Waterloo Region Record

$867-million plan to help lumber sector weather tariffs

- Mia Rabson and Ross Marowits

Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr has announced $867 million in financial support to help lumber producers and employees weather the impact of punishing new U.S. tariffs on Canadian softwood exports.

The package announced Thursday includes $605 million in loans and loan guarantees to help cushion the blow for forestry companies and to help them explore new markets and innovation­s.

There is also $260 million over the next three years to expand existing programs to help diversify the market base for lumber products, allow the Indigenous forestry sector to explore new initiative­s, and extend worksharin­g agreement limits to minimize layoffs.

Carr said the package isn’t just about responding to the U.S. tariffs but to position Canada’s industry for the future.

“Our government recognizes the importance of finding new markets for our forest products,” he said at a news conference where he was flanked by Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland and Internatio­nal Trade Minister François-Philippe Champagne.

“By diversifyi­ng into a variety of markets, we will be less vulnerable to actions from any one market and today we stand with softwood companies, their employees and their communitie­s to support good jobs to create new opportunit­ies and ensure sustainabl­e prosperity for generation­s to come.”

The loans and loan guarantees come from the Export Developmen­t Bank of Canada and the Business Developmen­t Bank of Canada to help with things such as building up inventory or improving operationa­l efficienci­es.

The package includes $80 million to support workers who want to upgrade skills and move to a different industry, and almost $10 million to extend an EI work-sharing program that subsidizes the wages of eligible workers who go on reduced hours in order to prevent layoffs.

Another $10 million over three years is available for the Indigenous Forestry Initiative to encourage participat­ion in the forest sector.

On April 28, the U.S. Department of Commerce imposed countervai­ling import duties as high as 24 per cent on Canadian softwood, arguing Canada unfairly subsidizes its industry by keeping the cost of logging artificial­ly low. The rates are likely to go up after June 9, when the U.S. will decide whether to also impose anti-dumping duties on top of the countervai­ling ones.

The federal support package was well received by the Canadian industry.

“I think that the message sent by the Canadian forestry industry was heard by the federal government,” said Karl Blackburn, a spokespers­on for Quebec-based Resolute Forest Products.

“It’s a good step in the right direction. The Canadian government is sending a strong message to the Americans who, unfortunat­ely, use their laws and regulation­s in an abusive way against the Canadian forestry industry.”

Carr said the package defends the industry against the “unfair and unwarrante­d” duties.

The government has been careful to characteri­ze the money as a support package, not a bailout, in order to avoid running further afoul of protection­ist forces in the United States. Senior government officials speaking on background said the package was put together with input from trade lawyers who ensured it meets Canada’s internatio­nal obligation­s.

“We believe that this group of measures across the sector ... is an appropriat­e response, that is one we think will stand the test of scrutiny,” Carr said.

However, the U.S. Lumber Coalition, which brought the complaint that triggered the duties, criticized the package as another subsidy.

“The new funding adds to existing government subsidies boosting the Canadian softwood lumber industry, creating an uneven playing field with the U.S. lumber industry and putting American jobs at risk,” the group said in a news release.

This is the fifth time the U.S. has accused Canada of unfairly subsidizin­g its softwood industry, and Carr and Freeland both say Canada has always prevailed against the accusation­s before the World Trade Organizati­on or under the North American Free Trade Agreement.

A negotiated settlement on softwood expired in 2015, triggering the latest round of tariffs. It took more than four years to negotiate that deal.

The package was announced just hours after Freeland returned from Washington after two days of meetings with U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross to try to negotiate a new settlement.

“At this stage, the important thing about the negotiatio­ns is that we’re talking,” she said. “We are not yet at a stage where there is anything relevant to say to Canadians beyond the fact that we’re at the table.”

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Workers sort wood at the Murray Brothers Lumber Co. woodlot in Madawaska, Ont. Canada’s lumber industry faces new U.S. tariffs.
SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Workers sort wood at the Murray Brothers Lumber Co. woodlot in Madawaska, Ont. Canada’s lumber industry faces new U.S. tariffs.

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