U.S.-Canada clash over softwood seen as trade-policy test

A long-simmering trade dispute between the U.S. and Canada over lumber is heating up, increasing the cost of building houses and causing American businesses to hunt for supplies in other countries.

A detente between the normally friendly neighbors expired in October, and a new agreement isn't on the horizon. That's contributed to a more than 20 percent surge in wood prices since the U.S. election and has the U.S. poised to impose tariffs that may send prices even higher.

Since the early 1980s, the U.S. has argued with Canada over how much softwood lumber the country's suppliers can sell in the U.S. and at what price. The two nations have negotiated temporary agreements in previous years over softwood, which comes from trees that have cones, like pine or spruce, and is preferred by builders for constructing home frames.

But hammering out a new deal has been slow-going for President Donald Trump's administration, which still doesn't have its chief trade negotiator in place.

"There's a tremendous amount of frustration because of this," said Jerry Carter, a custom-home builder and remodeler in Dallas. "It's similar to the impact if you go to buy gas one day and decide not to buy it when it was three dollars, and then you go back first thing in the morning and it's four dollars. Except you're buying $10,000 worth of gas."

After the latest deal lapsed, a group including U.S. timber companies petitioned an independent government agency and the U.S. Commerce Department for duties on lumber imports from Canada, saying the country unfairly subsidizes its own industry, costing profits and jobs. Those taxes, the first of which is expected to be announced by the end of April, could total more than 30 percent.

While beneficial for U.S. lumber suppliers, tariffs could lead to even higher costs for companies that buy wood, such as builders and mattress makers, which use it in box springs.

Trump has been highly critical of existing trade deals and has called for the renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement, which could ultimately include the wood dispute. Trump picked Robert Lighthizer to be the next U.S. trade representative in January, and his nomination is pending before the Senate.

Lighthizer said at his confirmation hearing last month that he views the lumber dispute as the top trade issue between the U.S. and Canada. Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden told Lighthizer the fight is the "longest-running battle since the Trojan War."

The $4.7 billion in softwood lumber that Canada sent to the U.S. in 2015 made up less than 2 percent of its exports to the U.S., but the wood trade has an outsize impact in timber-producing regions of both countries.

Most of the softwood in Canada is owned by provincial governments, which set prices to cut trees on their land, while it's generally harvested from private property in the U.S. The fees charged by Canadian governments are below market rates, creating an unfair advantage, U.S. producers say. Canada disputes that.

U.S. import penalties could increase the market price for wood even more, boosting profits for producers. Builders may suffer unless they can pass the higher prices along to consumers.

Then there are the mattress companies.

Canadian softwood is their lumber of choice for box springs because they claim colder climates produce a finer grain, which reduces warping and squeaks. The manufacturers are concerned the dispute will result in less lumber flowing into the U.S. and want the lower-grade Canadian wood they use exempted from any tariffs or restrictions.

"The last thing you want is a customer returning a product because the wife says every time her husband turns over the box spring squeaks," said Ryan Trainer, president of the International Sleep Products Association, a trade group for the mattress industry that has lobbied for the exemption.

Some large builders can lock in lumber prices for months, but eventually both large and small builders will either pass the higher prices to buyers or earn less money.

Carter, the Dallas homebuilder, recently passed on the higher prices to a buyer. For a 3,300-square-foot home he's constructing for a young couple, he'd estimated late last year the lumber would cost $27,000. Recently, when he went to lock in the price, the quote came in $4,500 higher.

"I just placed the order for it. I had to take a second glycerin pill to get my heart working right after the price increase," Carter said.

The National Association of Home Builders, a trade lobby, says the lumber price increase since the election has added about $3,000 to the $225,323 cost of building an average, single-family home, not including land.

"The point is simply to make sure that we use this situation to develop long-term policies that provide for a consistent and fairly priced supply of lumber," said Jerry Howard, the chief executive officer of the builders association.

U.S. lumber producers don't see it that way. They say Canadians have undercut them and forced the closing of American mills.

"The cost of lumber in an average home is negligible," said Zoltan van Heyningen, executive director of the U.S. Lumber Coalition, who points out lumber prices are still below the level of several years ago. "I don't understand what they're doing."

His group joined with U.S. timber growers, owners and workers to form a group dubbed the Committee Overseeing Action for Lumber International Trade Investigations or Negotiations, or Coalition, to advocate for duties against Canadian wood.

Fearing further supply disruptions, the homebuilders association has searched for lumber in other countries.

Chile looked like one promising source, and the homebuilders sent a delegation there in September to meet with producers. But weeks of fires this year ravaged Chile's forests, making it unlikely the country will be a large supplier anytime soon.

SundayMonday Business on 04/23/2017

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