
The B.C. government says it is taking action to
safeguard the province¡¯s lumber industry.
The province's strategy looks to ensure long-term sustainability
and employment in the face of wildfires and tariffs by ramping
up production.
The NDP says it is expanding BC Timber Sales (BCTS), the
provincial industry that manages about 20 per cent of logging on
Crown land. Its new focus will be on mitigating wildfire impacts
and restoring damaged areas quickly.
With more U.S. tariffs on the horizon, potentially as high as
25 per cent, Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar says the work
begins immediately, and the goal is to sustain a harvest of 45
million cubic metres of wood.
"45 million is a number that will support an innovative,
diversified, and thriving industry," Parmar said.
In terms of wildfire management, the project looks to work with
local communities, First Nations, and industry partners to thin
out high-risk areas, remove damaged trees, rehabilitate
rangelands, and deepen its partnership with the BC Wildfire
Service.
Parmar says the federal government will also need to play a
part, especially if Trump raises the tariff on Canadian lumber
imports, which currently sits at over 14 per cent.
"The federal government has not stepped up. It has not done
enough. I've continued to call, alongside the BC Lumber Trade
Council, for federal program investments and trade
diversification, focused on lumber," he said.
He says this initiative is important because the industry's
future is on the line and, should Trump follow through on his
desire to cripple the Canadian sector, experts say an additional
tariff on timber imports would be devastating for B.C., as 75
per cent of its exports go to the U.S.
Source:
vancouver.citynews.ca