Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Blame Game Already On As Canada-US Softwood Deal Expires; No Talks On Horizon

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Oct, 2015 11:23 AM
    VICTORIA — Officials in Canada and the United States appear to have resumed the acrimonious softwood trade dispute just where they left off in 2006 — with both sides blaming each other for failing to kick start negotiations.
     
    A British Columbia government official said Tuesday the Americans have ignored Canada's offers to renew or renegotiate the trade agreement.
     
    But the U.S. Lumber Coalition, which represents American producers, said in a statement Canada has been unwilling to begin talks.
     
    "If Canada continues to stay away from the negotiating table, the United States industry will eventually have no choice but to use our rights under U.S. trade laws to offset the unfair advantages provided to Canadian industry," said Charlie Thomas, a Mississippi lumber producer, in a coalition statement. 
     
    Nobody from the coalition was immediately available for comment. The agreement expired Monday.
     
    The B.C. official said Canada indicated it was interested in extending or renewing the existing softwood lumber agreement but has yet to receive a response.
     
    The official said it appeared the Americans were focused on other trade deals, including the recent Trans-Pacific Partnership.
     
    Susan Yurkovich of the B.C. Lumber Trade Council said a renewed or renegotiated softwood-lumber agreement benefits both countries' lumber industries.
     
    "We think it's incumbent on both governments to engage in discussions as soon as possible," she said. "We need to find a way forward for certainty on both sides of the border."
     
    B.C. Premier Christy Clark told the legislature last week the Americans have refused to negotiate despite two years of requests.
     
    She said her first topic of discussion with Canada's prime minister after next week's federal election will focus on the importance of a renewed lumber deal.
     
    American industry groups have long claimed Canada subsidizes its lumber production.
     
    The 2006 agreement was reached to regulate Canadian softwood exports to the U.S.
     
    It ended five years of court battles and returned $4 billion in duties collected by the U.S. on Canadian producers, more than half of which — $2.4 billion — was returned to B.C. companies.
     
    The lumber coalition said in its statement that the 2006 softwood agreement is outdated and the alliance of large and small American lumber producers intends to work with its federal government to reach a new deal.
     
    B.C. is Canada's largest producer of softwood lumber, accounting for 55 per cent of the nation's lumber exports to the U.S.
     
    The value of B.C. lumber exports annually to the U.S. is about $3 billion.
     
    The province's lumber exports to Asia, particularly China, have increased in recent years, but the U.S. remains B.C.'s top lumber export market.
     
    In 2006, B.C. lumber exports to the U.S. were valued at $4.3 billion, with lumber exports to China at $82 million. In 2014, B.C. lumber exports to the United States were $3 billion and $1.43 billion to China.
     
    The expired agreement includes a standstill clause that prevents the U.S. from launching any trade action against Canadian producers for one year.
     
    Yurkovich said the expired deal means dropped export duties on Canadian lumber, but she warns the Americans could be watching for price shifts and use any market changes to influence future negotiations.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    To Curb Sex Determination, Punjab To Engage Detectives

    To Curb Sex Determination, Punjab To Engage Detectives
    Punjab has one of the worst sex ratios among states, with only 846 females per 1,000 males as per the 2011 census.

    To Curb Sex Determination, Punjab To Engage Detectives

    Calgary Sikh Group Organises Week-Long Langar To Promote Equality

    Calgary Sikh Group Organises Week-Long Langar To Promote Equality
    n October 5, the first day, the group set up a tent at the University of Calgary and distributed free food, Metro News portal reported on Tuesday.

    Calgary Sikh Group Organises Week-Long Langar To Promote Equality

    Big Police Presence In Kitchener, Ont. After Man Dies Of An Arrow To Chest

    Big Police Presence In Kitchener, Ont. After Man Dies Of An Arrow To Chest
    Waterloo Regional police say they were called to the neighbourhood around 7 a.m. on Monday at Margaret Ave. and Union St. where they found Michael Gibbon lying on the ground.

    Big Police Presence In Kitchener, Ont. After Man Dies Of An Arrow To Chest

    Ladysmith, B.C., Teenager Zachary Andrew Identified As Victim Of Fatal Crash In Nanaimo

    Ladysmith, B.C., Teenager Zachary Andrew Identified As Victim Of Fatal Crash In Nanaimo
    The BC Coroners Service confirms Zachary Andrew was killed when his northbound sports car was hit by an oncoming vehicle on the Nanaimo Parkway.

    Ladysmith, B.C., Teenager Zachary Andrew Identified As Victim Of Fatal Crash In Nanaimo

    Simon Fraser University Professors Receive Award For Pipeline Battle

    Simon Fraser University Professors Receive Award For Pipeline Battle
    The university has announced Stephen Collis and Lynne Quarmby are the 2015 recipients of SFU's Nora and Ted Sterling Prize in Support of Controversy.

    Simon Fraser University Professors Receive Award For Pipeline Battle

    Slain Woman Found In San Francisco Park Identified As Quebec Tourist Audrey Carey

    Slain Woman Found In San Francisco Park Identified As Quebec Tourist Audrey Carey
    Audrey Carey's uncle had told her family she was embarking on an adventure and decided she would go to for the first time to the United States and then make her way to Europe.

    Slain Woman Found In San Francisco Park Identified As Quebec Tourist Audrey Carey