Canola trade seems unconcerned by tariff threat

The rapid export pace earlier in the year and a potentially large crush could speed up price rationing sooner than later

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: February 5, 2025

,

A graphic of two steel seacans, one painted as a Canadian flag, the other as a U.S. flag, hang from chains and banging together overtop a field of yellow blooming canola.

Glacier FarmMedia – U.S. tariffs on Canadian imports that had been planned for Feb. 4 have now been delayed for a month.

However, the threat that these tariffs will eventually be imposed continues to hang over the country.

The reasons cited are a supposed trade deficit with Canada and allegedly a large amount of drugs entering the U.S. from Canada.

Read Also

John Deere's machinery display at the Ag in Motion farm show near Langham, Saskatchewan, July 2025.

Deere expects steady production

The disruption to trade caused by the U.S. president’s passion for fluctuating tariffs will likely make new machinery more expensive.

Of course, one of those goods affected by the tariffs would be Canadian canola, effectively strangling trade between Canada and the largest buyer of Canadian canola oil. In 2023, Canada exported $8.6 billion worth of canola products to the U.S., according to Statistics Canada. The potential effects to canola prices at the Intercontinental Exchange, and to Canada’s canola industry, could be calamitous.

But what if the tariffs are short-lived?

A Trump administration, former or current, can be unpredictable. Commerce secretary nominee Howard Lutnick said at a hearing on Jan. 29 that Canada was “acting swiftly” to improve its border and “there would be no tariff” if successful. The Wall Street Journal reported on Jan. 30 that Trump’s aides were trying to persuade the president to pursue other options.

While the immediate threat is gone for now, the possibility of tariffs remains and no one knows how long the tariffs they would last.

Over the last week of January, canola saw choppy trading while holding rangebound, indicating a lack of concern for the threatened tariffs. We can only wait and see what will happen now.

The rapid export pace earlier in the marketing year, especially to China, and a potentially large crush could result in price rationing sooner than later.

Weather concerns over the past few weeks in Brazil and Argentina tightened production estimates for the still-to-be record-breaking South American crop. Chicago soyoil, which canola typically follows, saw its March contract trade two U.S. cents per pound above its moving averages.

The potential for hotter temperatures in India next month could decimate that country’s rapeseed crop.

However, China’s buying could come to a halt if the country prohibits imports after the conclusion of an anti-dumping investigation into Canada. The South American soybean harvest, slow so far, could start to accelerate sooner than later, putting more oilseeds into the market.

As the calendar turns to February, no one knows exactly how canola prices will turn out, if or when the Americans decide to go ahead with tariffs.

About the author

Adam Peleshaty

Adam Peleshaty

Reporter

Adam Peleshaty is a longtime resident of Stonewall, Man., living next door to his grandparents’ farm. He has a Bachelor of Science degree in statistics from the University of Winnipeg. Before joining Glacier FarmMedia, Adam was an award-winning community newspaper reporter in Manitoba's Interlake. He is a Winnipeg Blue Bombers season ticket holder and worked as a timekeeper in hockey, curling, basketball and football.

Markets at a glance

explore

Stories from our other publications