Canada just assembled a trade war cabinet

Mark Carney did not name an advisory committee. He named a trade war cabinet.

Twenty-four names. Cross-partisan. CEOs from BMO, CN Rail, TC Energy, Nutrien, and Teck Resources. Leaders from steel, auto parts, dairy, lumber, mining, and indigenous business. Former Conservative leader Erin O'Toole is sitting across the table from former Liberal finance minister Ralph Goodale. Former Quebec Premier Jean Charest is in the same room as Unifor's national president.

In Canadian politics, that kind of lineup is not consultation. That is mobilization.

The Canada-US-Mexico Agreement, known as CUSMA in Canada and USMCA in the United States, is up for review this year. And if you run a company with meaningful North American exposure — supply chain, sourcing, manufacturing, logistics, sales — you should be treating this moment with the same seriousness Ottawa just signaled it deserves.

The backdrop is not subtle

Start with the numbers. The US has imposed a broad tariff regime on Canada since Trump returned to office. Products traded under USMCA rules are nominally exempt, but that has not shielded Canadian steel, aluminum, or autos from damaging levies. Industries that employ hundreds of thousands of workers on both sides of the border are already operating under structural uncertainty.

Now layer in the rhetoric. US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick called CUSMA a "bad deal" for Americans that could "lapse" this summer. US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer has publicly stated that Canada is lagging Mexico in resolving trade irritants. Mexico has already scheduled a formal bilateral negotiating round with the US for late May. According to its own opposition leader, Canada has not had substantive negotiations in five months.

Meanwhile, Carney recorded a video address telling Canadians that the country's dependence on the US has become a "weakness." He did not mention Trump by name. He did not need to.

The Canadians are not panicking. They are positioning.

What the advisory committee reveals

When a G7 government assembles this kind of stakeholder foundation, it is not a signal of confidence. It is a signal of complexity. Carney's team has looked ahead and concluded that no prime minister's office can manage the CUSMA renegotiation unilaterally. They need sectoral intelligence. They need political cover. They need to know which industries can absorb pain and which ones will break.

That is exactly the kind of intelligence your board should be building right now.

The CUSMA review is not a background event. It is a potential restructuring of the North American trade architecture that has governed supply chains, investment flows, and competitive positioning for more than thirty years. The last time this agreement was renegotiated, companies with formal stakeholder engagement processes were better positioned to flag risks, adapt sourcing decisions, and communicate credibly with investors. Companies that had been watching from the sidelines were surprised.

The US-Canada bilateral tension also has a China dimension that matters for your strategy. Lutnick publicly attacked Carney for pursuing trade diversification with China, calling it "nuts." Canada's response has been to accelerate that strategy anyway, including new space-launch legislation designed to reduce reliance on foreign launch capacity. Ottawa is building optionality. The question for your board is whether you are doing the same.

What your company should be doing right now

First, map your CUSMA exposure specifically. Rules of origin, tariff classifications, sector-specific carve-outs — this is not generic trade policy. It is your cost structure.

Second, do not assume the exemptions hold. "USMCA-compliant" is a legal status, not a political guarantee. Steel and aluminum proved that. Autos may prove it again.

Third, watch Mexico. The US-Mexico bilateral round in late May is a structural signal. If the US and Mexico advance without Canada, the trilateral framework fractures in ways that will reshape North American supply chain decisions for a generation.

Fourth, build your government engagement function now, before the pressure peaks. The companies with stakeholder relationships in place will shape outcomes. The companies without them will read about outcomes in the news.

Carney just put 24 serious people at a table to defend Canadian economic interests. Your competitors are watching. Your supply chain is exposed.

Are you responding reactively?

Caracal Global is your fractional Chief Geopolitical Officer. We monitor geopolitical signals daily — tariff announcements, military movements, policy shifts, trade negotiations, export control changes, and competitive positioning. We translate these signals into what they mean for your business. And we help your board move from reaction to strategy.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc.

You can always reach me @ marc@caracal.global.

*****

Marc A. Ross is a geopolitical strategist and the founder of Caracal Global, a fractional Chief Geopolitical Officer service for Fortune 1,000 companies and private equity firms. He publishes the Caracal Global Daily — what a Chief Geopolitical Officer monitors every morning. Subscribe at caracal.global/contact.

I drove into a geopolitical case study. Here is what I saw in Ireland.

I did not expect my family adventure in Ireland to teach me about global supply chains.

On Tuesday, April 7, my family piled into a Renault transport van my niece named Blue Viking and headed west on the M4 toward Galway. Luggage crammed the back. Road trip snacks were in the center console. The Irish countryside was on the agenda. Cliffs of Moher. Blarney Stone. Some fish and chips and a few pints somewhere in between.

What we drove into instead was a live case study in supply chain fragility, just-in-time failure, civil disobedience, and the second-order consequences of a war most American executives are still treating as a distant headline.

Pay attention.

The first sign came as a sudden deceleration on the highway — a convoy of slow-moving semis, then more trucks, then a full standstill. I assumed it was a typical European protest. A bit of inconvenience, then dispersal.

I was wrong.

What followed was a multiday, nationwide fuel crisis. Truckers and farmers blockaded Ireland's only oil refinery in Whitegate, Cork. They clogged ports in Foynes, Galway, and Rosslare. They shut sections of the major ring road around Dublin. Irish police Commissioner Justin Kelly was direct: "These are blockades. They are not a legitimate form of protest. We gave the blockaders fair warning that we were moving to enforcement, and they chose to ignore it and continue to hold the country to ransom."

When we stopped to top off the tank — out of caution, not necessity — I watched the station attendant walk out and tape a sign to the pump the moment we finished. Fifty-euro limit per customer. We had just spent 100.

That is fuel rationing in a European democracy. In April 2026.

By the final day of our road trip, 600 of Ireland's 2,000 fuel stations had run out of petrol and diesel. Bone dry.

This is not just an Irish story

Here is what the protests were actually about. Irish truckers and farmers are being crushed by fuel costs driven by a conflict they did not start and cannot control. The Strait of Hormuz handles roughly 20% of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas. When you close it, you do not just raise energy prices. You reduce energy supply. You trigger a synchronized global repricing of all inputs that depend on energy for production, transportation, or storage.

That is almost everything.

Food. Fertilizer. Freight. Aviation fuel. Industrial chemicals. Consumer goods. The cascade is not abstract. It is already in your supply chain, and it is showing up in your cost structure right now.

The Irish just-in-time fuel replenishment system — precisely engineered, carefully coordinated, operating on thin margins — collapsed the moment trucks stopped moving and the refinery was blockaded. The Irish government, led by Taoiseach Micheál Martin, faced a motion of no confidence over its handling of the crisis. Michael Healy-Rae, scion of a County Kerry political dynasty, resigned amid the fury. An online coalition representing professional drivers, farmers, haulers, bus operators, and taxi drivers is now organizing follow-on protests.

One campaigner said it plainly to a Guardian reporter: "It's profit before people. Eventually, if we don't get what we want, it's going to start affecting the price of food on the shelves, and no one is going to be able to afford anything."

He is not wrong about the mechanics. And he is not alone in his anger.

Ireland is a data point

Jet fuel shortages are threatening summer flight schedules across Europe. Australian farmers are replanting their entire crop mix as input costs make previous plans uneconomic. Indian auto and textile production is declining amid labor shortages and input cost spikes cascading through industrial supply chains. Pistachio prices hit an eight-year high. LVMH reported Gulf shoppers staying home amid ongoing missile strikes. UK food and drink suppliers warned publicly that they would raise prices before the summer. Singapore tightened its monetary policy for the first time since 2022. And Downing Street is preparing contingency plans for mass protests over the fallout from the cost-of-living crisis.

This is not a war contained to the Middle East. It is a war being transmitted through energy markets into every economy on the planet. The second- and third-order effects are now visible in retail fuel lines, consumer price indices, government approval ratings, and street-level civil unrest.

If your scenario planning still has a clean baseline where this resolves by Q3, revisit it.

What companies should do now?

First, audit your energy exposure across the full value chain. Not just direct fuel costs. Freight inputs, packaging, cold storage, and raw material transportation. Every layer. The companies that have done this work are not panicking. The companies that have not are about to be surprised.

Second, map your just-in-time dependencies. Ireland's fuel system was efficient until it wasn't. The same logic applies to any supply chain optimized for cost rather than resilience. Identify the single points of failure. Then price the cost of a backup.

Third, build political risk into your pricing assumptions. The cost-of-living crisis is shaping voter behavior across the Western world, driving regulatory and policy volatility. Governments under pressure make decisions on fuel taxes, trade policy, and industry regulation that they would not make in calmer conditions. Ireland may be the preview.

Fourth, engage the government now, not after the next disruption. The truckers and farmers in Ireland organized because they felt ignored. The political dynamics that produced this crisis are not unique to Ireland. They are present in every country where working-class voters are bearing the burden of energy cost shocks from a conflict they did not choose.

The view from Blue Viking

My GWU class on Globalization and American Politics taught students to see these connections before they become crises. Most companies do not have that luxury built into their organizational structure. They are managing the crisis while trying to diagnose it.

That is an expensive way to operate.

Tariff volatility. NATO credibility erosion. Supply chain disruption. Chinese competition. Accelerated warfare. AI and tech sovereignty. Export control tightening. Interest rate uncertainty. These forces are reshaping your capital allocation, supply chain strategy, and competitive positioning right now. Your competitors are responding strategically. Are you responding reactively?

Caracal Global is your fractional Chief Geopolitical Officer. We monitor geopolitical signals daily: tariff announcements, military movements, policy shifts, trade negotiations, export control changes, and competitive positioning. We translate those signals into what they mean for your business. And we help your board move from reaction to strategy.

Michigan-born, DC-based, operating at the intersection of globalization and American politics. Intelligence, Strategy, and Communications — for Fortune 1000 companies and PE portfolio firms that need geopolitical capacity without the overhead of a full-time hire.

Blue Viking made it back to Dublin. Your supply chain may not be so lucky next time.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc.

You can always reach me @ marc@caracal.global.

*****

Marc A. Ross is a geopolitical strategist and the founder of Caracal Global, a fractional Chief Geopolitical Officer service for Fortune 1,000 companies and private equity firms. He publishes the Caracal Global Daily — what a Chief Geopolitical Officer monitors every morning. Subscribe at caracal.global/contact.

Five datapoints connected

The US Navy is poised to begin blockading Iranian ports at 10:00 am ET. Markets opened lower across Asia and Europe. Oil crossed $100. And JD Vance flew home from Pakistan without a deal after 21 hours of negotiations that produced nothing except confirmation that diplomatic off-ramps are narrowing.

Five datapoints are running simultaneously this week. They are not separate issues; they are one story.

Datapoint 1 - Trump's Hormuz gambit: The US Navy has two destroyers in the Strait, a declared naval blockade, and zero diplomatic agreement. Iran has threatened to hit Middle East ports in retaliation. The UK and France aren't supporting the action. American Gulf allies — Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar — are now shopping for South Korean systems and British missiles rather than assuming US supply. Two crude tankers made U-turns in the Strait on Sunday as the JD Vance-led talks collapsed. The question isn't whether the US can enforce a blockade. It's whether Washington has correctly calculated what happens to global energy markets if it does.

Datapoint 2 - China's quiet "electrostate": While Washington wages economic war through chokepoints, Beijing is running a parallel economic engine. Chinese energy firms are positioned to capture market share as Western companies reel from supply disruption. The "electrostate" — Chinese firms dominating AI infrastructure, battery supply chains, and power grids — doesn't need military engagement to gain strategic ground. Every week of Hormuz disruption is a week China consolidates its energy technology advantage over the West.

Datapoint 3 - Hungary's rejection of populist right-wing economics: Orbán's 16-year run ended Sunday in a 53% landslide with record turnout. The prime minister who made himself a global standard-bearer for populist right-wing economics — economic nationalism, EU antagonism, democratic backsliding — lost to a center-right reformer who campaigned on Europe, rule of law, and competence. The lesson: economic populism steeped in nationalism and corroded by corruption ultimately results in stagnation. Hungarian voters learned it. 

Datapoint 4 - The Pope enters the arena: Leo XIV is the first American pope. He is publicly opposing the Iran war and doing it directly — not through diplomatic channels, but through press conferences and social media. Trump responded by calling him "weak" and "terrible" on social media. Leo told reporters Monday morning he was unafraid. The Catholic Church has 1.4 billion followers globally, is on a continent-spanning African tour, and has zero electoral vulnerability. That is not a cultural sidebar. It is a geopolitical actor operating without the constraints of a nation-state.

Datapoint 5 - Western energy vulnerability is no longer theoretical: Ireland's fuel supply is fractured — 600 of 2,000 stations are dry, motorways are blocked, and the government survived a no-confidence vote by hours. A typical UK household will be £500 worse off this year due to surging energy prices. UK business confidence has fallen to its lowest level since the start of the COVID pandemic, according to Deloitte. The Iran war is not a Middle East story. It is arriving in household budgets, operating margins, and board presentations in London, Dublin, and Frankfurt. Fuel and economic pressure protests will continue to spread in the West, book it.

These five datapoints connect. 

Geopolitical volatility has fully moved from background risk to boardroom priority. Caracal Global provides the intelligence, strategy, and communications infrastructure for executives navigating exactly this environment — without the overhead of a full-time hire. Learn more @ caracal.global.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc

You can always reach me @ marc@caracal.global.