The Prince George Citizen

Duties unwarrante­d, says Horgan

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The B.C. Lumber Trade Council said the ruling, while not unexpected, is “completely without merit.”

Council president Susan Yurkovich said the process is biased in favour of the U.S. industry.

“We are confident that this latest decision by the ITC will again be reversed,” she said in a news release.

ITC decisions in the two previous softwood lumber trade disputes didn’t survive appeals, Yurkovich noted.

Between 2001 and 2006, when the last softwood lumber dispute took place, it’s believed about 15,000 jobs disappeare­d in the softwood industry.

Yurkovich said the U.S. Coalition’s claims of injury “ring particular­ly hollow” given the strong financial performanc­e the U.S. industry is facing and Canadian imports are lower than in 2006 when imports were deemed non-injurious.

New Brunswick Trade Policy Minister Roger Melanson said the province remains “deeply disappoint­ed” by the vote.

“Our government strongly feels that these duties against New Brunswick and Canada’s softwood lumber producers are unfair and unwarrante­d,” he said in a statement.

British Columbia Premier John Horgan said the province believes an independen­t tribunal will determine the U.S. allegation­s are unfounded.

“Today’s ruling, though not unexpected, means that B.C. and Canadian forest companies must continue to pay unfair and unwarrante­d duties, to make U.S. lumber companies and land owners even richer at the expense of Canadian exporters and American consumers and builders,” he said in a news release.

The U.S. Lumber Coalition, which launched a petition nearly a year ago, ap- plauded the vote.

“The evidence presented to the ITC was clear – the massive subsidies that the Canadian government provides to its lumber industry and the dumping of lumber products into the U.S. market by Canadian companies cause real harm to U.S. producers and workers,” stated co-chairman Jason Brochu. “Now, with a level playing field, the U.S. lumber industry, and the 350,000 hardworkin­g men and women who support it, can have the chance to compete fairly.”

Fellow co-chairman Joe Patton added U.S. lumber mills will be able to make investment­s to expand production to meet demand.

Reasons supporting the vote are expected to be released by mid-January, the commission said Thursday.

Trade data from the United States Department of Agricultur­e shows the amount of Canadian softwood imported was down eight per cent for first nine months of 2017, compared with the same period in 2016.

Trade data from Statistics Canada shows British Columbia producers are bearing the brunt of the drop, with softwood exports to the U.S. down about 33 per cent. The value of those exports was down 28 per cent.

British Columbia’s wildfires last summer cut exports in July and August to about half what they were a year earlier.

Quebec exports to the U.S. actually went up three per cent and Ontario exports are up 11 per cent so far this year.

Quebec and Ontario wood exporters rely almost exclusivel­y on U.S. markets, with 99 per cent of Ontario shipments of softwood and 98 per cent of Quebec’s going to the United States.

In 2016, about 81 per cent of B.C. softwood was exported to the United States, while in 2017 that fell to 63 per cent.

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