Close X
Tuesday, February 25, 2025
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

NDP MPs break ranks on B.C. pipeline protests

NDP MPs break ranks on B.C. pipeline protests
The B.C. RCMP arrested several people, including a photojournalist and a documentary filmmaker, last month when officers moved to enforce an injunction barring protesters from blocking an access road used by Coastal GasLink workers.

NDP MPs break ranks on B.C. pipeline protests

Immunity against Omicron still unknown: experts

Immunity against Omicron still unknown: experts
Experts and global health leaders say it's still too soon to tell whether the Omicron variant will significantly threaten immunity gained from current COVID-19 vaccines as calls grow in some corners for expanded booster shots.

Immunity against Omicron still unknown: experts

B.C. giving $1 million to wildfire-ravaged Lytton

B.C. giving $1 million to wildfire-ravaged Lytton
The British Columbia government says it is immediately providing a grant of $1 million to support the Village of Lytton as it recovers from a destructive wildfire last summer. The fast-moving fire razed much of the Fraser Canyon community on June 30, just one day after the temperature there hit an all-time Canadian high of 49.6 Celsius.    

B.C. giving $1 million to wildfire-ravaged Lytton

379 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

379 COVID19 cases for Wednesday
There are 2,874 active cases of COVID-19 in the province, and 215,884 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 224 individuals are currently in hospital and 77 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

379 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

Advocate says seniors abuse falls through 'cracks'

Advocate says seniors abuse falls through 'cracks'
British Columbia's seniors advocate is calling for a provincewide approach for reporting seniors abuse amid complaints that are "significantly rising." Isobel Mackenzie says there is a clear five-year pattern of increasing reports of seniors abuse and neglect, but the fragmented reporting system suggests the problem could be more widespread.

Advocate says seniors abuse falls through 'cracks'

Canadian officials to boycott Olympics: Trudeau

Canadian officials to boycott Olympics: Trudeau
Canada will join a diplomatic boycott of the Winter Olympics in Beijing next year, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Wednesday. The decision comes two days after the United States announced it would send government officials to the Olympics over concerns about China's human rights record.

Canadian officials to boycott Olympics: Trudeau