Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada-U.S. Softwood Lumber Deal Set To Expire Oct. 12; Priority For B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Oct, 2015 12:28 PM
    VICTORIA — The softwood lumber agreement between Canada and the United States expires Monday, and British Columbia is signalling that reaffirming lumber trade stability between the two countries must become a top priority of the new government in Ottawa following the federal election.
     
    B.C. Premier Christy Clark said the importance of a renewed lumber deal between Canada and the U.S. is her first topic of discussion with the federal government.
     
    "For lumber producers, and the communities throughout (B.C.) that depend on them, we need to avoid an unnecessary trade dispute with our most significant market," Clark said in a statement at the B.C. legislature. "When the new federal government is formed later this month, this is the first issue I'll be raising with the prime minister."
     
    The 2006 agreement ended five years of court battles and returned $4 billion of $5 billion in duties collected by the U.S. to Canadian producers, with more than half — $2.4 billion — returned to B.C. companies.
     
    Over the past two years B.C. has been working with the federal government on an extension or renewal of the softwood lumber agreement, but so far the U.S. has not been willing to start talks, Clark said in the legislature last week.
     
    The current agreement includes a provision that keeps the deal in effect for a year after the expiry date and precludes the U.S. from bringing trade action against Canadian softwood lumber producers.
     
    "I believe this is an important issue for both Canadian and U.S. producers," said Susan Yurkovich, B.C. Lumber Trade Council spokeswoman. "We are hopeful that this would be an issue that would get urgent attention from the new government to find out if we can find a way forward."
     
    The Lumber Trade Council represents the majority of B.C. lumber production companies.
     
    B.C. is Canada's largest producer of softwood lumber, accounting for 55 per cent of Canada's lumber exports to the United States, the province's Forests Ministry said.
     
    The industry creates about 145,000 jobs and about 40 per cent of the province's rural communities depend on the industry.
     
    The ministry said the value of B.C. lumber exports to the United States is about $3 billion annually. 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, when the softwood agreement was signed, 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 U.S. were $3 billion and $1.43 billion to China.
     
    "While we believe that another managed trade agreement is possible, we are also actively preparing to defend B.C.’s softwood lumber industry against any potential legal challenges brought by the United States, as we have done successfully in the past,” Yurkovich said.
     
    Forests Minister Steve Thomson is leading a forestry trade mission to Japan and China next month in an effort to expand B.C.’s second- and third-largest markets for softwood lumber products.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Manning Awards For Innovation Handed Out In Saskatoon; 2 Manitobans Win Top Prize

    Manning Awards For Innovation Handed Out In Saskatoon; 2 Manitobans Win Top Prize
    Two Manitoba researchers have won $100,000 for developing a laser device  to allow surgeons to better treat patients with brain lesions.

    Manning Awards For Innovation Handed Out In Saskatoon; 2 Manitobans Win Top Prize

    East Vs. West: Canadian Regional Differences On Display At TPP Trade Talks

    East Vs. West: Canadian Regional Differences On Display At TPP Trade Talks
    From the Liberal governments of eastern Canada, it's consternation. From a western Conservative premier, however, the prospect of Canada reaching a historic trade deal elicits celebration.  

    East Vs. West: Canadian Regional Differences On Display At TPP Trade Talks

    Omar Khadr In Toronto On Court-approved Visit With Grandparents

    Khadr's lawyer Dennis Edney says Khadr arrived in Toronto from Edmonton, dispelling earlier doubts that he might have been on Canada's no-fly list, which could have prevented him from travelling.

    Omar Khadr In Toronto On Court-approved Visit With Grandparents

    Lawsuit Launched Against City Of Vancouver Over Missing-Women Memorial

    Lawsuit Launched Against City Of Vancouver Over Missing-Women Memorial
    Sean Kirkham, also known as Sean Faludi, filed a notice of civil claim in B.C. Supreme Court this week, alleging city Coun. Kerry Jang defamed him in a news story about "The Living Stones" project.

    Lawsuit Launched Against City Of Vancouver Over Missing-Women Memorial

    Four Lion Cubs Born At Toronto Zoo 'Appear Healthy,' Zoo Says

    Four Lion Cubs Born At Toronto Zoo 'Appear Healthy,' Zoo Says
    The zoo says in a Facebook post that the white lion Makali gave birth last weekend to four cubs, fathered by another white lion, Fintan.

    Four Lion Cubs Born At Toronto Zoo 'Appear Healthy,' Zoo Says

    Two Proposed LNG Projects On Vancouver Island Get Nod For Export Licences

    Two Proposed LNG Projects On Vancouver Island Get Nod For Export Licences
    Steelhead says the National Energy Board has approved a 25-year licence for the annual export of up to six million tonnes of LNG from a proposed floating liquefaction and export terminal in Saanich Inlet.

    Two Proposed LNG Projects On Vancouver Island Get Nod For Export Licences