Skip to main content

Trade News

Welcome to CSCB Trade News!

You may search all CSCB articles here. Please note, articles with a dark blue background and the MEMBERS ONLY indicator are accessible only to logged-in employees of corporate member firms. Please click on the title link to access the article.

Your search found 41849 results
Displaying 20461 - 20480 of 41849

D11-5-9, Canada-Colombia Free Trade Agreement (CCOFTA) Rules of Origin

The following is now available on the CBSA Web site: Memorandum D11-5-9, Canada-Colombia Free Trade Agreement (CCOFTA) Rules of Origin This memorandum contains the CCOFTA Rules of Origin Regulations and provides a link to the Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada (FAITC) Web site where the Rules of Origin for the CCOFTA may be found. http://www.cbsa-asfc.gc.ca/publications/dm-md/d11/d11-5-9-eng.html _________________________________________________

Update to CFIA AIRS Website

Chapter 44 was published to add the following OGD extensions. 44.01.22.0122.14 - Maple - wood chips, wood particles, nuggets. (Acer spp.) 44.01.22.0122.15 - Horsechestnut - wood chips, wood particles, nuggets. (Aesculus spp.) 44.01.22.0122.16 - White Silk - wood chips, wood particles, nuggets. (Albizia spp.) 44.01.22.0122.17 - Birch - wood chips, wood particles, nuggets. (Betula spp.) 44.01.22.0122.18 - Hackberry - wood chips, wood particles, nuggets. (Celtis spp.)

K84 February 2012

Although payment for February’s monthly K84 statements will be due as usual on February 29, 2012, the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) realizes that some months have fewer days to arrange for payment, creating a challenge for clients. Therefore, the CBSA will not issue a late payment penalty or charge interest if the payment is received after February 29, 2012, but on March 1, 2012 before 16:30 local time. Should payments be received after March 1, 2012, 16:30 local time, they will be subject to interest and penalties effective March 1, 2012.

Canada-U.S. trade relationship drifting apart: TD

The following is excerpted from the 1 February 2012 edition of the Financial Post. While Canada may still be in a committed trade relationship with the United States, that evidently hasn’t stopped the two countries from seeing other people in the past decade, a new report from TD Economics said Wednesday. Derek Burleton, deputy chief economist with TD Economics, said Canada’s reliance on the U.S. to import its goods has been on a serious decline in the past 10 years, and is likely to continue to drop in the years ahead.

Border officers walk off job over safety concerns

The following is excerpted from the 2 February 2012 edition of The Windsor Star. Border services officers walked off the job at the Windsor-Detroit tunnel and the Ambassador Bridge on Wednesday afternoon demanding the Canada Border Services Agency fix flaws in the policies stipulating how officers are to deal with people considered armed and dangerous. Only two lines were open at the tunnel and the bridge and were staffed by management, said Jason McMichael, second vice-president of the Customs and Immigration Union, which represents border officers.

Item 125.2 - Milk Protein Substances

Item 125.2 - Milk Protein Substances with a Milk Protein Content Of 85% or More By Weight, Calculated on the Dry Matter, that do not Originate in a NAFTA Country, Chile, Costa Rica, or Israel The purpose of this Notice is to inform importers of the Minister’s policies and practices respecting the administration of the 10,000,000 kilogram (kg) per year tariff rate quota (TRQ) for milk protein substances (MPS) with a milk protein content of 85% or more by weight.

CFIA website update

Please be advised that an industry notice has been posted on the external CFIA website which provides links to the following four documents: 1) Appendix I of the QMP Reference Standard in the Facilities Inspection Manual: Guidelines on the Control Measures for Preventing the Contamination and Growth of Listeria monocytogenes

Costco Wholesale Canada Ltd. vs CBSA, Appeal No. AP-2011-009

Decision and reasons issued Thursday, January 19, 2012 IN THE MATTER OF an appeal heard on November 15, 2011, pursuant to subsection 67(1) of the Customs Act, R.S.C. 1985 (2d Supp.), c. 1; AND IN THE MATTER OF a decision of the President of the Canada Border Services Agency, dated February 24, 2011, with respect to a request for review of an advance ruling pursuant to subsection 60(4) of the Customs Act. BETWEEN COSTCO WHOLESALE CANADA LTD. Appellant AND THE PRESIDENT OF THE CANADA BORDER SERVICES AGENCY Respondent

Beckman Coulter Canada Inc. vs CBSA, Appeal No. AP-2010-065

Decision and reasons issued Tuesday, January 17, 2012 IN THE MATTER OF an appeal heard on September 20, 2011, pursuant to subsection 67(1) of the Customs Act, R.S.C. 1985 (2d Supp.), c. 1; AND IN THE MATTER OF a decision of the President of the Canada Border Services Agency, dated December 16, 2010, with respect to a request for review of an advance ruling on tariff classification, pursuant to subsection 60(4) of the Customs Act. BETWEEN BECKMAN COULTER CANADA INC. Appellant AND

Appeals, Decisions Pending

Appeal No. Appeal Name Act AP-2009-014 Transport Desgagnés Inc. Customs Act AP-2010-033 AP-2010-042 Contech Holdings Canada Inc. Customs Act AP-2010-046 VGI Village Green Imports Customs Act AP-2010-066 CE Franklin Ltd. Customs Act AP-2010-068 6572243 Canada Ltd. o/a Kwality Imports Customs Act AP-2011-008 Jockey Canada Company Customs Act

Little information so far on perimeter plan progress

The following is excerpted from the 1 February 2012 edition of Embassy Magazine. The first batch of dozens of deadlines in the Canada-United States perimeter security plan has come and gone, with neither government responding to questions of progress by press time. The border action plan announced in December notes that by Jan. 31 the two governments would "determine the way ahead" on how to share intelligence related to national security. This article is available in its entirety at:

Canada-EU trade deal a hopeful sign

The following is excerpted from the 30 January 2012 edition of the Financial Post. Negotiations on the wide-ranging free-trade agreement between Canada and the 27-member European Union are expected to conclude in the next few months. This is positive news, since Canada’s trade policy agenda has effectively been stalled for a generation.

Napolitano Notes CBP Successes in State of Homeland Security Speech

The following is excerpted from a 31 January 2012 news release by CBP. The work of Customs and Border Protection featured prominently in Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano’s address to Washington, D.C., journalists yesterday as she described how “our homeland security and our economic security go hand in hand.”