Canadian Manufacturing

Trudeau vows to ‘work with’ U.S. on softwood lumber; Ministers Carr, Freeland threaten litigation

by The Canadian Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
Exporting & Importing Financing Operations Regulation Sales & Marketing Supply Chain Mining & Resources Public Sector


The newest anti-dumping duty will overlap for about two months with average preliminary countervailing duties of 19.88 per cent announced in April that are set to expire Aug. 27

OTTAWA—Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his Liberal government will continue to work with the U.S. administration to find a resolution to the latest chapter of the long-running dispute over softwood lumber.

Trudeau says Canada has regularly emerged triumphant whenever the U.S.-Canada softwood dispute lands in the courts and the government expects the same outcome again.

Late Monday, the U.S. Department of Commerce hit Canada with with an additional 6.87 per cent in preliminary average anti-dumping tariffs, leaving the industry facing average duties of about 27 per cent.

The newest anti-dumping duty will overlap for about two months with average preliminary countervailing duties of 19.88 per cent announced in April that are set to expire Aug. 27.

Advertisement

A statement late Monday from Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr and Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland promised to “vigorously defend” the sector, “including through litigation.”

Unifor president Jerry Dias calls the latest round of tariffs a “slap in the face” to fair trade that pushes the lumber industry closer to the edge of crisis.

The union, which represents some 24,000 workers in the sector, estimates that sustained combined duties of 25 per cent could eventually result in 25,000 lost jobs north of the border.

Advertisement

Stories continue below