Canada's Trudeau comes up short on U.S. EV tax credits, says will keep pushing

Reuters

Published Nov 19, 2021 02:32

Updated Nov 19, 2021 12:34

By Steve Scherer

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau returned to Ottawa on Friday after failing to convince U.S. President Joe Biden to scrap proposed electric-vehicle tax credits that would favor American-based manufacturers, but said he would keep seeking a solution.

Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives on Friday passed the $1.75 trillion domestic investment bill that includes the tax credits, sending it to the Senate where negotiations will continue.

Canada fears the credits will undermine its own efforts to produce electric vehicles (EVs) in Ontario - the country's industrial heartland - where General Motors Co (NYSE:GM), Ford Motor (NYSE:F) Co and Stellantis NV already assemble cars and trucks and plan a pivot to electric.

"The Americans are very aware of Canada's position on this, and our concerns around it, and quite frankly, the threats it poses to over 50 years of integrated automaking in our two countries," Trudeau told reporters late on Thursday after meeting Biden at the White House.

"There are a number of ways to look at solving this," Trudeau said without elaborating, adding that Canada would continue to push to "find solutions".

Trudeau - who was in Washington to attend the first meeting https://www.reuters.com/world/us-canada-mexico-set-donate-vaccines-unveil-new-methane-curbs-2021-11-18 between the leaders of the United States, Canada and Mexico in five years - also met with Congressional leaders.

On Friday, Brian Nichols, the U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs, kept the door open to a compromise.

"Obviously we have some differences of opinion on these issues," he said. "But we have a great relationship... and we're going to work through all the issues that we have."

The tax credit issue was the first Trudeau brought up in his one-on-one meeting with Biden on Thursday, a government source said, and Canadian Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland on Wednesday warned the tax credits risk becoming the dominant bilateral issue between the two countries.

Canada says they would violate rules of the new North American trade treat, or USMCA (United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement). The White House insisted on Thursday that they do not. Canada has indicated it would respond if the tax credits are passed.

Trudeau said he discussed other contentious issues with Biden, such as his "Buy American" provisions and Michigan's push to shut down Enbridge Inc (TSX:ENB)'s Line 5 oil pipeline, but found no solutions.

There was "no definitive win for Canada," said the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, and the Conservative Party opposition said the failure showed "Canada's relationship with the United States has declined under Mr. Trudeau".

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