Calgary

Canola dispute with China could have serious impact on Alberta farmers

New standards on Canadian canola exports being demanded by China has producers worried, something the prime minister said is a priority as he heads to Beijing.

New cleaning standards would affect bottom line and could stall crop exports

Farmers could suffer after China announced new standards on Canadian canola exports. (Scott Mason/The Winchester Star/Associated Press)

New standards on Canadian canola exports being demanded by China has producers worried, something the prime minister said is a priority as he heads to Beijing.

China, which takes about 40 per cent of Canada's canola seed exports, is insisting the amount of dockage — foreign material like stems and pods — be cut down from 2.5 per cent to one per cent, effective this Thursday.

"Somebody has to pay for that and at the end of the day it's coming out of the farmer's pocket," said Kevin Serfas, who owns a canola farm near Lethbridge, Alta. 

Backlog and blackleg

It's not just the costs of cleaning that has him worried. 

"It'll be a ripple effect that's going to happen. Once we have to start cleaning this stuff down to one per cent, it just plugs the whole system up and it's going to cause backlogs in canola shipments, wheat shipments, barley shipments — any sort of grains that we export," he said. 

Kevin Serfas, who grows canola seed in the Lethbridge area, is concerned over new standards demanded by China. (CBC)

China is insisting on this lower dockage rate to reduce the possible spread of a fungal disease called blackleg. 

But Lynn Jacobson, the president of the Alberta Federation of Agriculture, said Canada has blackleg under control.

"Their stated reason that, you know, it's to control blackleg is I guess somewhat of a false argument," he said. 

Jacobson is worried the backlog will affect prices, with desperate farmers eager to offload their crop. 

Oil producers could benefit

One group that could benefit from those lower prices are domestic crushers, who turn the seeds into oil. 

Steven Bank, CEO of Sunora Oil, is cautiously optimistic that his company could benefit from lower seeds prices. (Raffy Boudjikanian/CBC)

"If there's less seed in China for processors, and there may be somewhat less, it opens up an opportunity for those of us who are exporting canola oil itself," said Steven Bank, the CEO of Sunora Oil, whose second largest market after the U.S. is China.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will be in China from Aug. 30 to Sept. 6, culminating in a G20 leaders summit. 

The canola trade with China is worth around $2 billion.

With files from Natasha Frakes