

"With this deal, we have secured our continued access to the largest market in the world and to the market thataccounts for around 70 per cent of our exports," she said. "Thatis a big deal."

'Deal I was happy to get'

Freeland said she agreedwith Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that "no deal is better than a bad deal," but was relieved that the agreement keepsChapter 19, a dispute-settlement mechanism of the original NAFTA, and the cultural exemption, which she said helps Canada maintain its identity.

Chapter 19allows companies to request arbitration if they feel their products have been unfairly hit with anti-dumping or countervailing duties.

"It's the deal that I was happy to get," she said. "It secures what we have."

The deal has elements that are better than NAFTA, she said.

For example, Freelandsaid the deal gets rid of the ISDS, the investor state dispute settlement mechanismbetween Canada and the U.S., which she said allows foreign companies to sue the Canadian government.

She said she considers that provision of the original NAFTAto be a "serious breach of our sovereignty." The provision cost Canada millions of dollars, she said.

"I felt throughout this negotiation truly a sacred trust," she said.

Farmers are meeting withthe Ontario premier on Tuesday to talk about the impactof thedeal on dairy, egg and turkey operations.

With files from Metro Morning