According to www.scmp.com, the United States has declined to renew the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) in its current form, citing Canada’s growing economic engagement with China as a principal obstacle.
US Trade Representative rejects pact renewal
US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer confirmed the decision during a formal statement issued on 2 July 2026. Greer stated that the three governments held a virtual trilateral meeting and that Washington would not endorse the agreement’s continuation without substantive revisions. “
“The United States did not agree to renew the USMCA in its current form. As a result, the USMCA is not renewed.” — Jamieson Greer, U.S. Trade Representative
The refusal does not terminate the pact; instead, it triggers annual review cycles under the agreement’s existing framework, which remains legally binding until its scheduled expiration in 2036.
Economic stakes and operational continuity
The USMCA replaced the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 2020 and governs trade across a combined market valued at approximately US$1.8 trillion annually. It supports an estimated 17 million jobs across the three nations and enables tariff-free movement of parts and finished goods across all land borders. A successful renewal on 2 July 2026 would have extended the agreement’s term by six years — resetting the expiration clock to 2042 and eliminating a decade of recurring regulatory uncertainty for manufacturers, logistics providers, and cross-border suppliers.
Geopolitical friction over Chinese investment
While the official notice did not name China explicitly, Greer directly attributed the impasse to Canada’s active courtship of Chinese capital — particularly in critical sectors including clean energy infrastructure, battery materials, and semiconductor supply chain development. According to the report, U.S. officials view such investments as incompatible with shared North American security and industrial policy objectives, especially given recent U.S. export controls targeting advanced AI chips and dual-use technologies. The tension reflects broader strategic recalibrations underway across the Western alliance, where supply chain resilience is increasingly measured not only by proximity but also by alignment on technology governance and foreign investment screening standards.
Implications for supply chain professionals
For supply chain practitioners, the non-renewal introduces no immediate disruption — duties and rules of origin remain unchanged — but signals heightened volatility in long-term planning horizons. Companies relying on just-in-time manufacturing networks spanning North America must now factor in potential renegotiation timelines, possible sector-specific carve-outs, and divergent national interpretations of labor, environmental, and digital trade provisions. Practitioners are advised to audit their Tier 2 and Tier 3 supplier exposure to Chinese-sourced components routed through Canadian assembly or distribution hubs — a practice that may face increased scrutiny under future USMCA compliance reviews. The agreement’s built-in review mechanism allows for targeted amendments, meaning negotiations could resume as early as 2027, though no formal timeline has been announced.
Source: South China Morning Post
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










