Thank you, Madam Chair and members of the committee for the opportunity to present to you today. It's a pleasure to be back.
As you know, CAFTA is the voice of Canadian agri-food exporters, representing the 90% of farmers who depend on trade and the producers and food manufacturers who want to grow the economy through better access to international markets. This includes the beef, pork, meat, grains, cereals, pulses, soybeans, canola, as well as the sugar, malt, and processed food industries. That's roughly 90% of what Canada exports in terms of agriculture and food, and about a million jobs across urban and rural communities in Canada.
We are grateful for the opportunity to speak with committee members today about the recently announced interim trade agreement with the United Kingdom, amongst other issues affecting our trade with the rest of the world. What I would like to imprint on the committee today is that Canada needs a permanent and meaningful trade agreement with the United Kingdom.
As committee members will appreciate, the U.K. is one of our largest and longest-standing trading partners in Europe. It is a high-value market, and the highest-value market for a number of Canadian agriculture and food products. Over the last five years, it absorbed, on average, at least a quarter of our total agri-food exports going to the EU-28. It's the largest market for Canadian beef and wheat, the second-largest for grains, the fourth market for pork, and an important market for processed foods, pulses and sugar-containing products among others.
It goes without saying that with the U.K. finally leaving the EU Customs Union at the end of the year, we cannot let the Brexit disruption disadvantage our exporters. Timing truly is of the essence. We cannot risk losing market share to our competitors, many of which are actively engaged in free trade negotiations. Others continue to negotiate free trade agreements with the U.K.
Although we have not seen the details of the text, we understand that the recently announced continuity agreement reflects CETA's negotiated outcomes. This is an important first step to ensuring that exporters preserve the existing access and benefits that are already in place. The temporary certainty and stability that a transitional agreement provides is welcome news for some of our members and the reason we call on parliamentarians to work together to pass this agreement before the end of the year.
However, for others, there remains a real fear that a transitional agreement will simply reinforce a situation that remains unacceptable under CETA due to the persistence of trade obstacles that continue to hinder Canadian agri-food exports. This is why we are urging both parties to return to the negotiating table as soon as possible in order to reach a comprehensive pact that removes tariffs and non-tariff barriers, provides liberal rules of origin and creates a level playing field that will enable increased trade and deliver commercially viable two-way growth for agri-food.
CAFTA remains concerned with the EU's unwillingness to remove trade obstacles that are preventing Canada from reaching its full potential under CETA. We are equally concerned with such obstacles being carried over to both a transitional deal and a future FTA between Canada and the U.K. At the same time, any transitional agreement should not be the template for a future bilateral negotiation during which CAFTA would seek more ambitious outcomes for agri-food exporters and the removal of technical barriers.
Put simply, an interim trade arrangement that preserves existing access and provides stability during a transition period is one thing; a real, meaningful, permanent trade agreement that provides ambitious outcomes and enables the sector to grow is another.
This interim agreement is a welcome stopgap measure, but it's not enough. The best way to show the world that free and open trade will protect the economy now and support recovery is by negotiating a permanent and meaningful free trade agreement that enables growth for both sides.
For this and for further FTAs, we would expect close engagement and consultations with the government and our negotiators in the design stage, throughout the negotiations process, but also in the enforcement and implementation of the deal.
In the time I have left, I would like to make one additional point.
As a trading nation, our road to recovery will go through trade and cannot be successfully navigated unless we unblock our major trade routes and reaffirm commitments to rules-based trade.
CAFTA, you will have seen, recently sent a letter to committee members requesting that Parliament, through this committee, undertake a competitiveness review of the trade agreements that have come into force in recent years to help ensure that the negotiated outcomes are living up to what was negotiated, and, most importantly, to identify where our trading partners are not fully honouring commitments made. This is especially important for agri-food exporters if our sectors are to be key anchors for growth and prosperity moving forward.
As you know, despite being in force for over three years, CETA has failed to deliver on expected gains, in large part because the EU continues to maintain a wide range of barriers and subsidies, imposing new barriers or failing to reduce those that were to be removed or eliminated through the CETA. This makes expected export growth to the EU elusive for Canadian farmers and agri-food exporters.
A recent report issued by the WTO and the FAO, echoed by a number of international institutions, demonstrates that international trade clearly is absolutely central to the future of agriculture and food and resilient supply chains. Really, no other sector is so inherently dependent on trade.
We've become an agri-food powerhouse in Canada precisely because we've specialized in making products that the world wants and needs. The global demand for agri-food presents an immense global growth opportunity for us, and we must be mindful that unless we're leading the pack, we're doomed to be left behind.
Harnessing the power of our sector to support Canadians now and into the future will require a proactive and collective effort to aggressively oppose protectionism and spend the political capital necessary to keep trade free and open.
I look forward to your questions.
Thank you.