National Post (National Edition)

It’s Canada and U.K. vs. U.S. airplane giant at trade tribunal hearing.

GOVERNMENT­S WAGE BATTLE OVER BOMBARDIER TRADE DUTIES

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

The rhetoric that exists in the United States at the present moment … has given U.S. companies the permission to take action they wouldn’t have taken before DAVID MACNAUGHTO­N, CANADIAN AMBASSADOR TO WASHINGTON Boeing makes the best airplanes in the world. But we can’t compete with companies funded and backed by government­s Kevin McAllister, Boeing

The Canadian and British government­s appeared before a U.S. tribunal Monday arguing against the imposition of duties on Bombardier planes, in a hearing highlighti­ng the more aggressive use of trade remedies in Donald Trump’s America.

Canada’s ambassador to Washington said potential duties of up to 300 per cent on Bombardier’s C-Series jet are illegitima­te as he urged the U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission to cancel them in its final impending determinat­ion.

First, David MacNaughto­n said the case that imports of the Bombardier jet would cause material injury to rival Boeing is based on speculatio­n and conjecture — prohibited not only under U.S. law but also by World Trade Organizati­on rules.

Moreover, he told the commission there’s no evidence Bombardier planes will be exported to the U.S.; that the C-Series does not compete with Boeing aircraft; that Boeing has a seven-year backlog in sales, invalidati­ng its claim of an injury; and that duties would ultimately hurt Americans, as Bombardier accounts for 23,000 jobs in nine U.S. states.

The British ambassador to the U.S., Kim Darroch, made a similar case, and added another shot at Boeing: He argued that it has benefited from billions in government support via different U.S. mechanisms, while it complains about subsidies elsewhere.

MacNaughto­n said the case has broader implicatio­ns. Speaking to reporters outside the hearing, he said anti-trade rhetoric in the U.S., not just from the Trump administra­tion, has emboldened companies to launch commercial attacks on their foreign rivals.

“What we are seeing is because of, in large measure, the rhetoric that exists in the United States at the present moment — and I’m not just referring to one source of the rhetoric, I’m talking broadly of the antitrade rhetoric — it has given U.S. companies the permission to take action they wouldn’t have taken before,” MacNaughto­n said.

“The real danger of this is it’s going to have a negative impact on U.S. jobs.”

The Trump administra­tion itself has boasted about how trade complaints like Boeing’s have surged since it took office.

Boeing argued that Canada is the one practising unfair trade.

The company said government subsidies have allowed its Canadian rival to infringe on potential markets; that CSeries sales are already hurting orders; and that the recent Bombardier­Airbus partnershi­p to build in Alabama is a ruse that would disappear if duties are rescinded.

The president and chief executive of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, Kevin McAllister, said it’s hard to compete against a company with a bottomless reservoir of support from foreign taxpayers.

“Boeing makes the best airplanes in the world. But we can’t compete with companies funded and backed by government­s,” McAllister said.

“In a fair competitio­n, I’ll bet on Boeing, our U.S. employees, and the U.S. industry every time. But we should only have to compete against private companies — not government­s and the airplanes they create and produce through endless subsidies.”

He cited some examples of competing against a government. For example, he pointed out that the Canadian government recently cancelled a big military contract for Boeing Super Hornets, in retaliatio­n for its trade complaints against Bombardier.

He also argued that Delta was poised to buy used planes in a package being assembled by Boeing — before Bombardier swooped in with an unbeatable offer, its unrealisti­cally priced planes backed by government subsidies.

“Essentiall­y Bombardier offered new airplanes at used airplane prices. And it worked,” McAllister said.

He also cast this fight as something bigger. The Boeing executive explained how he grew up in Bethlehem, Pa., and saw the iconic Bethlehem Steel company shut down a generation ago, killed slowly by a variety of factors including dumped foreign steel.

In his closing remarks, he said he now keeps a painting of the old plant in his office.

“This left an impression on me.”

 ?? FRANCOIS MORI / THE CANADIAN PRESS ??
FRANCOIS MORI / THE CANADIAN PRESS
 ??  ?? David MacNaughto­n
David MacNaughto­n

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