Eby says B.C. could fight lumber tariffs in U.S. courts
VICTORIA — British Columbia Premier David Eby said a ruling by the United States Supreme Court that strikes down far-reaching global tariffs opens the door to challenge other tariffs that currently hurt his province’s softwood lumber industry.
While Friday’s ruling does not lift long-standing American anti-dumping levies on B.C. softwood, Eby says it “opens up the possibility” of the province mounting a legal challenge in U.S. courts to the additional 10-per-cent tariff imposed last fall on national security grounds.
“The Supreme Court of the United States said very clearly that they would read carefully the authorities that are given to the president and Congress in determining whether or not tariffs are justified, and that careful reading, in my opinion, would not find that B.C. wood products are a national security threat to the United States,” he said.
Eby added that the additional 10 per cent tariff “has been quite devastating” for the softwood lumber sector.


