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New Brunswick

Woodlot owners worry softwood duties will push them out of business

Sawmill owners and wood producers are worried their companies won't survive if the U.S. imposes duties on softwood lumber imports, says Rick Doucett, president of the New Brunswick Federation of Woodlot Owners.

U.S. is expected to announce decision Tuesday on levying duties on Canadian softwood lumber

The U.S. is expected to announce its position Tuesday on softwood lumber duties, which Rick Doucett says could hurt private woodlot owners and sawmill operators. (CBC)

Sawmill owners and wood producers are worried their companies won't survive if the U.S. imposes duties on softwood lumber imports, says RickDoucett,president of the New Brunswick Federation of Woodlot Owners.

The U.S. Department of Commerce is expected to announcea decision Tuesday on levying duties against Canadian softwood lumber imports, whichcould end a 10-yearCanada-U.S. softwood lumber agreement.

Twenty-five New Brunswick sawmills owned by 14 companies will be affected if the United States imposes aduty on Canadian softwood lumber, according to the provincial government.

"Our biggest concern is if [the duties] are too big, the companies can't absorb thoseand some will go out of business," said Doucett. "Then we lose further competition and further markets."

He said estimates of the new duties range between 20 and 40 per cent, which could lead to closures, the worst-case scenario in New Brunswick.

The issue of duties isn't new, since the U.S. has maintained for years thatthe Canadian lumber industry is unfairly subsidized.

Doucett said the biggest difference now is that New Brunswick hasconsolidated its marketplaces and a lot of sawmills have already disappeared since 2006, when the two countries agreed on a solution to their longstanding dispute.

Crown vs. private

Doucettsaid private sources of wood would be key to exemptions from new U.S. duties, yet New Brunswick policies have allowed J.D. Irving and other big forestry companies to harvest even more wood from Crown lands in recent years rather than buying from private woodlot owners.

In 2006,Doucettsaid, the private wood sector was running around 25 to 27 per cent of the total market share, but by2008 it was down eight per cent.

"The issue is if we're not managing the private market that well in the province, we start to lose ability to make that argument that these companies having access to public land are not at an unfair advantage that's where we dropped the ball a little bit over the last decade."

He said his group has pleaded itscase to successive governments for making sureprivate woodlot owners play a greater role in the New Brunswick market.

"We've ... said, 'Look guys, we need to get this marketing situation sorted out here in the province because it could turn around and bite us and this is one of the ways it could.'"

We shouldn't have a crisis like this to reflect on how the public forest is managed in the province.-RickDoucett

Last week the province announced thatit intends to fight for exclusion from border duties on softwood lumberand said atask force was looking at what can be done to mitigate the effects of any duty.

"As the forestry sector we are feeling a bit maligned and somewhat dismissed as far as an important part of the sector," Doucettsaid.

New Brunswick mills account for about two-thirds of the lumber production in Atlantic Canada, and receiving favourable treatment from the United States is viewed as critical to sustaining the industry and jobs that depend on it.

Nearly$470million of New Brunswick softwood was exported last year more than 90 per cent of it destined for the U.S.

With files from Information Morning Fredericton