As Ottawa prepares to host the Chinese foreign minister to boost Canada-China ties, Taiwan’s representative in Canada is calling on MPs to increase trade with the island nation.
He noted that Taiwan’s foreign trade reached a record high last year, at approximately US$1.1 trillion, while Canada’s total trade remained “highly robust” at approximately US$1.2 trillion.
The next logical step, he said, is to advance a trade cooperation framework agreement. He said this would “provide an important institutional framework” to facilitate trade, investment, regulatory cooperation, and supply chain integration between the two nations.
Tseng reiterated during the May 26 committee meeting that negotiations for the agreement concluded more than a year ago. He said the text of the agreement is finalized and the necessary legal review has largely been completed.
Asked by Conservative MP Jacob Mantle whether he knows why Canada has not moved forward in implementing the agreement, Tseng said he is not in a position to comment.
“The ball is in your court. It is for you [the Canadian government] to see whether you want to move on or what kind of obstacle you want to bring up for both sides to solve,” Tseng said.
Mantle then asked Tseng if he believes Ottawa is purposely delaying the implementation of the agreement “at the behest of, or out of fear of, China.”
“I am not in a position to answer this question,” Tseng repeated, noting that in the past year there was a change in government in Canada as well as a change in the geopolitical landscape.
“I believe I have the goodwill from the counterpart I work with in the federal government, and we are looking forward to their cooperation to move on,” he added.
China
Tseng’s testimony comes as Ottawa prepares to host Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi this week in an effort to improve relations with Beijing, following Carney’s January visit to China, where he described the relationship between the two countries as a “strategic partnership.”Beijing views self-ruled Taiwan as a breakaway province, despite never having governed the island nation, and seeks to place it under its rule. Taiwan has pushed back against Beijing’s international pressure campaign to sideline the island.
Tseng told MPs on May 26 that it is “very important” for Canadian politicians to continue to visit Taiwan and for Canadian navy ships to transit the Taiwan Strait. He noted the Taiwan Strait is international waters and it is “unacceptable” that China has claimed the strait as internal water.
“You are defying what China says is their internal water by action, so we appreciate that very much,” he said.
Liberal MP Judy Sgro, who chairs the international trade committee as well as the Canada-Taiwan Friendship Group in Parliament, noted she will be leading a delegation to Taiwan in October with parliamentarians on both sides of the aisle.







