Poll suggests most Canadians favour cutting EV tariff for canola relief
A new poll suggests that the majority of Canadians favour cutting the tariff Ottawa has imposed on Chinese electric vehicles if it means relief from tariff China has slapped onto Canadian canola imports.
In poll, published on Thursday by the Angus Reid Institute, 57 per cent of respondents said they would support lowering Canada’s 100 per cent tariff on Chinese-manufactured EVs if it would help secure a better deal for canola producers, who are facing a 76 per cent tariff from China. Just 24 per cent said they would prefer to see Canada’s maintain its current tariff rates.
“These two dueling priorities are contentious, as the canola market is of key import to Saskatchewan, Alberta, and Manitoba, with $14.5 billion in exports in 2024, while the EV market has received billions in federal funding as a strategic sector going forward,” the nonprofit think tank explained in a statement.
Unsurprisingly, support for cuts to the EV tariff was highest in Saskatchewan (68 per cent), where the majority of Canada’s canola crops are grown. Manitoba and Alberta, which also produce canola, had the second- and third-highest levels of support at 61 and 60 per cent, respectively.


