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NAFTA panel sides with U.S. softwood lumber decision but B.C. hopes for final win

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VANCOUVER — A NAFTA panel has backed the U.S. International Trade Commission's decision regarding softwood lumber imports from Canada but British Columbia's industry group still hopes for an ultimate victory.

The U.S. Lumber Coalition says the decision affirms the USITC determination from December 2017 that the imports "materially injured" American producers and workers.

It says in a news release that the harm is caused by the Canadian government providing its lumber industry "massive subsidies" and dumping those products into the U.S. market.

The BC Lumber Trade Council says it is disappointed by Friday's decision, saying it remains convinced that the determination that the U.S. industry is injured by Canadian lumber imports is "flawed and without merit."

Despite the decision, it said Canada still has pending World Trade Organization and NAFTA challenges to the U.S. Department of Commerce's underlying countervailing duty and anti-dumping duty determinations that have yet to be resolved.

Council president Susan Yurkovich says the group representing provincial producers is confident those proceedings will again support Canada's position and rule the duties are unwarranted.

"We will continue to work with the Government of Canada to vigorously defend against baseless U.S. trade action on softwood lumber," she said in a news release. 

B.C. Forests Minister Doug Donaldson also expressed disappointment in the ruling and committed to keep fighting for local forestry workers.

"This is only one piece of the ongoing softwood lumber dispute, and resolving this dispute is our top trade priority," he says in a statement.

He also pointed to the separate NAFTA appeals of the Department of Commerce duty determinations.

"We will continue to defend the 57,000 hard-working people whose livelihoods depend on B.C.'s forest industry against these unfair and unjust tariffs."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 22, 2020.

 

The Canadian Press


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