
The British Columbia government is investing up to $11
million toward four projects in the province aimed at boosting
the local mass-timber manufacturing sector.
Jobs and Economic Development Minister Diana Gibson says in a
statement that the funding comes at a time when government
investment is needed to strengthen “homegrown B.C. companies” in
the forestry sector that provide value-added manufacturing for
the province’s lumber supply.
Gibson says the funding also creates more than 100 jobs in
several regions, while securing employment for hundreds more in
the industry.
Among the projects receiving funding is Nelson-based Spearhead
Timberworks, which will get up to $7.5 million to help build a
new production facility for curved, laminated timber, bonding
layers of wood to create large, durable structural components
for buildings.
In Castlegar, Mercer Celgar Limited Partnership, a kraft pulp
mill, will receive as much as $1.75 million to modernized its
log lines and install equipment, while Penticton’s Greyback
Construction will get about $235,000 to renovate a former mill
site as it diversifies into prefabricated housing construction.
Another project receiving the funding is Langley-based
construction plywood manufacturer Westlam Industries, which will
get $1.5 million for a new plant and automated equipment to
increase production for building local housing and commercial
structures.
The Spearhead investment is expected to create more than 60
jobs, while the Westlam funding may mean hiring up to 46 more
workers, the province says.
“We’re working alongside industry to build a stronger, more
resilient economy that works better for people and communities,”
Gibson says.
The province says the new facility would allow Spearhead to make
“high-complexity, high-value” mass-timber construction
components that would boost the company’s ability to compete for
business internationally.
The funding is being administered through the provincial
Manufacturing Jobs Fund aimed at helping local companies grow
and create more made-in-B. C. products.
The province says nearly a quarter of all B.C. wood-product
makers have applied for funding through the program.
The investment comes at a time of growing uncertainty facing
B.C.’s lumber industry, where U.S. President Donald Trump wants
to boost American lumber production and has directed
investigators to look into the potential harms of importing
Canadian lumber.
West Fraser Timber president Sean McLaren has said that demand
on Canadian lumber could be hampered by the potential
inflationary effects of tariffs imposed by the United States.
Source:
ctvnews.ca