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Canada's Inflation Rate Falls to 1.7 Percent in April as Carbon Tax Is Lifted

Canada's Inflation Rate Falls to 1.7 Percent in April as Carbon Tax Is Lifted

Epoch Times27-05-2025

Canada's inflation rate slowed to
driven by
lower energy prices following the removal of the consumer carbon tax, a
ccording to Statistics Canada.
The country's inflation rate was at 2.3 percent in March. It fell in April due to a combination of lower energy prices from the carbon tax's removal, decreased oil demand due to U.S. tariffs, and increased oil supplies from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, StatCan says.
Energy prices fell 12.7 percent in April following a 0.3 percent decline in March. Year over year, natural gas prices fell 14.1 percent in April after a 6.4 percent gain in March.
While energy prices pushed inflation down in April, food prices grew at a faster pace, rising 3.8 percent year-over-year compared to 3.2 percent in March. The largest contributors to the food price increases were items such as fresh vegetables (3.7 percent), beef (16.2 percent), coffee and tea (13. 4 percent), and sugar (8.6 percent). This marks the third month in a row that grocery price increases have outpaced the overall inflation rate.
Restaurant food also rose at a faster pace in April, coming in a 3.6 percent compared to 3.2 percent in March. Canada imposed
Loblaws recently
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Shortly after taking office on March 14, Prime Minister Mark Carney
signed a directive for the consumer carbon tax rate to be cut to zero.
The carbon tax came into effect in 2019 at $20 per tonne, and was set to increase until reaching $170 per tonne in 2030.
When removing the consumer carbon tax, Carney said the move would 'make a difference to hard-pressed Canadians.' He previously said the carbon tax had become 'too divisive' among Canadians.
In commenting on the news of the inflation rate drop on social media, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said though the suspension of the carbon tax had brought down inflation, grocery prices were again rising as 'money-printing deficits continue pushing prices higher.'
Poilievre and the Conservatives repeatedly called for the carbon tax to be removed throughout 2023 and 2024, arguing that it was raising the cost of food, fuel, and heating.
In April, the Bank of Canada
Carney has said he will replace the carbon tax with a
'consumer carbon credit market' integrated into Canada's industrial pricing system, which will reward Canadians for making lower-emission choices while making 'big polluters pay' for those incentives.
A recent TD Canada
The report said the jump in food inflation is a 'setback' for the Bank of Canada and 'complicates' its path forward on monetary policy. The Bank held its core interest rate steady at 2.75 percent in April due to uncertainty around U.S. tariffs, but TD Bank said it expects there will be two more rate cuts this year due to a slowing labour market and Ottawa offering a temporary reprieve on some tariffs.

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Loblaw pulls Folgers coffee from shelves over 'unjustified' cost increases
Loblaw pulls Folgers coffee from shelves over 'unjustified' cost increases

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Loblaw pulls Folgers coffee from shelves over 'unjustified' cost increases

Shoppers at Loblaw Cos. Ltd.'s stores will soon no longer be able to get a coffee fix by purchasing Folgers-brand products after a pricing dispute prompted the grocer to pull them from its shelves. In an email sent to retailers on Wednesday, Loblaw said it decided to delist all Folgers products after talks with the coffee maker's manufacturer couldn't solve the impasse. "After several weeks of negotiations, we were unable to reach an agreement with the manufacturers of Folgers coffee regarding their significant and unjustified proposed price increases," said the email signed by Loblaw category director Suren Theivakadacham and obtained by The Canadian Press. "We are doing this because we are on the side of customers, and doing what we can to keep prices low ... This decision to delist Folgers coffee reflects our commitment to providing value for customers by not accepting unreasonable cost increases that would hurt Canadians." The email contained an attached list of alternative coffee products the grocer offers as stores prepare to update their shelves. The move comes as coffee prices continue to rise in Canada. Last month, Statistics Canada reported the price of coffee and tea was up 13.4 per cent in April on a year-over-year basis — outpacing both the 3.8 per cent increase in the cost of groceries that month, as well as Canada's overall inflation rate of 1.7 per cent. Experts say higher coffee prices are in part due to recent extreme weather and changes in temperature, which have caused some producers to experience lower yields. Other pressures include a weak Canadian dollar, making it more expensive to import coffee to Canada from other countries, along with the fact coffee is one of the products still subject to Canada's retaliatory tariffs against the U.S. While the U.S. isn't a major producer of coffee, Canadian distributors often purchase it from American brokers. Folgers products are made by the Orrville, Ohio-based J.M. Smucker Co., which raised prices of its coffee offerings both last June and October in response to higher costs it is facing. President and CEO Mark Smucker told analysts on the company's quarterly earnings call in February that more coffee price increases were likely on the way. He said pricing decisions are dictated by costs it faces. "Although we haven't laid out when other pricing is going to happen, we do expect it's going to happen in the next fiscal year, probably in the first half," Smucker said at the time. In a statement, the company said it has been experiencing "record high and sustained" prices of unroasted coffee beans. "Our pricing actions have been managed prudently and responsibly and have only been taken when justified by costs," said Smucker's spokesman Frank Cirillo in an email on Thursday. "We remain dedicated to working with all our retail partners to manage increased input costs while delivering value to our shared consumers." But Loblaw spokeswoman Catherine Thomas said Folgers' proposed cost increases were "unreasonable and unjustified based on underlying costs" and that the grocer felt it was important to push back as many Canadians continue to struggle with unaffordability. "Despite several attempts to address this with the manufacturer, we were not successful," Thomas said in a statement. "We will not accept or pass unjustified cost increases on to customers and therefore we have removed Folgers from our shelves ... We recognize this may create some inconvenience for customers and for that we apologize but again, we will do what is right to help address price increases." Thomas added Loblaw expects most of its stores to be out of stock of Folgers products over the next week or two. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 5, 2025. Companies in this story: (TSX:L) Sammy Hudes, The Canadian Press Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Demand for US light sweet crude drops as OPEC+ ramps up output
Demand for US light sweet crude drops as OPEC+ ramps up output

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Demand for US light sweet crude drops as OPEC+ ramps up output

By Stephanie Kelly and Robert Harvey NEW YORK (Reuters) -Rising OPEC+ supplies and new streams of oil coming online globally are increasing options for European and Asian refiners and weighing on export demand for light sweet U.S. crude, contributing to lower prices in the country's main oil-producing regions. The U.S., the world's largest crude producer, is facing increasing competition as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies pump more oil in a bid to regain market share and punish members that over-produce. Since April, OPEC+ countries including Saudi Arabia and Russia have made or announced increases totaling 1.37 million barrels per day, or 62% of the 2.2 million bpd they aim to add back to the market. The additional supplies come at a time of broad uncertainty for global oil producers as they assess how volatile trade policies are impacting the world's economic outlook and prepare for a longer-term future in which greener fuels could displace their barrels. For the U.S., lower demand for a significant portion of its crude will likely add to a complicated outlook for producers already digesting on-again, off-again tariffs from President Donald Trump's administration. Companies are considering cutting output and jobs even as Trump urges higher domestic production. U.S. exports fell to an average of 3.8 million bpd in May from an average of 4 million bpd in April, according to an analysis of weekly Energy Information Administration data. Prices have declined for crudes such as WTI-Midland, a key sweet grade from the U.S. shale region. Since early March, its price is off by 45% to a 60-cent premium to U.S. crude futures. Light Louisiana Sweet from the U.S. Gulf Coast has fallen by about 30% to a $2.70 per barrel premium over the same period. "That's a part of OPEC accelerating. Light sweets are weak, broadly speaking," said Jeremy Irwin, global crude lead at Energy Aspects, adding that demand is expected to fall further as European refiners favor medium crudes in the summer months. The U.S. sent 1.4 million bpd of light, sweet crude to Europe in May, versus 1.6 million bpd in April, data from Kpler showed. In May 2024, the U.S. exported 1.7 million bpd of light, sweet crude, which is lighter in density and lower in sulfur content, to Europe. While light crudes are typically easier for refineries to process, many global refineries have invested in upgrading capacity to run heavy-sour grades, which are usually cheaper and still yield sufficient quantities of higher-value fuels. As Asian refiners come out of turnaround season - when plants reduce output for maintenance purposes - and European refiners ramp up fuel production going into summer, demand for medium-sour grades has increased. GLOBAL SUPPLY MEETS UNCERTAIN DEMAND Increased OPEC+ exports will primarily flow into Asia. Lower prices for Murban crude produced in the United Arab Emirates have made it unprofitable to export WTI to Asia, said Richard Price, an oil markets analyst at Energy Aspects. OPEC+ is increasing output more quickly than expected this year to punish allies such as Kazakhstan, which has produced well above its OPEC+ target. "The rise in Kazakh crude production means greater availability of CPC blend crude, which is increasingly competing with WTI into Europe," said Matt Smith, a lead oil analyst at Kpler. CPC Blend is light density crude, similar to WTI-Midland. Additionally, Guyana and Brazil's exports into Europe could increase from the 400,000 bpd they each already send, if European refiners can absorb it, Smith said. Other sweet grades including barrels from Libya and Algeria, and Norway's new Johan Castberg stream, are giving European refiners more choice, Vortexa analyst Rohit Rathod said. Global petroleum consumption is expected to grow by 970,000 bpd in 2025 and 900,000 bpd in 2026, the EIA said, while global crude production is expected to grow by 840,000 bpd in 2025 and 680,000 bpd in 2026. But demand growth currently is mainly fueled by oil products that are best refined from heavier barrels, said Janiv Shah, vice president of commodity markets at Rystad Energy. "As such, we expect increased throughput of available medium sour barrels and some discounting of light sweet grades."

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