Calgary among three cities to take biggest tariff hit

A total of 97% of Calgary exports go to US buyers.
President Donald Trump, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
President Donald Trump, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Western Standard Canva
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The Canadian Chamber of Commerce has warned Calgary, Windsor, ON, and Saint John, NB, will take the heaviest initial hits in a trade war with the United States.

Analysts calculated the share of municipal GDP tied to US exports in the 41 largest cities nationwide, per Blacklock’s Reporter.

“US President Donald Trump’s proposed tariffs will have significant consequences for the global economy but for some of Canada’s cities the threat is far more local and personal,” said a Chamber report released Tuesday.

“Certain key themes and impacts emerge.”

“Trump’s tariffs would cause significant economic problems for Canadians and Americans, potentially even causing a recession.”

“We subsequently looked below the national numbers to analyze the potential tariff impacts for Canadian provinces.”

“The work revealed particular vulnerabilities in Alberta, Ontario and New Brunswick. This is because these provinces are highly trade intensive and the vast majority of their exports go to the US market.”

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Calgary was vulnerable as “a major hub that exports crude oil and natural gas to the US Midwest particularly Illinois.” A total of 97% of Calgary exports go to US buyers.

“Windsor’s economy depends heavily on auto production and is home to major assembly plants for Ford and Stellantis,” wrote analysts. About 96% of exports go to the United States.

Saint John is home to the country’s largest oil refinery. The Chamber estimated 96% of Saint John exports went to the United States.

“Our modeling estimates the tariffs will impose the steepest hit for the value of Canada’s energy exports which explains why the highest vulnerabilities are for Saint John and Calgary,” said the report.

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Cities ranked by vulnerability to US tariffs from most to least were:

  1. Saint John

  2. Calgary

  3. Windsor

  4. Kitchener-Waterloo

  5. Brantford

  6. Guelph

  7. Saguenay

  8. Hamilton

  9. Trois-Rivières

  10. Lethbridge

  11. Belleville-Quinte West

  12. Drummondville

  13. Thunder Bay

  14. Oshawa

  15. Abbotsford-Mission

  16. St. Catharines-Niagara

  17. Peterborough

  18. Fredericton

  19. Barrie

  20. Chilliwack

  21. Red Deer

  22. Sherbrooke

  23. Montréal

  24. Edmonton

  25. Kingston

  26. Québec City

  27. Toronto

  28. Kelowna

  29. Ottawa

  30. Moncton

  31. London

  32. Vancouver

  33. St. John’s

  34. Saskatoon

  35. Halifax

  36. Victoria

  37. Regina

  38. Winnipeg

  39. Nanaimo

  40. Kamloops

  41. Sudbury

“Cities higher up are more export intensive, i.e. they export more goods to the United States as a share of their local economies,” wrote analysts.

“The index simply sums a location’s ‘excess US trade intensity’ and its ‘excess US export dependence.’”

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