Tai
told a U.S. Senate Appropriations subcommittee meeting that a
new lumber trade agreement requires the Canadian government to
address U.S. concerns that its policies amount to subsidies for
Canadian producers.
"When and if Canadian industry and the Canadian government are
ready to address those issues, we stand ready and willing to
enter into negotiations to see if we can once again come to some
kind of an agreement with Canada," Tai said.
U.S. homebuilders, beset with price inflation for lumber and
other building materials, have clamored for President Joe
Biden's administration to remove the anti-subsidy and
anti-dumping duties in place on Canadian softwood lumber,
ranging from 6.75% to 20.24%, depending on the producer.
"Canada has been at the table since the beginning, we are glad
to hear that the United States are ready to meet us there," said
Alice Hansen, spokesperson for Canada's International Trade
Minister Mary Ng.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Tuesday that Biden
was not considering cutting tariffs on Canadian lumber as part
of potential tariff relief he is considering to fight inflation.
The softwood lumber tariffs are the legacy of a decades-long
trade dispute over the structure of Canada's timber sector that
could not be resolved when a quota agreement expired in 2015.
The United States has said that Canadian timber harvested from
federal and provincial lands with low government-set stumpage
fees constitutes an unfair subsidy, while most U.S. timber is
harvested from private land at market rates.
"I talk lumber almost every time I see my Canadian counterpart,"
Tai told the hearing, referring to Ng.
Indicating that the fundamental subsidy dispute is still a major
hurdle, Tai said any resolution would depend on Canada's
willingness to address "an unlevel playing field for our
industry with respect to how they govern their harvesting and
their industry, which has the impact of subsidies for (U.S.)
competitors."
(Reporting by David Lawder, additional reporting by Steve
Scherer in Ottawa; Editing by Will Dunham and Sandra Maler)
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