Canada's Freeland won't hold NAFTA talks, says more work needed

Reuters  |  SASKATOON, Saskatchewan 

By David Ljunggren

A well-placed source had earlier told that Freeland planned to return to for more talks on Thursday with U.S. Trade Robert Lighthizer, adding that plenty of work remained.

But Freeland, who briefed about the negotiations twice in a matter of hours on Wednesday, said she had agreed during a phone conversation with Lighthizer that she would stay in

"We decided that in order to have another productive conversation, it would be best to give our officials some time to hold technical discussions," she told reporters late in the day, but gave no details.

U.S. has already struck a deal with Mexico, the third member of the North American Free Trade Agreement, and is threatening to exclude unless agrees to concessions.

and the are still arguing over cultural protections, an American demand for more access to the Canadian dairy market and a dispute resolution mechanism that Canada wants to keep and insists be scrapped.

Asked whether the talks had hit a stalemate, Freeland replied: "Absolutely not".

Canada's NAFTA negotiator, as well as the country's to the United States, will fly back to on Wednesday night for more talks, she said.

Trudeau, speaking to legislators of his ruling at a meeting in the western city of Saskatoon, reiterated that he would rather have no NAFTA than sign a bad agreement.

Freeland, pressed as to how much time was left, said her focus was on getting a good deal for Canada.

Canadian officials say they have some doubt as to whether Trump has the legal power to unilaterally tear up the 1994 pact, which he says is biased against the and needs to be reformed.

NAFTA underpins $1.2 trillion in trade. Uncertainty over the pact's future has hit Canadian and Mexican markets as well as the two countries' currencies.

The well-placed source had earlier reiterated Canada's position that it would take as long as needed.

"I expect we'll probably have several more sessions. This won't get resolved in an afternoon," said the source, who declined to be identified given the sensitivity of the situation.

Earlier on Wednesday, Mexican said while he expected the U.S-Canada talks to yield an agreement, must be ready to pursue a bilateral trade deal with the Washington if need be.

Guajardo told reporters that still wants Canada to join the agreement to make it trilateral, saying that would be a "great asset."

He also said that Kenneth Smith, Mexico's NAFTA negotiator, went to Washington on Wednesday to continue working on the wording of the new bilateral accord that Trump announced.

(Reporting by David Ljunggren; Additional reporting by in City; Editing by and Christopher Cushing)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, September 13 2018. 09:01 IST