China has signalled a revival of Canadian canola trade following recent diplomatic engagement and a shift in tariff policy, marking a significant development in one of the world’s largest agricultural commodity supply chains. Traders estimate that Chinese importers have booked at least 600,000–650,000 tonnes of Canadian canola seed for shipment in the spring, after market access was restored under a preliminary bilateral trade agreement.
The renewed purchases come after China and Canada agreed to cut tariffs on canola products — including lowering combined duties on canola seed to around 15% and suspending punitive levies on related agricultural goods — as part of broader efforts to mend strained economic relations. Canadian canola had faced historically high tariffs that sharply reduced exports in 2025.
China is a crucial destination for rapeseed and its processed products such as oil and meal, which are used widely for cooking and livestock feed. Before trade disruptions, exports to China were valued at nearly USD 4–5 billion annually, making it one of Canada’s top export markets for canola.
Market participants say the recent bookings — representing around 10–26% of China’s total canola import volumes from recent years — signal that Chinese crushers are seeking to replenish stocks and capitalise on improved economics following tariff relief. The cargoes are expected to be loaded between March and April 2026, with the potential for additional purchases if current terms remain favourable and geopolitical tensions do not escalate.
Analysts caution, however, that the trade environment remains fluid. Tariff reductions tied to diplomatic understandings may still be subject to revision, and longer‑term resolution of underlying trade conflicts — including broader disputes involving electric vehicle tariffs and other agricultural products — will influence the stability of canola flows.
Overall, this development illustrates how policy shifts and trade diplomacy can rapidly reshape agricultural supply chains, with implications for exporters, commodity markets and downstream industries reliant on stable oilseed supplies.
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