Carney is the first Canadian PM to visit China since 2017 and is seeking to rebuild ties as he looks for new markets.

The PM is seeking to deepen trade and repair ties with China after years of tense relations - without compromising national security or provoking the US.

“If the Canadian side reflects on the root causes of the setbacks ... it will realize that it can avoid the same outcome,” China Daily wrote in an op-ed.

BEIJING: Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney arrived in Beijing on Wednesday for a state visit, Chinese state broadcaster CCTV said. Carney, who is expected to meet President Xi…

Canadian leader's visit comes after nearly a decade of strained ties between Ottawa and Beijing.

Carney is on a four-day trip to China, the first by a Canadian PM since 2017, in a move to thaw tense relations.

BEIJING: Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and Chinese President Xi Jinping began talks in Beijing on Friday, marking the first meeting between the countries’ leaders in China’s…

Mark Carney held talks with Xi Jinping on Friday during rare Beijing trip as Canada seeks to diversify trade links away from Trump’s America

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney seeking to reset ties with Beijing amid global tensions and US tariffs.

Canola oil and electric cars are at the centre of the deal agreed by Mark Carney and Xi Jinping after years of strained ties.

Amid a thaw in Chinese-Canadian relations, Chinese President Xi Jinping hosted Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, finalizing a deal to cut tariffs.

Carney is the first Canadian PM to visit China since 2017 and is seeking to rebuild ties as he looks for new markets.

Canada will initially allow in up to 49,000 Chinese electric vehicles at a tariff of 6.1% on most-favoured-nation terms, Prime Minister Mark Carney said.

Carney says Canada's relationship with China has become "more predictable" than that with the US, as his country searches for trade certainty.

PM’s visit to Beijing seen as a welcome reset to relations in a ‘new world order’ but critics worry what trade deal could mean for Canadian workers

Canada will allow imports of Chinese electric vehicles with a 6.1% tariff, Carney says.