Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Trudeau promises to keep up softwood fight

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Sep, 2020 06:47 PM
  • Trudeau promises to keep up softwood fight

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau vowed Wednesday to keep up the fight against the never-ending effort in the United States to slap countervailing duties on Canadian softwood-lumber exports.

In an interview on Vancouver-based RED FM, Trudeau cheered the World Trade Organization for ruling last week in Canada's favour, touted the federal government's investments on behalf of forestry operators in B.C. and assailed the U.S. government for persistently trying to punish a Canadian industry it believes is unfairly subsidized.

"Canada is doing the right things and the United States is wrong," Trudeau said of the decision.

He even borrowed one of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden's campaign slogans — "build back better" — to complain about U.S. policies that Trudeau warned would undermine efforts in both countries to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.

"We know that a big part of restarting our economies and building back better is going to involve construction, which is going to require forestry products," he said.

"The Americans continue to think that having people pay higher prices than necessary for their lumber is a good thing for the economy. Of course, they're wrong."

The WTO dispute-resolution panel declared that the U.S. Department of Commerce and the U.S. International Trade Commission were wrong in 2017 when they imposed countervailing duties on Canadian softwood lumber exports, having concluded that Canada's regulated forestry industry amounts to an unfair advantage for Canadian producers.

In particular, the panel agreed with Canada's argument that the Commerce Department made a number of errors in determining the benchmark Canadian timber prices it used to determine whether producers north of the border were paying adequate stumpage fees to the provinces.

U.S. trade ambassador Robert Lighthizer, long a vocal critic of the WTO, savaged the decision as unfair, calling it further evidence that the body's dispute-resolution mechanism is biased against American interests. A statement from Lighthizer's office said the U.S. would be "evaluating options in response" to the ruling.

The 2017 flashpoint over countervailing duties was just the latest flare-up in a trade dispute that has raged for nearly 40 years.

U.S. producers have long argued that Canada's system of provincially regulating stumpage fees, which are paid to the Crown in exchange for the right to harvest timber, unfairly subsidizes an industry that is privately owned and operated in the U.S., with pricing set by the competitive marketplace. As a result, the U.S. argues, imports of Canadian lumber should be subject to countervailing duties.

The WTO report, which emerged less than two months after the new U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement formally replaced the NAFTA trade deal, also came after a U.S. decision to restore 10 per cent national-security tariffs on exports of Canadian aluminum — a move broadly opposed by producers on both sides of the border.

In an echo of the similar tariff dispute that stalked the USMCA negotiations and persisted until May 2019, Canada has announced plans to impose retaliatory tariffs on a laundry list of U.S. aluminum products and related exports that are scheduled to take effect Sept. 16.

In addition to a variety of forms of aluminum, the list includes a number of products containing the metal, including refrigerators, golf clubs, bicycles, washing machines and metal office furniture.

Like Canadian aluminum, Canadian lumber exports play a critical role in the U.S., where demand for wood products used in construction significantly outstrips the domestic supply.

MORE National ARTICLES

WATCH: NHL gets backlash for not speaking up sooner on Jacob Blake Shooting, China will not ship vaccine to Canada

WATCH: NHL gets backlash for not speaking up sooner on Jacob Blake Shooting, China will not ship vaccine to Canada
WATCH- NHL takes heat on social media and from critics for not responding earlier to the anti-racism rhetoric in the wake of the Jacob Blake shooting. No vaccine for Canada from China. 

WATCH: NHL gets backlash for not speaking up sooner on Jacob Blake Shooting, China will not ship vaccine to Canada

B.C. report urges health regulation reforms

B.C. report urges health regulation reforms
A report recommends cutting the number of regulatory colleges governing health professionals in British Columbia from 20 to six to improve public protection.

B.C. report urges health regulation reforms

Champagne pushes Lebanon, China on first trip

Champagne pushes Lebanon, China on first trip
Canada's foreign minister was bound for London for private talks with a trusted ally after butting heads with leading figures from Lebanon and China, capping a bubble-bursting, four-country tour amid an unprecedented global pandemic.

Champagne pushes Lebanon, China on first trip

Tories ask speaking agency to deliver WE docs

Tories ask speaking agency to deliver WE docs
The federal Conservatives are calling on a speaking agency through which WE Charity paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to members of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's family to hand over all documents about the arrangements.

Tories ask speaking agency to deliver WE docs

Macklem to central bankers: Speak simply

Macklem to central bankers: Speak simply
The head of the Bank of Canada made an international pitch to his fellow central bankers on Thursday to forge closer ties with average citizens to manage economic expectations through the pandemic, or risk losing public trust and face an existential crisis.

Macklem to central bankers: Speak simply

Elections Canada braces for pandemic vote

Elections Canada braces for pandemic vote
Elections Canada is bracing for an explosive increase in the number of Canadians who vote by mail should the country be plunged into an election during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Elections Canada braces for pandemic vote