Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada's forestry sector faces uncertainty with 25 per cent U.S. tariffs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Feb, 2025 02:40 PM
  • Canada's forestry sector faces uncertainty with 25 per cent U.S. tariffs

A wide shadow of uncertainty has been cast over Canada's forestry sector by U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to impose a 25-per-cent tariff on its lumber products. 

Several industry groups have released statements criticizing the tariff as unnecessary and harmful for both sides, a sentiment echoed by British Columbia Premier David Eby who vows full support for the provincial sector.

Eby says the sector is already paying softwood lumber duties of 14.4 per cent when it ships to the United States, not to mention other challenges such as the pine beetle outbreak that wiped swaths of forests. 

He says the additional tariff will also bring pain for U.S. consumers, since demand for homebuilding will be on the rise to replace thousands of buildings lost in the Southern California wildfires. 

Forest Products Association of Canada president Derek Nighbor says in a statement that the United States can meet about 70 per cent of its homebuilding lumber needs, but that's without taking into account the rebuilding around Los Angeles and in North Carolina after hurricane Helene last year.

The BC Lumber Trade Council calls the tariff a "punitive, unjustified protectionist measure," adding in a statement that the 25 per cent charge on top of the current duties will "disrupt trade, raise costs for consumers, and threaten jobs and communities on both sides of the border."

"For Canadian producers, higher tariffs erode competitiveness and put mills under financial strain, leading to curtailments, job losses, and economic harm to forestry-dependent communities," the council statement says.

"Unjustified trade barriers weaken both economies and put workers, businesses, and consumers at risk."

The latest figures for B.C. provincial trade data on forest product exports to the United States show a value of almost $6.2 billion for the first 11 months of 2024 — about 58 per cent of total forest product exports from the province.

Forest product exports to China — including Hong Kong and Macau — are ranked second at $2.3 billion or 22 per cent of total exports, followed by Japan at $806 million or 8 per cent.

"It’s not only the close proximity that makes Canada and the U.S. great partners in forest products trade, but it’s also the unique quality of the wood and wood fibre-based products that come out of Canada’s northern, colder, longer growing cycle forests," Nighbor says in his statement. 

"In the immediate, our priority is to work with the Government of Canada in support of our sector’s employees and their families and the forest-dependent communities they call home.”

The new tariff has also sparked opposition from within the United States, with National Association of Home Builders chairman Carl Harris saying in a statement that the trade barrier "will have the opposite effect" of the Trump White House's expressed goal "to lower the cost of housing and increase housing supply."

“Tariffs on lumber and other building materials increase the cost of construction and discourage new development, and consumers end up paying for the tariffs in the form of higher home prices," Harris says, adding the group is urging the Trump administration to reconsider.

Eby echoes those sentiments, noting Canadian lumber is a reliable and cost-effective way for U.S. homebuilders to supplement their construction needs even with the softwood lumber duties that had been in place before the latest tariffs announced by Trump.

"It's going to make it more expensive for L.A. to rebuild, certainly at a time of increased demand," Eby says. "But right across the United States, it's going to hurt families on both sides of the border, and it doesn't make any sense.

"This is a sector that is asking for — and is going to receive — our support in restructuring to be able to respond to this new reality, to access those new markets and to ensure sustainable forest jobs into the future."

B.C. Conservative forests critic Ward Stamer says uncertainty is pervasive across the forestry industry in the province, since no one knows for sure how the U.S. construction market will react to the tariffs.

"Is the market going to be able to respond positively and still want to continue to buy our products? Or is the market going to say, 'No, it's too expensive now,' and next thing we know we have mills closing?

"That's what's happening today, the phone has been ringing off the hook because of the uncertainty that we don't know what these effects will have on the markets," he says.

MORE National ARTICLES

Replica gun used in road rage incident

Replica gun used in road rage incident
Mounties in the Lower Mainland say a man has been charged after a road rage incident where he allegedly used a replica gun to threaten the victim. Surrey R-C-M-P say officers responded to a report of an incident involving a gun along the Fraser Highway near 148 Street last Thursday evening.

Replica gun used in road rage incident

Seizure of illicit drugs on Vancouver Island

Seizure of illicit drugs on Vancouver Island
Police on Vancouver Island say they have seized illicit drugs and guns as part of an investigation targeting mid-level drug trafficking in the Cowichan Valley. R-C-M-P say searches at three homes in the Duncan area and one in Sooke turned up three kilograms of suspected fentanyl, 3.5 kilograms of methamphetamine and cocaine, as well as six handguns, including two that were made using a 3-D printer.

Seizure of illicit drugs on Vancouver Island

More shelter beds for people in Victoria street camp cited by police for 'hostility'

More shelter beds for people in Victoria street camp cited by police for 'hostility'
Dozens of new shelter beds are opening for people living on the streets in Victoria, including at an encampment where police escorts have been required for emergency responders. A statement from the Housing Ministry says that up to 72 new beds will be made available for people living on Pandora Avenue and elsewhere.

More shelter beds for people in Victoria street camp cited by police for 'hostility'

Japanese Canadian paper, pillar for community during war, saved from digital oblivion

Japanese Canadian paper, pillar for community during war, saved from digital oblivion
More than eighty years ago, Japanese Canadians came together to sustain The New Canadian, the only newspaper specifically for the community that was allowed to be published through the Second World War. Now the community has come together again — and may have saved the newspaper's archives from the digital scrap heap.

Japanese Canadian paper, pillar for community during war, saved from digital oblivion

SUV allegedly rams into police car

SUV allegedly rams into police car
Surrey Mounties say they got a call about a suspicious vehicle around 146 Street and 108 Avenue, and the driver of a Ford S-U-V allegedly hit a police vehicle as it fled from officers.  Surrey R-C-M-P says the S-U-V also hit another vehicle that was stopped and later drove into oncoming traffic as police were in pursuit. 

SUV allegedly rams into police car

One-third of Canadians report being personally impacted by severe weather: poll

One-third of Canadians report being personally impacted by severe weather: poll
A new poll suggests more Canadians are feeling the direct impacts of extreme weather, but that has not changed overall opinions about climate change. The results from a recent Leger poll suggest more than one in three Canadians have been touched directly by extreme weather such as forest fires, heat waves, floods or tornadoes. 

One-third of Canadians report being personally impacted by severe weather: poll