Provincial News

'Razor’s edge of survival': Eby decries increasing softwood tariffs

By The Canadian Press

Published 12:03 PDT, Tue October 14, 2025

Last Updated: 2:27 PDT, Tue October 14, 2025

British Columbia's softwood industry is facing an "existential threat" from increasing U.S. tariffs that needs to be treated with the same urgency by the federal government as threats to Canadian steel and auto jobs, B.C. Premier David Eby says.

Eby held a news conference Tuesday, surrounded by union and industry representatives on the same day an additional 10 per cent duty for softwood lumber and 25 per cent on furniture came into effect. 

U.S. President Donald Trump announced the additional tariffs last month. 

It means Canadian softwood lumber entering the United States will see combined duties and tariffs exceeding 45 per cent.

"When auto parts makers, … when steelworkers in Ontario, when their jobs are in trouble, when their jobs are threatened, it's treated as a national emergency, and rightly so. These are foundational industries for Ontario, for Canada, and I feel the urgency around those steel jobs as much as any Canadian," Eby said.

"What we're asking for today is that same respect, that same concern, that same sense of emergency, is shared for the forest sector in this country."

Eby said he feels some anxiety that other industries, like energy and aluminum, may be at the front of federal officials' minds, when it comes to making trade deals with the United States.

He said it's important the federal government looks at "the whole array of sectors," not just the ones where Trump recognizes that American industries will suffer without a deal.

"A side deal on aluminum is, basically, it's delivering to Trump what he knows he requires and he can't get anywhere else at no additional cost. We've got to make sure that all those industries are moving together in lockstep," the premier said, while standing alongside Forest Minister Ravi Parmar. 

"That's been part of my message to the federal government. Or reach agreement on more vulnerable sectors, like softwood."

Prime Minister Mark Carney announced in August that his government would offer up to $700 million in loan guarantees to help forestry companies and another $500 million to support market diversification.

On Tuesday, Eby said that money is urgently needed.

"There is no time to wait. Jobs and mills are on the line," he said.

In a letter sent to Carney this week, Eby said the tariffs have left anyone with jobs dependent on the forest industry under imminent threat.

"The punitive and unfair tariffs and duties, coupled with historic lows for the price of lumber and the cratering U.S. demand for housing products, have put many forest companies on a razor’s edge of survival," the letter dated Oct. 10 says.

"I’m afraid some will not survive the current state of affairs. Mill workers, loggers, truckers, contractors and all the jobs dependent on an active forestry industry are all under imminent threat."

Eby said in the letter that Canada needs to have programs in place to support workers in the event of curtailments, layoffs and permanent closures, including enhanced unemployment benefits for those workers.

– Ashley Joannou, The Canadian Press

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