Saturday, November 23, 2024
spot_img
spot_img
HomeBusinessEconomyCanada’s request dispute settlement under Chapter 31 CUSMA

Canada’s request dispute settlement under Chapter 31 CUSMA

OTTAWA, Canada – Mary Ng, minister of small business, export promotion and international trade, today issued the following statement regarding Canada’s request for a dispute settlement panel under Chapter 31 of the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) with respect to the United States safeguard tariffs on solar products from Canada:

“As we build back better from the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic and urgently address climate change, Canada and the United States must be aligned and work together on the development of sustainable and equitable energy transitions and clean energy innovation.

“It is in this context that Canada has requested a dispute settlement panel to address the United States safeguard tariffs of 18 percent on Canadian solar products. These tariffs are unwarranted and damaging to the global competitiveness of our long-established, secure, and deeply integrated supply chains.

“Moving forward with Canada’s request for a dispute settlement panel on these tariffs will help ensure the timely resolution of this issue.”

“Canada and the United States share a long-standing mutually beneficial relationship, and our ongoing partnership will contribute to a strong, sustainable recovery, and benefit workers and businesses on both sides of the border.”

spot_img
RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Caribbean News

ILO – Suriname’s discusses just transition progress

PARAMARIBO, Suriname, (ILO News) - Advancements towards strengthening entrepreneurship, formalization and a just transition for the benefit of workers and businesses in Suriname was...

Global News

G20 economies should target reforms to boost medium-term growth prospects

By Paula Beltran Saavedra, Nicolas Fernandez-Arias, Chanpheng Fizzarotti, and Alberto Musso For most Group of Twenty economies, growth is poised to weaken over the next five years...