let’s say that same cookie was made with flour milled from saskatchewan grain, manitoba oats, quebec butter and imported sugar. the producer could label it “made in canada from domestic and imported ingredients.”
‘prepared in canada’ and other domestic content claims
swapping american products for canadian ones is more difficult for some categories than others.
“dairy, beef, chicken, pork — canada produces plenty of these, and supply management keeps them local. root vegetables like potatoes, carrots and beets are easy to find from canadian farms, and grains like wheat, oats and lentils are a huge part of our agriculture,” said charlebois.
“anything tropical — bananas, oranges, lemons, avocados, pineapples — those all come from way further south. a lot of packaged snacks and processed foods are also tough because so many of them are made in the u.s. or rely on american ingredients, products ‘prepared in canada.'”
the cfia encourages companies to use “product of canada” and “made in canada” (with a qualifying statement) to help consumers identify domestic content. however, a raft of other claims are also allowed, including “prepared in canada,” provided they’re “truthful and not misleading.”