![U.S. defeats Canada in first dispute under new North American trade pact](https://i.cbc.ca/1.5718988.1599875525!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/dave-daniels.jpg)
U.S. defeats Canada in first dispute under new North American trade pact
CBC
This item is part of Watching Washington, a regular dispatch from CBC News correspondents reporting on U.S. politics and developments that affect Canadians.
Canada has lost its first dispute case under the new North American trade agreement to the United States, with a panel agreeing that Ottawa flouted part of its obligation to open the dairy market.
The three-member panel — made up of a Uruguayan diplomat who was once ambassador to Canada, a Canadian trade lawyer based in the U.S., and a U.S. trade lawyer named to the panel by Canada — agreed that Canada violated its promise to allow slightly more dairy imports by imposing unfairly complicated rules.
The U.S. says Canada now has a few weeks to comply with the ruling, or face the possibility of a trade penalty such as a tariff.
The finding comes amid a succession of trade disputes between the countries that risk souring the bilateral relationship.
"We prevailed — as we thought we would," a senior official in the U.S. Trade Representative's office told reporters in a briefing Tuesday.
"Now the goal is to work with Canada.… The end goal is not to put retaliatory tariffs in place."
The report was released to the countries in a full confidential version just before the holidays, on Dec. 20; a 53-page public version was released Tuesday.
The Canadian government also claimed a partial victory: It noted that the panel otherwise upheld Canada's system of supply management of its dairy sector.
Dairy was one of the hardest-fought issues in negotiating the new Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade (CUSMA), and was resolved in the final days of negotiating.
The Canadian government worked to prevent new imports, under pressure from producers concentrated in Central Canada.
They argued that Canada's tightly controlled system allows for stable farming communities without the wild price fluctuations that have periodically battered U.S. farms.
For the U.S., exporting more dairy was a top priority.
Its allies argued that the tight Canadian controls unfairly shut out competition, and innovation, and can lead to higher prices for consumers.