
Commerce Department increases anti-dumping duties to 20.56%,
bringing levies above 27%
B.C. lumber producers and Forests Minister Ravi Parmer expressed
disappointment on Friday (July 25) as the United States
Department of Commerce decided to hike anti-dumping duties on
softwood lumber to 20.56 per cent.
These "anti-dumping" duties are combined with "countervailing"
duties to add fees to Canadian lumber shipped to the U.S.
This rate hike sets anti-dumping duties higher than the
preliminary determination of 20.07 per cent put forward by the
U.S. in April. Canadian producers are still waiting for the
final word on countervailing duties, which is expected sometime
later this summer. The preliminary determination in April for
countervailing rates was 14.38 per cent, which, if brought into
force, would make a combined rate of 34.94 per cent. These rates
are up from 7.66 and 6.74, respectively.
While these rates are valid for the majority of Canadian
softwood lumber producers, Canfor and West Fraser Timber have
company-specific rates. Generally speaking, rates for Canfor
products are set higher than the average and rates for West
Fraser are set lower.
The U.S. uses anti-dumping duties to force specific companies to
sell products at what it determines to be "fair market value,"
arguing those companies are selling products at artificially
depressed prices. It uses countervailing duties to make up for a
foreign government's subsidies in a given industry.
Whether or not these duties are fair to Canadians has been the
subject of a decades-long dispute between the two countries.
While the Americans contend that Canada props up its lumber
industry, creating an unfair competitive advantage, the
Canadians argue that the U.S. uses flawed methodology to arrive
at this conclusion, and in calculating duties.
Kurt Niquidet, president of the B.C. Lumber Trade Council
reiterated this stance in a written statement on Friday.
“These duties are both unjustified and harmful,” he said. “They
unfairly penalize forestry workers and families across British
Columbia, while further increasing costs for American
homebuilders and consumers.”
The B.C. Council of Forest Industries (COFI) issued a separate
written statement saying it wants the lumber trade dispute made
a top national priority and for the province to do more to
bolster the industry.
COFI called for the creation of a dedicated team to clear
permitting backlogs, the release of more volume through B.C.
Timber Sales, and the expansion of salvage and thinning
operations, among other actions.
"The best way to support forest workers is to keep mills
operating and people working," the COFI statement says. "We want
to retain forestry workers, not retrain them."
Source: langleyadvancetimes.com