News

At a crucial moment for global trade, the CPMA Convention and Trade Show 2025, held in Montreal, Canada, celebrated its 100th ...
Nothing chills table talk like a bite of spoiled food. Fruits and vegetables are some of the most difficult foods to keep ...
Canada’s fruit and vegetable sector is deeply intertwined with the U.S. market, but the greenhouse industry is particularly ...
As many Canadians commit to boycotting products from the U.S. amid a continuing tariff war by Donald Trump, one grocery ...
The Okanagan Valley is home to one of Canada’s premier fruit belts, where approximately 800 farms dot the landscape, many of which grow strawberries, apricots, grapes, peaches, pears ...
With Donald Trump seemingly determined to push the US economy on a path towards autarky, our major trading partners will need to make alternative ...
Most of the fresh fruit, coffee, and fish Americans consume are shipped from overseas from countries like Peru, Chile, and ...
Over three days last month, Canada's greenhouse vegetable growers got a preview of what sweeping US tariffs would do to their industry, and they saw that the impact could be devastating.
A study led by the University of Waterloo in Canada suggests that adding more potassium-rich foods to your diet such as ...
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is promising to scrap the federal government’s ban on single use plastics and bring back ...
you’re all set,” DeBruin said on Thursday Ongoing uncertainty created by the Canada-U.S. trade war has heightened interest in locally-produced foods, including vegetables and fruits.
President Trump says the goal of his tariffs − resuscitating U.S. manufacturing's glory days − will be worth the turmoil.