The Niagara Falls Review

Ex-ambassador says lumber dispute needs to be settled

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Quebec’s representa­tive in the softwood lumber dispute between Canada and the U.S. says that dossier needs to be settled before talks begin on renegotiat­ing the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Raymond Chretien, Canada’s former ambassador to the U.S., says it would be difficult to have two sets of delicate negotiatio­ns going on simultaneo­usly.

Chretien called softwood lumber an “explosive” issue that is “too big, too complex and too emotional” to overlap with NAFTA talks.

“We have to settle softwood before the NAFTA discussion­s begin,” he said. “Is that possible? I don’t know. There’s not a lot of time left. We’re almost in midJuly.

“The Americans aren’t ready, so we’re waiting for them. It’s up to them to get their house in order.”

The Trump administra­tion is expected to publish its negotiatin­g positions for a new North American Free Trade Agreement next week — a public statement required under an agreement with Congress.

After that, negotiatio­ns are slated to begin between the U.S., Mexico and Canada in about a month.

On the softwood lumber file, the Americans added another seven percentage points to the total average import duties on Canadian softwood in late June, accusing the industry of selling wood in the U.S. at rates lower than in Canada.

They came on top of countervai­ling duties imposed in April which averaged out at about 20 per cent and range from about three per cent to 24 per cent.

The Conference Board of Canada has said U.S. softwood lumber duties paid at current export levels will cost Canadian producers $1.7 billion a year and cut about 2,200 jobs until a settlement is reached.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Raymond Chretien, Quebec’s representa­tive in the softwood lumber dispute between Canada and the U.S., says the issue needs to be settled before talks begin on renegotiat­ing NAFTA.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Raymond Chretien, Quebec’s representa­tive in the softwood lumber dispute between Canada and the U.S., says the issue needs to be settled before talks begin on renegotiat­ing NAFTA.

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