Over the weekend, Canada and China struck a trade deal which could see Chinese electric vehicles (EVs) into the country.

Under the deal, Canada will reduce the 100 per cent tariff on made-in-China EVs to 6.1 per cent for the first 49,000 units per year, a number which will rise to 70,000 cars per year by the fifth year of the deal.

In return, China will slash the tariff it imposes on Canadian canola seed from 85 per cent to 15 per cent in March.

Although Chinese EVs now face fewer financial barriers in the Canadian market, it might take a while for Chinese vehicles to start heading to the Great White North, as no manufacturers have announced plans to enter the market. Nor do we know which vehicles would comply Canadian car design rules, which are closely aligned with those used in the US.

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Xiaomi XU7
Xiaomi XU7

Even if Chinese automakers max out their low tariff allocation, Chinese EVs will make up a tiny portion — under 3.7 per cent — of the Canadian new car market which, according to Statistics Canada, totalled 1.9 million vehicles in 2024.

The Canada-China trade deal is part of a push by Canadian prime minister Mark Carney to diversify the country’s trading base away from the US.

Doug Ford, premier of Ontario, the province where all of Canada’s car plants are located, criticised the trade deal stating, “The federal government is inviting a flood of cheap made-in-China electric vehicles without any real guarantee of equal or immediate investments in Canada’s economy, auto sector or supply chain.”

Since World War II, Canada’s economy has been closely intertwined with its southern neighbour. Their close trading and regulatory environment lead to the signing in 1994 of NAFTA, a free trade bloc encompassing Canada, the US, and Mexico.

Relations between Canada and the US turned from cozy to sour when, at the beginning of his second term in 2025, President Donald Trump started referring to Canada as America’s “51st state”, and began slapping tariffs on a plethora of Canadian products, including cars and automotive parts, in what he claimed was a bid to stop the flow of illegal drugs into the country.

Nissan N7
Nissan N7