
High anxiety over softwood lumber despite tone change from U.S.: B.C. premier
British Columbia’s premier says he is encouraged to see a shifting tone in U.S. President Donald Trump’s talks with Canada, but concerns remain about how tariffs could devastate the province’s softwood lumber sector.
Premier David Eby says he will be travelling to Prince George in the B.C. Interior to speak with forest industry representatives, in light of Trump’s statements that the United States doesn’t need Canadian lumber.
Eby, who spoke with Prime Minister Mark Carney on Thursday, says he is hopeful that the change in tone from the White House “means some stability and ultimately grounds to sit down like adults” and reach a new trade agreement.
But the premier also says Trump’s launch of a national security investigation into Canada’s timber practices and U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick’s repeated indications that the sector is a key area of “concern” raise anxiety about the industry’s future.