琉璃神社

Skip to content

Poilievre calls for tariffs on Chinese EVs, Liberals imply they鈥檙e already coming

Poilievre said the Chinese government is 鈥榚xploiting weak labour and environmental standards鈥
web1_20240809100844-8c9f8551c195e95629844dcd7cfd9ffc3946fd2df4a0ab4a54bc87edb7498097
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says he would impose big new import taxes on a host of Chinese-made goods including electric cars, solar panels and semiconductors. Poilievre speaks to the media during a press conference in Montreal, Friday, July 12, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi

A future Conservative government would slap massive import tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles and a host of other products in a bid to protect Canadian jobs, Leader Pierre Poilievre said Friday.

His promise comes as the Liberal government just completed the required consultations to impose tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles and launched an additional consultation Friday that could expand that to additional industries.

Poilievre made his announcement in front of a few dozen workers at the Stelco steel plant in Hamilton, with steel being one of the products he says China is trying to undermine in Canada.

Poilievre said the Chinese government is 鈥渆xploiting weak labour and environmental standards to produce artificially cheap steel, aluminum and EVs that create more pollution.鈥

鈥淭hey have stolen technology from western countries, limited access to global supply chains and have massively subsidized steel, aluminum and EV industries. They鈥檙e doing this with the goal of crushing our steel, our aluminum and our automotive production and taking our jobs,鈥 he said.

His plan is to introduce a 100 per cent import tax on Chinese-made EVs and cancel Canadian EV purchase rebates for them. A 50 per cent import tariff would be added to semiconductors and solar cells, as well as 25 per cent on steel and aluminum products, graphite and other critical minerals, EV batteries, battery parts, permanent magnets and ship-to-shore cranes.

The plan mirrors the tariffs announced by U.S. President Joe Biden for his country on May 14, in a plan Biden said was meant to protect U.S. industry from unfair Chinese competition and control of supply chains that can disrupt the global economy.

The European Union also imposed higher import tariffs on Chinese EVs this summer, bringing the maximum import tax to almost 50 per cent. On Friday Beijing filed a complaint at the World Trade Organization over it. China promised in May to respond strongly to the U.S. tariffs but hasn鈥檛 yet announced any retaliatory measures.

Poilievre accused Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of refusing to follow the U.S. lead.

鈥淢eanwhile, Trudeau has done nothing to protect our workers and our jobs,鈥 he said. 鈥淲orse than that, this is where it gets really crazy, he鈥檚 giving out rebates for people to buy Chinese made cars.鈥

Canada has a national rebate of up to $5,000 on the purchase of EVs that do not restrict the country of origin. Currently the only EVs made in China that are sold in Canada are Teslas made at the U.S. tech giant鈥檚 Shanghai factory.

Canada鈥檚 Teslas came from the U.S. until recently, but switched some production to Shanghai because the U.S. is offering EV tax credits that are limited to vehicles made in North America.

However in April China鈥檚 biggest EV company, BYD, registered as a Canadian corporate entity and in July, registered Canadian lobbyists to talk to the Canadian government about BYD鈥檚 planned entry into the Canadian market and Canadian tariffs on EVs.

Canada currently applies a six-per cent import tariff on Chinese-made passenger vehicles. But an increase seems imminent, as Canada just completed the required month-long consultation process to impose higher tariffs.

When she announced those consultations in June, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said Canada would 鈥渘ot stand for鈥 China鈥檚 clear policy to overproduce and oversupply EVs and EV-related products.

On Friday her spokeswoman said Freeland 鈥渉as been clear that action is necessary鈥 and accused Poilievre of harming Canada鈥檚 industries by delaying the passage of the government鈥檚 new investment tax credits to help the auto sector and other clean tech industries.

鈥淚t is incredibly rich for Pierre Poilievre to attempt to repackage the government鈥檚 position that action is necessary to protect Canadian auto workers from unfair Chinese trade practices in electric vehicles and claim it as his own,鈥 Katherine Cuplinskas said.

Several hundred submissions were made during the consultation, which ran from July 2 to Aug. 1, and Freeland met personally with representatives from labour groups, as well as the steel, aluminum, critical minerals and auto industries.

Most industry groups welcome the notion of new tariffs while some environment advocates say they will delay the expansion of electric vehicles in Canada by keeping lower-cost cars out of the market.

The new tariffs would be applied under section 53 of the Customs Tariff Act, which allows for imposition of a surtax on imported goods in response to practices that adversely affect Canada鈥檚 industry.

Canada has invested heavily in its auto sector to become a key player in the global transition to electric cars, with the federal and provincial governments offering $53 billion in tax credits, production subsidies and capital grants to 13 different EV plants, battery factories and battery precursor production sites over the last four years.

That effort propelled Canada to surpass China this year for the top spot on Bloomberg NEF鈥檚 annual ranking of the potential of countries in the lithium-ion battery supply chain.

The Liberals may also be moving to look at tariffs beyond EVs as well. On Friday International Trade Minister Mary Ng launched a 45-day consultation period on 鈥減otential new measures to advance and defend Canada鈥檚 economic security interests.鈥

That consultation mentions supply chain disruptions, rising protectionism and unfair trade practices, but doesn鈥檛 mention any specific industries or products that may be targeted or what mechanisms may be used. The new consultation period will end Sept. 23.

Mia Rabson, The Canadian Press

Breaking News You Need To Know

Sign up for free account today and start receiving our exclusive newsletters.

Sign Up with google Sign Up with facebook

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google and apply.

Reset your password

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google and apply.

A link has been emailed to you - check your inbox.



Don't have an account? Click here to sign up




(or

琉璃神社

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }
Pop-up banner image