The U.S. is setting duties on Canadian softwood lumber that would effectively lower the punitive tariffs on most producers as the long-simmering trade dispute drags on.Average preliminary anti-dumping and countervailing duties of nearly 12% will be levied on Canadian softwood lumber producers, the U.S. Department of Commerce said Tuesday in an email. The move follows the government’s decision in late 2021 to raise the combined duty rates on shipments from Canadian companies. Producers such as Canfor Corp. will see combined duty rates drop from nearly 20% to 6.75%, and Resolute Forest Products Inc. will pay duties of 20%, down from nearly 30%. West Fraser Timber Co. will see its rates rise to 13% from about 11%.
The final decision on rates won’t be known until August, and Canadian producers will be paying average rates of 18% until then, according to British Columbia’s Lumber Trade Council.``We continue to hope that the U.S. industry will put an end to this decades-long litigation and instead work with us to meet demand for the low carbon wood products the world wants,’’ BC Lumber Trade Council CEO Susan Yurkovich said Tuesday in a statement.
The Biden administration’s move to reduce tariffs is an important step to addressing America’s ``housing affordability crisis,’’ Chuck Fowke, chairman of the National Association of Home Builders, said in a statement. Swings in the lumber market have added more than $18,600 to the price of a new home since late summer, and the industry is urging the U.S. to negotiate with Canada on a new softwood lumber agreement to eliminate duties, he said.Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said Tuesday at a Senate hearing that she supports finding a lasting solution for the Canada softwood lumber issue to end the need for anti-dumping and countervailing duties.