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Canadian PM seeks reset with China amid US tensions

Published on: January 13, 2026 2:51 PM

Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney departed for China on Tuesday, marking the first visit by a Canadian premier to Beijing in nearly a decade and signalling a potential reset in relations strained by years of diplomatic and trade disputes.

Read More: China seeks stronger ties with Canada amid trade disputes

The four-day trip will focus on trade cooperation and international security, and comes as Canada navigates an increasingly uncertain relationship with the United States, where a trade war and annexation rhetoric from President Donald Trump have unsettled policymakers in Ottawa.

Carney accepted Beijing’s longstanding invitation during his meeting with President Xi Jinping in South Korea last October. While that encounter yielded few concrete breakthroughs, it opened space for deeper engagement after relations deteriorated under former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, particularly following the arrest of a senior Huawei executive in 2018.

Senior Canadian officials say Carney is expected to sign several memoranda of understanding, with discussions centred on energy, agriculture, and manufacturing. Prospects for increased Canadian crude exports to China are among the most closely watched outcomes, as shifts in US oil purchasing patterns raise concerns for Canadian producers. Officials also hope to make progress on Chinese tariffs affecting Canadian canola, though a full resolution is seen as unlikely during the trip.

However, economic diplomacy is only part of the agenda. Analysts warn that partnerships in strategic sectors such as critical minerals and artificial intelligence could present national security risks for Canada, while rights groups caution against overlooking human rights concerns in pursuit of market access.

Read More: China seeks improved ties with Canada amid rising trade tensions

China is expected to welcome Carney with high-level protocol, part of what observers describe as a broader “charm offensive” as Beijing seeks to improve its global standing. For Canada, the visit tests its ability to diversify trade while managing tense relations with Washington and balancing values-based diplomacy with economic necessity.

Filed Under: Business Tagged With: Canada-China relations, Diplomacy, international security, Latest, mark carney, trade, US-Canada tensions

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