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Canadian manufacturers face new Buy American policy on construction materials

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Canadian manufacturers are once again facing the risk of being hit by U.S. protectionism and the need to fight for crucial exemptions.

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The challenge comes after the Biden administration announced new procurement guidance Monday that requires the construction material purchased for federally-funded infrastructure projects to be produced in the U.S.

Dennis Darby, head of Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters, says Canada will have to work hard to secure carve-outs and waivers to protect access to the U.S. market, as it has done in previous challenges.

Key to those efforts will be emphasizing the integrated nature of the economies, where materials already flow freely across the border, and how Canada is rarely in a position to undercut U.S. prices.

“Canada and the U.S. don’t compete with each other in the manufacturing sector; we actually make things together. And that’s a truism, it’s not even a cliche,” Darby said in a phone interview.

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Across the continent, some grades of steel are made almost exclusively in Canada while others are produced in the U.S., he noted.

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“We’d love to say, ‘Buy North American.’”

The U.S. provisions are likely intended to target countries like China, where there are concerns about subsidized production and the dumping of products for exports at problematically low prices, Darby added.

The Buy American rules, part of the US$1-trillion infrastructure package that was passed into law last November, allow for several scenarios where the requirements could be waived, including if they’re inconsistent with public interest or if the materials aren’t produced in sufficient quantities or satisfactory quality domestically.

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Federal agencies will be responsible for approving all waivers, which the White House says should target specific products and projects “to the greatest extent applicable,” rather than whole sectors or product types.

In response to the Buy American push, Global Affairs Canada and the federal Finance Department are in the midst of consultations on reciprocal procurement policies. The two departments said last month the new U.S. requirements “are expected to negatively affect Canadian suppliers’ access” to U.S. markets.

The federal hearings follow a Liberal budget commitment last year pledging “to ensure that goods and services are only procured from countries that grant Canadian businesses a similar level of access to their procurement markets.”

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