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Canadian Wheat Board

Prairie strong, worldwide

Newsroom

2001

June 29, 2001

Canadian Wheat Board fights back with facts Winnipeg

The Canadian Wheat Board (CWB) yesterday sent a formal submission to the United States International Trade Commission (ITC). The submission responds to inaccurate allegations about Canadian grain marketing contained in a recent trade challenge initiated by the North Dakota Wheat Commission (NDWC).

"The NDWC is not a marketer and does not make commercial sales therefore it stands to reason they don't fully understand the international wheat market," said CWB President and CEO Greg Arason. "But we are not going to allow their simplistic and anecdotal rhetoric to be passed off as fact."

The current trade challenge from the NDWC is the ninth challenge American groups have launched against the CWB since 1990. In all eight previous challenges the CWB was found to be a fair trader.

"The fact that the CWB has generated such concern among the Americans reflects our success in the global market, where we compete fiercely, but fairly," Arason said. "The CWB has marketed a superior quality, consistent, and uniform product while providing technical support and good customer service."

As well as factual marketing information, the CWB's submission includes an independent report by two American economists. The economists dismiss the trade challenge filed by the NDWC as an overly simplistic "cause-and-effect" view.

ITC staff have accepted an invitation to visit CWB's Winnipeg headquarters in July. The CWB welcomes this opportunity to further explain its role in the global marketplace.

Controlled by Western Canadian farmers, the CWB is the largest marketer of wheat and barley in the world. As one of Canada's biggest exporters, it sells grain to more than 70 countries and returns all sales revenue, less marketing costs, to Prairie farmers.

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