The Trump administration on Wednesday formally declined to renew the landmark U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) in its current form, shaking the foundations of North American agricultural trade and initiating a high-stakes, decade-long countdown before the multi-billion-dollar trade pact automatically expires.
A $60 Billion Risk for the American Heartland
For the U.S. agricultural sector, which exports nearly $60 billion annually to Canada and Mexico, the decision to leave the deal in limbo threatens a crucial buffer against global economic volatility. Together, America’s two continental neighbors purchase roughly one-third of all U.S. agricultural exports.
Midwestern crop growers and livestock producers, who form the political bedrock of the Trump administration’s rural support, quickly expressed deep anxieties over the loss of long-term certainty.
“USMCA is without a doubt critical to the livelihood of farmers, fishers and rural communities across the country who rely on exports to Mexico and Canada,” said Bryan Goodman, spokesman for the Agricultural Coalition for USMCA. Goodman emphasized that beyond direct revenue, the pact provides the baseline stability “allowing the agricultural industry and farmers to make long-term strategic and planting decisions.”
The anxiety spans across major commodified sectors:
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Corn and Biofuels: Mexico is the absolute top foreign buyer of U.S. corn, while Canada ranks as the largest international market for American ethanol. Jed Bower, an Ohio farmer and president of the National Corn Growers Association, called USMCA “the single most important trade agreement to the corn industry.”
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Pork Producers: The National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) noted that Canada and Mexico account for one-third of all U.S. pork exports. “Trade has remained a bright spot for U.S. pork producers,” the council stated, adding that these continental exports inject more than $66 in vital value into every single hog marketed in the U.S. and sustain over 155,000 American jobs.
On Capitol Hill, key Republicans defended the administration’s strategy. Rep. Adrian Smith (R-Neb.), chair of the House Ways and Means Trade Subcommittee, framed the non-renewal not as a death knell but as a mechanism for tightening enforcement after six years of partner countries allegedly failing to uphold their legal commitments.
The Friction Points: Auto Rules, Dairy, and Biotech
While the administration’s overarching rationale is fueled by broader macroeconomic imbalances, the actual battlefield of upcoming negotiations will pivot on specific industrial and agricultural friction points.
Senior administration officials indicated that bilateral talks scheduled to begin with Mexico the week of July 20 will focus on tightening North American rules of origin for industrial goods. The Trump administration is reportedly pushing to raise regional auto content requirements to 82%, with a mandate that 50% of that content originate specifically within the United States.
However, U.S. agricultural groups are aggressively lobbying the U.S. Trade Representative to use this newly manufactured leverage to extract sweeping concessions on lingering farming disputes.
Dairy organizations have pressed the hardest. U.S. dairy leaders complain that Canada has “flagrantly disregarded” USMCA’s dairy tariff-rate quotas and continues to manipulate pricing disciplines on underpriced dairy protein exports. Concurrently, dairy producers are demanding that Mexico—which consumes 40% of U.S. dairy exports by value—protect the rights of common-name products (like parmesan or feta) against aggressive, European Union-style restrictions on geographical indications.
Corn growers are similarly looking to cement wins. They rely heavily on the USMCA’s formal dispute settlement mechanism to challenge Mexico’s long-contested restrictions regarding biotechnology access and genetically modified crops.
Neighbors Dig In for a Long Siege
In Mexico City and Ottawa, leaders signaled they are prepared for a marathon process of annual friction rather than immediate capitulation.
Mexican Economy Minister Marcelo Ebrard sought to calm regional markets in a video message posted to X, indicating that Mexico would cooperate with the mandatory annual reviews while methodically working through structural disputes. “We’re in no rush, but we also don’t want any uncertainty,” Ebrard said. Meanwhile, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum struck a more diplomatic note, reminding Washington that an extension remains achievable “any time” over the next ten years.
In Canada, Minister Dominic LeBlanc indicated that Ottawa intends to use the open-ended negotiating table to push back against President Trump’s sweeping tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminum, autos, and lumber.
For American farmers, who operate on razor-thin margins dictated by unpredictable weather and fluctuating global commodity markets, the next decade now promises an added layer of political volatility. The Trump administration has bet that the threat of a 2036 expiration will force America’s closest neighbors to blink. But until a deal is struck, the American heartland will be left farming under the possibility of a prolonged trade war.

