Economy June 9, 2026 08:48 AM

Canada’s trade surplus expands to C$2.72 billion as oil and food shipments lift exports

Record total exports driven by energy gains and stronger farm shipments while imports of chemicals and refinery products rise

By Nina Shah
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Canada posted a trade surplus of C$2.72 billion in April, up from C$1.75 billion in March and the largest monthly surplus since January 2025. Total merchandise exports reached a record C$75.2 billion, supported by a near 10% jump in energy exports and notable strength in farm and food shipments. Imports increased more modestly, with sizeable monthly gains in chemicals, lubricants and computers.

Canada’s trade surplus expands to C$2.72 billion as oil and food shipments lift exports
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Key Points

  • Canada’s goods trade surplus rose to C$2.72 billion in April from C$1.75 billion in March, the largest monthly surplus since January 2025.
  • Total merchandise exports reached a record C$75.2 billion, supported by a 9.7% increase in energy exports and an 8.9% rise in farm, fishing and intermediate food products.
  • Imports recorded modest growth overall, with significant increases in chemical and refinery product categories and a record high for computers and computer peripherals.

Statistics Canada reported that Canada recorded a goods trade surplus of C$2.72 billion in April, up from C$1.75 billion in March. The April surplus is the largest monthly excess since January 2025. On a monthly basis, total merchandise exports rose 1.6% while imports edged up 0.3%.

Energy exports were a major contributor to the improved external position, increasing 9.7% in April. Crude oil shipments rose 7.0% as prices continued to climb amid uncertainty tied to conflict in Iran. Overall goods exports reached a record C$75.2 billion in the month.

Farm, fishing and intermediate food product exports also posted strong growth, increasing 8.9% in April. Wheat shipments were up 31.9%, a move that Statistics Canada attributed in part to higher volumes destined for China.

Not all categories contributed positively. Metal and non-metallic mineral product exports declined 17.5% in April. Within that group, exports of unwrought gold, silver and platinum group metals fell 25.5%, driven by lower gold shipments to the United Kingdom.

On the import side, several categories registered significant monthly increases. Imports of basic and industrial chemical, plastic and rubber products rose 16.9%, making the largest single contribution to the monthly import gain. Imports of lubricants and other petroleum refinery products surged 49.0%, reflecting higher purchases of crude oil diluent from the United States. Imports of computers and computer peripherals climbed 13.2%, reaching a record high.

Trade with the United States remained a dominant factor in Canada’s external accounts. The surplus with the United States widened to C$9.5 billion in April from C$7.8 billion in March, the largest bilateral surplus since February 2025. Exports to the United States increased 4.8% while imports from the United States rose 1.6%.

The April figures show simultaneous strength in energy and selected agricultural exports, alongside notable swings in metals and several import-intensive industrial categories. The monthly data reflect both price and volume effects across commodity and manufactured goods sectors.


Data snapshot

  • Trade surplus: C$2.72 billion in April (C$1.75 billion in March)
  • Total merchandise exports: C$75.2 billion (record high)
  • Exports - energy products: +9.7%; crude oil shipments: +7.0%
  • Exports - farm, fishing and intermediate food products: +8.9%; wheat shipments: +31.9%
  • Exports - metal and non-metallic mineral products: -17.5%; unwrought precious metals: -25.5%
  • Imports - basic and industrial chemical, plastic and rubber products: +16.9%
  • Imports - lubricants and other petroleum refinery products: +49.0%; computers and peripherals: +13.2% (record high)
  • Trade with the United States - surplus widened to C$9.5 billion; exports +4.8%, imports +1.6%

Risks

  • Energy export gains are linked to higher crude oil prices amid uncertainty caused by conflict in Iran, which could lead to volatile export values and market risk for energy-related sectors.
  • The marked drop in unwrought precious metal exports, driven by lower gold shipments to the United Kingdom, introduces uncertainty for the metals and mining sector's export performance.
  • Rising imports of lubricants and petroleum refinery products, tied to increased diluent purchases from the United States, and large gains in chemical and plastics imports could expose domestic manufacturing and refining margins to input cost fluctuations and supply-chain pressures.

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