Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and members of the committee. Thank you for the opportunity to appear today on behalf of Canada's 26,000 farmers and over 100 companies that are part of the Canadian pulse industry.
Canada accounts for close to one-third of the global pulse trade. Upwards of 85% of what we produce is exported. Put simply, our sector does not work without open access to international markets. The 100% retaliatory tariff imposed by China has had a profound consequence on the Canadian pulse industry. China has been a critical market for us since the mid-1990s. After India restricted its imports in 2017, China emerged as our largest buyer.
Over decades, the work of farmers and the trade transformed this market from a 20,000-tonne market to one of over two million tonnes. Over the past five years, we've shipped 3.7 billion dollars' worth of Canadian peas to our customers in China. Because of that work, customers have a strong preference for Canadian peas. However, the 100% tariff is too much for them to absorb. They're being forced to look to our competitors in the Black Sea region.
The reality is that this business will not be easily won back. While we often hear that the industry will have to diversify, let me be clear: There is no ready alternative that can replace sales of this scale. Creation of entirely new demand takes years.
Since the tariff was announced, the price of yellow peas has fallen 43%, and 50% for greens. These low prices, combined with slow movement and no other readily available markets, have translated into an estimated net loss at the farm gate of $637 million. This figure worsens every day. For many growers, that means the difference between breaking even and falling into the red. Companies who invested in facilities that process one of Canada's biggest pulse crops now face uncertainty about throughput. Support measures in the form of loans are really not the answer.
Imagine, Mr. Chair, taking a 50% pay cut at your job only to be offered the chance to take out a loan to make up the shortfall. Our farmers would stress to you that they want the emphasis put back on getting their market open. Canada's pulse industry can no longer afford to be collateral damage in a dispute that has nothing to do with the products we produce. The idea that farmers can grow something else and sell it somewhere else betrays a lack of understanding of Canadian agriculture and the markets it serves.
The pulse sector is resilient, and we are committed to our role as a trusted supplier of high-quality, sustainable food, but we cannot do it alone. To be effective, we need government to champion a trade policy that safeguards the livelihoods of Canadian farmers.
Today we ask Parliament and the Government of Canada to act with greater urgency, to restore access and to put agriculture back on stable ground.