Wednesday, June 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Feds file challenge to softwood lumber duties

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Dec, 2021 04:04 PM
  • Feds file challenge to softwood lumber duties

OTTAWA - The federal Liberals have put the White House on notice that Canada will officially challenge the legality of an American decision to hike duties on softwood lumber heading south of the border.

The government is filing the grievance under the recently renewed North American free trade pact.

Trade Minister Mary Ng said in a statement that she expects Canada to be successful, as it has been in previous challenges to what she calls unwarranted duties on Canadian lumber.

She added that the extra costs are likely to hit American homebuyers and homeowners hardest, saying the duties are also a tax on U.S. consumers that will raise construction and renovation costs.

Late last month, the U.S. government nearly doubled the tariffs on Canadian softwood lumber as part of a long-running dispute that stems from the U.S. industry's belief that their northern counterparts get help from the federal government.

The Liberals have been under fire from opposition parties for not preventing the new round of tariffs, particularly given expectations that trade disputes would dissipate with Joe Biden in the White House rather than Donald Trump, with his protectionist policies.

The government had hinted it was prepared to impose countervailing measures, or take a more formal stance in challenging the duties under the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement.

Ng said the government remains interested in negotiating a settlement to the trade issue, but decided to go the route of a trade challenge in the absence of any movement from the Americans.

Susan Yurkovich, president of the B.C. Lumber Trade Council, applauded the government's decision to challenge the American duties that she said remain a threat to an economic recovery on both sides of the border.

MORE National ARTICLES

Urgent need for waste management in North: report

Urgent need for waste management in North: report
The marine conservation group says northern communities produce a similar level of waste to cities in the south, but have fewer ways to deal with it.

Urgent need for waste management in North: report

Advocates fear jails filling again during pandemic

Advocates fear jails filling again during pandemic
About a year after the first COVID-19 cases emerged in Ontario jails, the update by the Prison Pandemic Partnership says the risk to inmates increases when there is less space.

Advocates fear jails filling again during pandemic

O'Toole brushes off grassroots vote on climate

O'Toole brushes off grassroots vote on climate
Over the weekend, delegates to the Conservatives' policy convention voted down a resolution that would have included the line "climate change is real" in the party's official policy document.

O'Toole brushes off grassroots vote on climate

Canadians still edgy about U.S. visitors: poll

Canadians still edgy about U.S. visitors: poll
It found 70 per cent of 2,200 Canadian respondents were either very or somewhat worried about allowing cross-border travel.

Canadians still edgy about U.S. visitors: poll

RCMP warn of police impersonator south of Kelowna

RCMP warn of police impersonator south of Kelowna
A statement from Cpl. Jesse O’Donaghey says it happened Sunday night on a backcountry provincial highway in the Boundary region south of Kelowna.

RCMP warn of police impersonator south of Kelowna

PHAC head grilled on firing of two scientists

PHAC head grilled on firing of two scientists
The committee agreed to give him until Friday to provide answers about why PHAC terminated the employment of Dr. Xiangguo Qiu and her husband, Keding Cheng, in January.

PHAC head grilled on firing of two scientists