Lumber producers brace for second round of duties
Resolute has already cut shifts at seven of its sawmills
MONTREAL — Canada’s softwood lumber industry is bracing for a second wave of U.S. duties Monday that could put further pressure on producers, particularly smaller ones, to cut jobs.
The move is an attempt by the U.S. to play hardball and impose high anti-dumping rates in order to push Canada to agree to a deal before negotiations on NAFTA begin in August, said analyst Paul Quinn of RBC Capital Markets.
“Anti-dumping (duties) is a way to scare the Canadians and try to force them to get something done,” he said from Vancouver.
The U.S. wants a quick end to the lumber dispute but Canada sees no agreement in sight. Former Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney has warned that slow lumber talks could stall the upcoming NAFTA process.
But both David MacNaughton, Canada’s envoy to Washington, and Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland believe a deal is not imminent. Freeland has said the softwood lumber file was “notoriously difficult and complex file.” However, she has also noted that American lumber producers can’t meet domestic demand, so Canadian lumber will be needed.
The tariffs are already hurting the U.S. as the cost of softwood lumber rises down south. The Montreal Economic Institute (MEI) said it now costs American consumers an additional US$2,400 for the construction of a single-family home in the U.S.
“We all lose with protectionism,” said Alexandre Moreau, public policy analyst at the MEI, in a statement recently.
The U.S. Department of Commerce announced in April preliminary countervailing duties against five companies ranging between three and 24 per cent, with other producers facing a tariff of 19.88 per cent.
This time, the U.S. is expected to announce preliminary anti-dumping duties with an average rate of around 10 per cent, which would be added on to the previous levy.
Canada’s share of the U.S. softwood lumber market was 27 per cent in May, down from 31 per cent a year earlier, according to monthly Canadian government reports. That represented a $165-million loss in exports for the month, including $105 million in B.C. and $18 million in Quebec.
Final duty rates have been lower than preliminary tariffs in the past. But Quinn said that could change this time because the U.S. Lumber Coalition is pushing for a tough response to the Canadian government’s $867-million financial support for the industry, mainly through loans and loan guarantees.
Federal Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr said Ottawa was “very prudent” in developing the program and wouldn’t say if more industry funding will be coming in the wake of the second round of duties.
The ripple effects of the first round of softwood lumber duties are already being felt. Resolute Forest Products has cut shifts at seven sawmills, and there are fears other companies could follow suit.
The Conference Board of Canada has said U.S. softwood lumber duties will cost Canadian producers $1.7 billion a year and result in the reduction of 2,200 jobs. — With files from
Bloomberg