British ColumbiaB.C. canola farmers are collectively staring down millions of dollars in losses after China slapped new anti-dumping duties on Canadian canola, just weeks before harvest begins.Analysts want Canada to review its own tariffs on Chinese electric vehiclesMatt Preprost · CBC News · Posted: Aug 17, 2025 7:26 PM EDT | Last Updated: 2 hours agoRoughly 290 canola growers in B.C.’s Peace Region seed up to 110,000 acres a year, which accounts for 95 per cent of B.C.’s annual canola crop. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)B.C. canola farmers are staring down millions in losses after China slapped new anti-dumping duties on Canadian canola just weeks before harvest begins.The retaliatory 75.8 per cent tariff on canola seed is the latest volley in the ongoing trade fight between the two countries.While farmers brace for the hit, experts are asking whether Canada’s own 100 per cent tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles (EVs) are worth the cost, and if they should be scrapped in hopes China will reverse its canola tariff.Ernest Wiebe, who farms 800 acres of canola in Montney near Fort St. John, B.C., says producers are feeling discouraged by a recent drop in price for their crops.The price per bushel had been $15 to $16 earlier this year, but it’s since dropped to about $12.50 to $13.20 a bushel, Wiebe said. And it’s a long way off from the highs of $27 a bushel seen in 2022.”With all the uncertainty and stress of tariffs, and anti-dumping duties, we have seen a significant slide in our prices,” he said.Doing the mathA price drop by about $3 per bushel can wipe out between $120 and $180 an acre, depending on yield, according to Wiebe, who sits on the board of the Canadian Canola Growers Association. For the roughly 290 producers in the Peace Region, who seed up to 110,000 acres a year and grow 95 per cent of B.C.’s canola, that’s a massive hit.Ernest Wiebe farms near Fort St. John, and is a director with the Canadian Canola Growers Association. (Canadian Canola Growers Association)Most of the crop is bound for China, where it’s crushed and processed into cooking oil.Meanwhile, input costs keep climbing. Fertilizer alone is up $200 a metric ton this year, Wiebe said, on top of higher bills for land, fuel, equipment, and taxes.The growing price gap could mean tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, in losses for the average farmer, and millions for B.C.’s economy.WATCH | Canola farmers brace for tariff impact: Chinese tariffs on Canadian canola have farmers bracing for the worstA new Chinese tariff of over 75 per cent on Canadian canola seed takes effect today, effectively closing Canada’s biggest export market for the product. The tariffs are an escalation in a mounting trade dispute between the two countries.”Overall, farmers [are] incredibly discouraged, and looking at it and going, ‘Well, how are we going to make this all work?'” said Wiebe.B.C. growers are hoping for an average or slightly above-average crop this year. But a very dry May followed by late June rains has delayed maturity, raising the risk that bad weather — possibly even snow — could interfere with harvest.Pressure on OttawaWerner Antweiler, an associate professor at University of British Columbia’s Sauder School of Business, says he is worried about farmers suffering the consequences of “arbitrary” Canadian tariffs.The canola tariffs came after Canada’s 100 per cent tariffs on Chinese EVs, and Antweiler says the EV tariffs weren’t based on a proper investigation under World Trade Organization (WTO) principles. “We should definitely revisit this issue and, in that way, also maybe reduce the countervailing duties that we now see on canola exports.”Stuart Smyth, a professor of agriculture and resource economics at the University of Saskatchewan, believes China’s new tariffs are a strategic move to push down international canola prices before China buys large volumes at a discount. Similar tariffs in 2019 and 2020 cost the canola industry $2.3 billion, he said. “If this stays in for six or eight months, we could be looking at billions of dollars in costs,” Smyth told CBC Radio West host Sarah Penton.China claims Canada is dumping canola below the cost of production, which the federal government denies. Smyth says Canada doesn’t subsidize crops like other countries do, nor does it promote exports with subsidies.LISTEN | Professor says EV tariffs hurt B.C. farmers The Early EditionChinese tariffs on Canadian canola seed to come into effect todayChina has announced a preliminary anti-dumping duty on Canadian canola imports, an escalation in a yearlong trade dispute that began with Ottawa’s tariff on Chinese electric vehicles. Associate professor at UBC’s Sauder School of Business Werner Antweiler explains how this will impact Canadian growers and B.C.’s portsCanada and China are challenging each other at the WTO, and while Prime Minister Mark Carney says his government is working with industry to find solutions, Smyth doesn’t expect much of a response. He believes Carney is prioritizing the steel, aluminum, and auto sectors to save jobs in southern Ontario, where there’s a high density of voters. “The federal government has been very reserved on reaching out to China, having consultations, or even trying to set up discussions with them,” Smyth said.Farmers running out of timeWiebe says the federal government needs to strike a deal with China soon, even if that means walking back its EV tariffs. “If that could be resolved, and the tariffs, or the anti-dumping duty in this case, lifted, I believe our canola price would probably jump $2 to $3 a bushel probably within the next week.”ABOUT THE AUTHORMatt Preprost is an award-winning journalist and editor focused on northeast British Columbia including Fort St. John, Dawson Creek, Fort Nelson, Chetwynd, and Tumbler Ridge. The former editor of the Alaska Highway News, he first moved to Fort St. John in 2013 and has a history of reporting on pipeline politics, the Site C dam, and rural life in B.C.’s Peace Country. You can contact him at mathew.preprost@cbc.cawith files from The Early Edition and Radio West
B.C. canola growers brace for new Chinese tariffs as harvest approaches
