Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

As Trump flags timber tariffs soon, B.C. minister says impact would be 'devastating'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Feb, 2025 02:15 PM
  • As Trump flags timber tariffs soon, B.C. minister says impact would be 'devastating'

B.C.'s Forests Minister Ravi Parmar says the expectation of more duties and additional tariffs piled onto Canadian softwood lumber would "absolutely be devastating" for the country's industry.

Parmar says the government expects the U.S. Commerce Department will issue anti-dumping duties by Friday of as much as 14 per cent, on top of the current 14.4 per cent duty. 

It comes after U.S. President Donald Trump told media on Air Force 1 that his administration was eyeing a 25 per cent tariff on lumber some time around April. 

Parmar says he knows many forestry workers are going to be worried about their jobs and he'll continue to fight for them. 

He says the extra tariffs are "very likely" and Canada should take Trump at his word.

Trump has paused his threat of tariffs until March 4, but says he still plans 25 per cent tariffs on all Canadian goods and a 10 per cent levy on imports of Canadian energy.

Canadian steel and aluminum have already been singled out for 25 per cent tariffs. 

Parmar was recently in California, where 16,000 buildings were destroyed by wildfires, meeting with builder groups who said they need Canadian lumber, not only to rebuild, but to prepare for FIFA events next year and hosting the Olympic Games in 2028. 

"Imagine the president going to Los Angeles in 2028 to host the Olympics — I understand the guy likes to host parties — and as part of that being in a city that hasn't been able to rebuild because of the tariffs and duties he has put on goods from British Columbia, goods from Canada," he told reporters in Victoria. "It's ludicrous."

Canada's forestry sector recently described the threatened tariffs as unnecessary and unwarranted, given that the United States currently meets only about 70 per cent of its homebuilding lumber needs domestically and uses Canadian lumber to fill the gap.

If the threatened 25 per cent tariff is added to current and pending duties, the combined total on softwood exports to the United States will be closer to 50 or 55 per cent, Parmar said. 

The U.S. last raised duties on softwood lumber from Canada last August from 8.05 per cent. 

Parmar said he has already asked the federal government to support the industry under the threat of tariffs with loan guarantees and worker support.

"It's important that we keep this industry going and those workers employed." 

He said provincial and federal governments need to continue to make the case that while such tariffs hurt Canadians, they will also hurt Americans. 

"Whether it's the wildfires in California, the hurricanes in North Carolina, the cost of doing business, the cost of rebuilding their homes is going to skyrocket in those states.

"It's important for the residents in those communities to know that those are the actions of their president." 

MORE National ARTICLES

Tourist randomly assaulted near Canada Place

Tourist randomly assaulted near Canada Place
Vancouver police say charges have been laid after a tourist was randomly assaulted near Canada Place last Sunday.  The V-P-D say a woman visiting Vancouver was walking near Canada Place's cruise ship terminal Sunday morning when a stranger repeatedly punched and kicked her. 

Tourist randomly assaulted near Canada Place

Air India passengers get a lift from RCAF after bomb scare forces landing in Nunavut

Air India passengers get a lift from RCAF after bomb scare forces landing in Nunavut
More than 200 Air India passengers should be on the ground in Chicago this morning after their flight was diverted to Nunavut due to a bomb threat. The airline issued an update overnight via social media, thanking the Royal Canadian Air Force for helping ferry the 211passengers of Flight 127 from India to their final destination.

Air India passengers get a lift from RCAF after bomb scare forces landing in Nunavut

Reduction in permit wait times for multiplex housing in Vancouver

Reduction in permit wait times for multiplex housing in Vancouver
Vancouver is planning to reduce the time it takes to get a building permit for certain multiplex applications. The city says a streamlined permit application process starting early next year will take about half the time.

Reduction in permit wait times for multiplex housing in Vancouver

Woman stabbed outside Whalley home

Woman stabbed outside Whalley home
Surrey R-C-M-P say they're looking for three young female suspects after a woman was stabbed outside a home in Whalley. Police say the woman didn't know the suspects, who are all believed to be between the ages of 15 and 20.

Woman stabbed outside Whalley home

Sikh groups calls for Indian consulates to be shut down in Vancouver, Toronto

Sikh groups calls for Indian consulates to be shut down in Vancouver, Toronto
Representatives of a British Columbia Sikh temple whose president was shot dead last year, as well as the Sikh independence group he was involved in, say their communities won't feel safe until India's consulates in Vancouver and Toronto are shut down.

Sikh groups calls for Indian consulates to be shut down in Vancouver, Toronto

Child dead after falling from 19th floor window in Winnipeg, police say

Child dead after falling from 19th floor window in Winnipeg, police say
Police in Winnipeg say a child has died after falling from a window on the 19th floor of a building. It happened Monday in the city's downtown. The child was taken to hospital and pronounced dead.

Child dead after falling from 19th floor window in Winnipeg, police say