Latest news with #TradeRelations


National Post
2 days ago
- Business
- National Post
Former Saskatchewan premier Brad Wall can repair relations with India, say premiers
OTTAWA — Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe agree that Moe's predecessor Brad Wall is the right man to repair Canada-India relations, amidst news that Canada will soon be sending a new high commissioner to New Delhi. Article content 'I'd be supportive of that,' said Smith when asked on Wednesday about the prospect of Wall becoming Canada's next high commissioner to India. Article content Article content 'I think that Saskatchewan has done incredibly impressive work on expanding its footprint internationally through its trade offices, in particular India,' she added. Article content Moe was quick to echo Smith's sentiments, hinting that Wall could possibly aim even higher than being Canada's envoy to the emerging Asian superpower. Article content 'I would also be a proponent for (Wall) to be not only high commissioner to India but essentially the face and the voice for many of Canada's foreign relations,' said Moe. Article content 'We'll see what his answer is to that,' Moe joked. The two Prairie premiers were speaking at a joint press conference in Lloydminister, Sask., after a joint caucus meeting. Article content Moe praised Wall for building inroads to India and other emerging markets during his tenure as Saskatchewan's premier, between 2007 and 2018. Article content 'Why I would be a proponent of (Wall's) to be high commissioner to India is because of the effort and focus that he provided … to those province to nation relations, and province to industry relations in not just India but in many countries around the world,' said Moe. Article content Moe also commended Prime Minister Mark Carney for taking steps to mend Canada's strained bilateral relationship with India. Article content Wall became the province's first premier to visit India in 2011 and led a second trade mission in 2014. Article content Saskatchewan's exports to India were valued at $1.3 billion in 2023, a 52 per cent jump from the midpoint of Wall's tenure in 2013. Article content The province now produces more than a quarter of Canada's total exports to India, while being home to just three per cent of the country's population. Article content It is the top supplier globally of lentils and potash to India. Article content Carney and Indian counterpart Narendra Modi jointly announced at this week's G7 summit in Kananaskis, Alta., that they'd be designating new high commissioners for the first time since 2023, when the murder of Canadian Sikh leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar caused a rupture in bilateral relations.


Bloomberg
3 days ago
- Business
- Bloomberg
Carney on US Tariffs: We Retain Flexibility to Retaliate
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney comments on the state of US-Canada trade relations during the G-7 leaders' summit in Kananaskis, Canada. (Source: Bloomberg)

RNZ News
3 days ago
- Business
- RNZ News
Luxon arrives in China intent on building on positives amid global conflicts
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon arrives in Shanghai after a 20-hour trip from Auckland. Photo: RNZ / Craig McCulloch [b Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has touched down in China early on Wednesday, kicking off his first visit there as prime minister - a trip analysts say will seek to consolidate the relationship rather than reinvigorate it. The RNZAF Boeing 757 arrived in Shanghai at about 3:30am (NZT) after departing Auckland's Whenuapai Airbase more than 20 hours earlier. Luxon will spend roughly two days in Shanghai, touting New Zealand's wares, and one in Beijing, holding high-level meetings with the Chinese administration. To aid him in those goals, the PM has brought with him Tourism Minister Louise Upston, Ethnic Communities Minister Mark Mitchell, and a team of officials and business leaders. Addressing the delegation before departure, Mitchell quipped it was like "getting the old band back together" after a trade mission to India in March. He said the China visit was important right now given the immense global uncertainty. "Probably never seen the amount of conflict that's going on… old alliances that are being challenged a bit," Mitchell said. "Hopefully, touch wood, the 757 gets us up there." Upston said New Zealand had a "long and deep relationship" with China but there was more to be done. "Particularly from a tourism and hospitality perspective, we're kind of lagging - so we've got a bit of serious heavy-lifting to do up there to make sure we can resurrect those very deep relationships and ensure the China market knows we're open for business." The 28-strong business delegation is chaired by Dame Therese Walsh, chair of Air New Zealand and ASB Bank. Among the companies represented are Fonterra, Zespri, A2 Milk, and Silver Fern Farms. Also of note are education providers Te Pūkenga, Victoria University of Wellington, and UP Education, as well as both Auckland and Christchurch airports. Read a comprehensive preview of Luxon's China trip here . Photo: RNZ / Craig McCulloch In a sit-down interview with RNZ before departure, Luxon used a range of adjectives to describe the bilateral relationship: strong, mature, complex, considered, predictable. "It's an important relationship. We're being consistent and steady with it," he said. "We've got a good rapport with the leaders, and there's a lot more for us to build and develop within this relationship." Earlier this month, a group of former political leaders - including Helen Clark, Sir Geoffrey Palmer, Sir David Carter, and Don Brash - criticised the coalition's approach to China as being needlessly "adversarial" . But Luxon dismissed the warning as incorrect and "a bit simplistic". "We've been very consistent that where we have differences, we raise them, we do so publicly or privately, we call it out. And that's a sign of a good mature relationship." RNZ asked whether he would directly raise those differences, whether on human rights or militarisation in the Pacific, during his meetings this week with President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang. "I don't talk about what I'm going to raise in those meetings in advance," Luxon said. "But suffice to say, I've been pretty consistent with how we how we run them." He encouraged RNZ to "maybe listen a little less to former politicians" and said he was "not at all" concerned about a potential relationship breakdown. "It is a more volatile world out there, and New Zealand can navigate those volatilities incredibly well," Luxon said. "Yes, that comes with some challenges from time to time, but I'm very confident we can do that." Contemporary China Research Centre director Jason Young said it was crucial for the government to get its messaging right on this trip: keeping the relationship "sustainable and stable" without raising expectations too much. "Often within China, things can't really sit still. They have to keep moving," Young said. "From a New Zealand end, it's more a question of demonstrating that the relationship is valuable and wanting to maintain the growth within that relationship at a sustainable level." Young, who is an associate professor of international relations at Victoria University of Wellington, said the relationship had become "more strained" given the shifting geo-strategic environment. He said there were plenty of differences that would have to be navigated: the recent Cook Islands deal, China's growing military power, and stability across the Taiwan Strait. "As with any great power - and particularly a great power with a very different political system, a different view of geopolitics and their role in the world - there are always potholes that New Zealand could fall into," Young said. "New Zealand is not immune from the broader geopolitical challenges, and navigating those challenges is going to be one of the hardest things that New Zealand does over the next couple of decades." Professor of political science at the University of Canterbury Anne-Marie Brady told RNZ Luxon would use the visit to highlight positive areas of cooperation to protect the trading relationship. But she expected Luxon would also voice his support for the "multilateral rules-based order" which was under threat from China. "Both President Xi and Premier Li have pleaded with New Zealand to return to the old rubric for NZ-China relations, which was the 'relationship of the first' where New Zealand was going to jump in on every initiative that China launched. "New Zealand doesn't use that language anymore. It uses the relationship of common points and difference."
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Trump to Leave G-7 Summit Early Over Growing Tensions in Middle East
President finalizes trade agreement with the U.K., but will leave Canada without announcing new trade deals.
Yahoo
7 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Trade With China Is Becoming a One-Way Street
President Trump is trying to further open up China's market to U.S. companies as Beijing's appetite for the rest of the world's exports is diminishing