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Canada's objectives for negotiations for a Canada-Thailand Free Trade Agreement

On October 30, 2025, Canada and Thailand announced the launch of negotiations toward a bilateral free trade agreement (FTA). On November 24, 2025, the Government of Canada submitted to Parliament a Notice of Intent (NOI) to enter into these negotiations, in accordance with the amended Policy on Tabling Treaties in Parliament.

In negotiating an FTA with Thailand, the Government’s objective is to create opportunities and benefits for Canadian businesses, workers and families by reducing barriers to trade and investment and creating rules that will enhance predictability for traders. The agreement is intended to provide new preferential market access for Canadian goods and services to Canada’s second largest trading partner in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) region and foster new opportunities for two-way investment. It will also enhance transparency and predictability in trade relations and strengthen access to Thai supply chains.

The Government will seek to ensure that the FTA promotes sustainable prosperity and that the benefits of trade with Thailand are widely shared, including among traditionally underrepresented groups. Beyond commercial opportunities, Canada will seek to uphold internationally recognized labour principle and rights, advance environmental sustainability, and safeguard the ability of governments to regulate in the public interest, including in areas such as public health and safety, education, social services, and environmental protection. Canada will also seek to preserve flexibility to adopt and maintain measures related to Canada’s cultural sector and seek to fulfill Canada’s legal obligations to Indigenous Peoples, including rights as recognized and affirmed by Section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982, and the rights set out in self-government agreements. In addition, the Government will preserve the supply management system for dairy, poultry and eggs, by ensuring no further market access is granted for supply-managed goods.

In pursuing the FTA, the government will continue to be guided by feedback obtained from Canadians during public consultations. This includes input received during public consultations which were launched in December 2025 and concluded in January 2026, as well as ongoing engagement with a broad range of stakeholders that will be conducted throughout the negotiating process. Canada’s approach to negotiations will also be guided by comprehensive impact assessments.

The government is fully committed to a high level of transparency throughout the negotiation of a Canada-Thailand FTA. In this spirit, the government is publishing a summary of its objectives for the negotiation of the trade agreement.

In line with the considerations listed above, Canada will seek to negotiate an FTA:

Trade in goods

National treatment and market access for goods

Rules of origin

Origin procedures

Customs and trade facilitation

Trade remedies

Sanitary and phytosanitary measures

Technical barriers to trade

Investment and trade in services

Investment

Cross-border trade in services

Financial services

Temporary movement of business persons

Telecommunications

Other areas

Digital trade

Government procurement

Intellectual property

Competition policy

State-owned enterprises and designated monopolies

Transparency and anti-corruption

Regulatory cooperation and good regulatory practices

Trade and sustainable development elements

Administrative

Dispute settlement

Institutional and general exceptions

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