Canada has formally petitioned the United States and Mexico for a 16-year renewal of the continent’s free trade agreement, according to diplomatic sources in Ottawa. The request, lodged with the office of U.S. Trade Representative and Mexico’s Economy Secretariat, proposes extending the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) beyond its scheduled 2026 review.
The Canadian government argues that long-term predictability is essential for cross-border supply chains, particularly in automotive manufacturing, agriculture, and energy. A senior official in Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s office stated that the extension would “cement North America’s competitive advantage against emerging economic blocs.” The 16-year timeline aligns with major capital investment cycles in the energy and defence sectors.
Analysts note that the request comes at a fraught moment for North American trade relations. U.S. presidential elections are due in November 2024, and both Republican and Democratic candidates have signalled potential renegotiation of the pact. Mexico’s government, meanwhile, has raised concerns over energy sector disputes with Washington.
“A 16-year extension would be transformative, but it requires consensus on unresolved issues such as country-of-origin rules and digital trade,” said trade economist Dr. Helena Greaves of the Centre for International Governance Innovation. “Ottawa may be testing the waters ahead of the formal review.”
The USMCA, which replaced the North American Free Trade Agreement in 2020, includes a sunset clause requiring a joint review every six years. Failure to agree could trigger automatic termination within five years. Canada’s proposal, if accepted, would postpone the first review until 2032.
Reaction from Washington has been cautious. A spokesperson for the U.S. Trade Representative’s office said the request “is being reviewed” but declined to comment on its merits. Mexican officials have not yet issued a public statement.
For Canadian exporters, the stakes are high. The United States absorbs roughly 75% of Canadian exports, with bilateral trade totalling nearly $800 billion annually. Sectors such as forestry, dairy, and aerospace depend on tariff-free access under the USMCA.
Opposition parties in Ottawa have criticised the government for making the request public before securing preliminary support from its partners. Conservative trade critic Emily McMillan called the move “premature and potentially reckless.”
The development follows a series of bilateral irritants, including U.S. duties on Canadian softwood lumber and Ottawa’s digital services tax on foreign tech firms. Trade experts suggest the extension bid may also be aimed at signalling Canada’s commitment to multilateralism at a time of rising protectionism.
Negotiations are expected to proceed in parallel with the USMCA’s regular review cycle. Any amendment to the pact’s duration would require legislative approval in all three countries.








