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New Brunswick seeking continued exemption from duties on lumber exports to U.S.

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New Brunswick seeking continued exemption from duties on lumber exports to U.S.
WATCH ABOVE: The U.S. Department of Commerce is set to rule whether New Brunswick should continue to be excluded from border duties on softwood lumber. Global’s Jeremy Keefe has more – Apr 21, 2017

New Brunswick’s trade-policy minister says he’s confident Atlantic Canadian lumber exports will remain excluded from U.S. duties once President Donald Trump sees the facts.

READ MORE: Christy Clark praises Trump, rips Obama over softwood lumber negotiations

Roger Melanson, who is also president of the province’s Treasury Board, says he’s been working alongside the federal government to secure exclusions in place since 1982.

The U.S. Commerce Department is expected to release a preliminary decision by Tuesday whether to impose duties on Canadian softwood, which American producers say is overly subsidized and unfairly floods their market.

Trump has called Canada’s actions a “disgrace” when it comes to dairy, lumber, timber and energy.

There have been estimates the duties could range from 20-40 per cent.

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“We do not know for sure what the determination will be, but certainly a duty in that range would have an impact on the New Brunswick economy, and certainly on New Brunswick communities where the forestry industry is so important,” Melanson said Friday.

READ MORE: New Brunswick dairy farmers say Donald Trump’s comments not a concern

He said there could be very serious local impacts if specific mills are idled or permanently closed.

Duties have the potential to impact 14 companies operating a total of 25 sawmills in New Brunswick. Representatives of those companies declined any comment as they entered a meeting with the provincial government Friday afternoon in Fredericton.

More than 86 per cent of the province is forested. The forestry industry contributes $1.45 billion to the New Brunswick economy each year and employs more than 22,000 people.

For more than 30 years, Atlantic Canada has been excluded from every softwood lumber agreement and all trade litigation due to unique market conditions.

Melanson said he has had meetings in recent weeks with state officials in Massachusetts and Maine to explain why the exemptions should continue.

“I think when we show the facts, and the results, to the new administration in Washington, I think they’ll get it,” he said.

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The minister uses the example of Junction Lumber in Bathurst, N.B., which he says creates 20 jobs in New Brunswick because of the partnership and access to the U.S. market. Can-Am Cedar, which creates playground equipment with wood from Junction Lumber, creates 12 jobs in Maine.

The New Brunswick government has set up a task force to address the possible duties. Melanson said it aims to determine and mitigate the impact that next week’s ruling could have on New Brunswick communities.

Opposition critic Ross Wetmore says the task force is a case of too little, too late.

“A month before the duties are to take place, they decide to appoint a task force,” he said. “We should have been at the table long ago.”

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