Canadian agriculture groups are urging the federal government to fully renew the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), warning that any changes to the trade deal could undermine the stability and growth of the sector.
In a letter sent to the federal government Monday, farm and agri-food organizations echoed similar calls from US producer groups, stressing the need for a complete 16-year renewal of the pact without weakening its existing terms.
The groups represent farmers, ranchers, processors, and agribusinesses across the country. They argue that CUSMA has been essential to building a predictable, integrated North American market that allows Canadian producers to compete and expand. Since 2005, they noted, agricultural and food trade among the three countries has tripled, reaching about $400 billion in value.
Industry leaders highlighted the agreement’s detailed rules governing sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) standards, biotechnology, and technical barriers to trade — policies they say have created transparency, scientific consistency, and regulatory clarity. Those provisions, they wrote, allow new agricultural technologies to reach farmers faster, protect plant and animal health, and give exporters confidence that they will be treated fairly.