Vancouver Sun

Resolute bemoans rising cost of spats

- JEN SKERRITT Bloomberg With files from The Canadian Press

A Canadian timber company caught in the crosshairs of two trade disputes with the U.S. said it will be forced to fork over as much as US$75 million a year in duties while it tries to fight back against the measures.

Montreal-based Resolute Forest Products Inc., the world’s largest newsprint maker, will pay about US$50 million a year after the U.S. levied a 12.8 per cent import tariff on the company’s softwood lumber, chief executive Richard Garneau said Thursday. That’s in addition to as much as US$25 million in tariffs it’s already paying after the U.S. imposed a duty on its shipments of supercalen­dered paper, the glossy type used in magazines and newspaper inserts. “It’s a very difficult issue we have to deal with and it’s affecting our cash flow,” Garneau said.

The long-running dispute between Canada and the U.S. over softwood lumber escalated last month when President Donald Trump announced tariffs on shipments from Canada. Canada’s lumber producers called the duties unfair and vowed to fight the decision.

Garneau said the dispute over the “baseless” tariffs could still be resolved as the U.S. needs to import lumber from north of the border.

Resolute and New Brunswick-based J.D. Irving Ltd. are also appealing the duties on specialty paper of as much as 20 per cent, which the U.S. imposed in 2015 amid allegation­s that Canadian companies were receiving unfair subsidies.

Resolute shares tumbled as much as 8.5 per cent in Toronto, their biggest intraday decline since Feb. 16, after the company reported an unexpected first-quarter loss excluding one-time items of 33 cents per share. Resolute cited smaller newsprint shipments.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada