OTTAWA—Canada posted a trade surplus of C$3.13 billion in November, the largest in over 13 years, with record exports offsetting the impact of floods in British Columbia, Statistics Canada said on Thursday. Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast a November surplus of C$2.03 billion. Exports and imports hit all-time highs for the second month in a row, pushing the surplus to a level not seen since the C$3.45 billion posted in September 2008. Peter Hall, chief economist at Canada’s export development agency, said the data showed how much global production had recovered from the COVID-19 pandemic. “The economy has come roaring back much more quickly and much more decidedly than anybody expected or was prepared for,” he said by phone, noting that energy exports had posted a 2.8 percent gain. Canada is a major exporter of crude and natural gas. Overall exports rose by 3.8 percent from October, helping outweigh …