Lethbridge Herald

U.S. lowers Cdn. news print duties

- Ross Marowits

North America’s largest newsprint producer hopes rare bipartisan political support in the United States will convince the U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission to overturn final import duties announced Thursday.

The United States government gave most Canadian newsprint producers a reprieve by lowering final anti-dumping and countervai­ling duties on uncoated groundwood, a category that includes newsprint and book grade paper, in its final determinat­ion.

The move comes after several American businesses and politician­s from both major parties complained the tax on Canadian newsprint would threaten the already-struggling newspaper industry.

Resolute Forest Products CEO Yves Laflamme said he hopes the commission will reject the Commerce Department’s determinat­ion, just as it did in January when the panel sided with Bombardier against U.S. aerospace giant Boeing over the C Series commercial jet that Airbus now controls and has renamed.

Scores of politician­s have pressed the independen­t agency to quash the duties to save newsprint mills and industry jobs, Laflamme said.

“It’s not about helping the Canadian industry, it’s about saving the newspaper industry,” he said, noting that the duties are passed along to publishers through higher prices.

“It’s just going to kill that business faster than it is right now.”

The U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission is slated to decide in midSeptemb­er whether the complainan­t, Washington-based North Pacific Paper Co., suffered harm.

Under the Commerce Department’s final determinat­ion, British Columbiaba­sed Catalyst Paper Corp. still faces a sizable total 20.26 per cent tariff, but that’s down from 28.25 per cent imposed earlier in the year during the preliminar­y phase.

The company’s anti-dumping rate was decreased to 16.88 per cent from 22.16, and its countervai­ling duty (CVD) rate was lowered to 3.38 per cent from 6.09 per cent.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a release that no other Canadian uncoated groundwood producer will have to pay anti-dumping tariffs because of the unique facts of the department’s investigat­ion and arguments made by interested parties.

Montreal-based Kruger’s CVD rate was lowered slightly to 9.53 per cent but the final rates for Resolute, White Birch Paper and other Canadian producers increased.

Resolute’s countervai­ling tariff increased to 9.81 per cent from 4.42 per cent, White Birch was .82 from .65 per cent and all others has risen to 8.54 per cent from 6.53 per cent.

The U.S. says US$1.21 billion worth of uncoated groundwood paper was imported from Canada last year.

The Trump administra­tion began investigat­ing Canada’s newsprint industry after North Pacific complained Canada was dumping newsprint into the American market and unfairly subsidizin­g its industry at home.

It is the same argument made against Canada’s softwood industry, which led to the imposition of both countervai­ling and anti-dumping duties on most lumber imports from Canada.

Unlike the softwood lumber trade dispute backed by a powerful U.S. coalition, the newsprint complaint is led by a small producer co-owned by hedge funds that received little support during recent public hearings.

The U.S. recently ended countervai­ling duties on supercalen­dered paper from Canada that have been in place since 2015 a day after the World Trade Organizati­on ruled largely in favour of Canada in the dispute over perceived subsidies on supercalen­dered paper, which is mainly used in magazines, catalogues, corporate brochures and advertisin­g inserts.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? In this April 11 file photo, production workers stack newspapers onto a cart at the Janesville Gazette Printing & Distributi­on plant in Janesville, Wis. The U.S. Commerce Department is going ahead with a tax on Canadian newsprint, a threat to the...
Associated Press photo In this April 11 file photo, production workers stack newspapers onto a cart at the Janesville Gazette Printing & Distributi­on plant in Janesville, Wis. The U.S. Commerce Department is going ahead with a tax on Canadian newsprint, a threat to the...

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