Montreal Gazette

Canadian newsprint firms fear U.S. set to slap duties

- MIA RABSON

The ongoing softwood dispute with the U.S. may not be hurting Canada much yet, but the industry is bracing for a new trade battle with the U.S. that could take a bite out of a part of the sector that is already facing sharp declines.

Derek Nighbor, chief executive of the Forest Products Associatio­n of Canada, says heading into the new year, the industry is waiting for the U.S. Department of Commerce to decide if it believes Canada is dumping newsprint into the U.S. at below market value. “This is not something that people are talking about, but in our sector we are concerned this could be worse than softwood,” said Nighbor.

The U.S. government has been investigat­ing Canada’s newsprint industry since the end of August, after Washington-based North Pacific Paper Co., complained Canada was dumping newsprint into the U.S. market and unfairly subsidizin­g its industry at home.

It is the same argument made by the U.S. Lumber Coalition about Canada’s softwood industry, which led to the imposition of both countervai­ling and anti-dumping duties on most Canadian softwood exports to the United States.

The preliminar­y newsprint decision was initially due by Jan. 16 but has been postponed until March at the request of North Pacific Paper.

About 25 lumber mills in Canada would be hurt by duties, most of them in Ontario and Quebec.

U.S. Commerce says Canadian companies exported about $1.6 billion worth of newsprint to the United States in 2016. But Nighbor notes with the expansion of digital print, media newsprint sales are declining by about 10 per cent a year.

Still, he said, the industry will exist for many years and more than 1,000 small and mid-sized newspapers in the U.S. have asked their federal government not to institute duties because they can’t sustain an increase in newsprint prices.

Canada is the world’s largest newsprint exporter.

Newsprint would be the third Canadian wood product targeted by the Americans, after softwood and supercalen­dered paper. That paper was the first to be hit with duties.

Nighbor says the Washington company behind the newsprint complaint likely wouldn’t even benefit from a cut to Canadian imports because it is on the West Coast and most of the Canadian business is destined for the Midwest and eastern U.S. markets.

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