by Greg Quinn
May 5, 2017
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told the leader of timber-rich British Columbia that he would consider her request to ban thermal coal shipments in retaliation for new U.S. tariffs on softwood slumber.
In a letter to B.C. Premier Christy Clark, a copy of which was posted on the provincial government’s website, Trudeau said his officials are “carefully and seriously” considering the federal ban on thermal coal shipments through the province’s ports that she’s proposed.
“The Government of Canada is considering this request carefully and seriously. I have asked federal trade officials to further examine the request to inform our government’s next steps,” Trudeau said in the the letter. “We disagree strongly with the U.S. Department of Commerce’s decision to impose an unfair and punitive duty on Canadian softwood lumber products.”
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The move is a shift for Trudeau who until now has been telling U.S. officials that bilateral trade irritants are minor, and both nations benefit from having integrated production. Clark, who faces elections next week, has been more vocal and said she will impose a carbon tax on coal shipments if Trudeau doesn’t ban them.
U.S. President Donald Trump stoked trade tensions last week by slapping duties on softwood lumber imports from Canada, reigniting a dispute that dates backs decades, while threatening to take actions against Canadian dairy over what the U.S. says are unfair subsidies.
British Columbia says 94 percent of the 6.6 million metric tons of thermal coal exported from the West Coast province last year came from the U.S. Clark’s original request for a ban triggered a fall in the shares of Canadian export terminal operator Westshore Terminals Investment Corp. and U.S. miner Cloud Peak Energy Inc.
Trudeau is also considering other trade actions against the U.S. including duties on Oregon companies, Canadian Press reported on Friday, citing sources who requested anonymity.
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