The calendar is finally set. Canada and the United States will kick off formal talks to review their free trade agreement in mid-January, according to a statement from Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's office released late Thursday.
This matters because the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement is up for review in 2026, and what starts as a routine check-in could turn into full-blown renegotiations. Dominic LeBlanc, Canada's point person on US-Canada trade relations, "will meet with U.S. counterparts in mid-January to launch formal discussions," Carney's office confirmed.
The stakes are enormous. More than 75% of Canada's exports flow south to the US, with most enjoying tariff-free status under USMCA. We're talking about roughly C$3.6 billion (that's $2.7 billion US) worth of goods and services crossing the border every single day.
What's Actually On The Table
These aren't just friendly neighborly chats. Tariffs have been hitting Canadian sectors hard, particularly aluminum, steel, auto manufacturing, and lumber. On Thursday, Carney pointed out that US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer has flagged several trade irritants including dairy products, alcohol, and digital services as part of what Carney called a "much bigger discussion" about continental trade.
The USMCA, which President Donald Trump negotiated during his first term, includes a built-in clause allowing for possible renegotiation in 2026. That clause has become the focal point for both countries to hash out their ongoing trade grievances.
Here's where it gets interesting: Greer suggested in a podcast earlier this month that Trump might actually pull out of USMCA next year, even though the deal's text encourages members to stick around until at least 2036. Trump already showed he's willing to use trade talks as leverage when he abruptly cut them off in October after Ontario ran an advertisement criticizing his tariffs. That followed the whole awkward episode where Trump kept suggesting Canada should become the 51st US state.
Why This Matters Beyond Politics
Strip away the political theater and you'll find some hard economic realities. Canada is the largest supplier of steel, aluminum, and uranium to the United States. The Pentagon considers these resources essential for national security purposes.
Then there's energy. About 60% of US crude oil imports come from Canada, along with 85% of US electricity imports. These aren't numbers you can easily replace by sourcing elsewhere.
The outcome of these mid-January talks will ripple through industries on both sides of the border, affecting everything from manufacturing supply chains to energy security. Both countries have a lot riding on getting this right.




