
The global trade landscape has fundamentally changed. To meet
this moment, Canada’s new government is developing a
comprehensive industrial strategy. It will invest in domestic
production, develop Canadian expertise, support our companies to
retool and reinvest, and help industries pivot to a growing
Canadian market and those of new, reliable trading partners
around the world.
As part of that strategy, the Prime Minister, Mark Carney, today
announced a series of new measures to help the softwood lumber
industry transform to remain competitive. These measures will
help unlock the full potential of the industry as we scale up
housing and major infrastructure construction and drive
long-term economic growth, rooted in Canadian resources and
innovation.
Canada’s new government will:
Provide up to $700 million in loan guarantees to address the
immediate pressures facing the softwood lumber sector. This will
ensure companies have the financing and credit support they need
to maintain and restructure their operations during this period
of transformation.
Invest $500 million to supercharge product and market
diversification to make the industry more competitive for the
long-term. As technology changes the way we build and demand
grows for softwood lumber, this will increase domestic
processing and value-added production. This investment will also
include initiatives that support Indigenous-led forestry
business development and diversification.
Build Canadian by prioritizing Canadian materials in
construction and changing federal procurement processes to
require companies contracting with the federal government to
source Canadian lumber. As the government delivers on its
mandate to build major infrastructure projects faster and to
increase the pace of homebuilding to nearly 500,000 new homes
per year over the next decade, we will ensure Canadian lumber
and other Canadian materials are prioritized in that
construction. Once established, Build Canada Homes will
provide financing to innovative private sector home builders in
Canada that use Canadian technologies and resources, like mass
timber and softwood lumber.
Diversify international markets for Canada’s sustainably sourced
forest products. We will launch a new initiative to diversify
exports of Canadian wood products, including the reinvigoration
of federal programming to expand offshore markets for
sustainable, innovative, high-quality products. In fast-growing
regions with rising demand for housing and other buildings, we
will promote Canadian lumber as an affordable, sustainable
solution.
Provide $50 million for upskilling, reskilling, and income
supports for more than 6,000 affected softwood lumber workers
through the Labour Market Development Agreements. This
investment builds on temporary enhancements to the Employment
Insurance (EI) program and the EI Work-Sharing program. Through
this investment, we will equip workers with the tools and
training they need to stay competitive – helping them adapt to
new technologies, strengthen their expertise, and excel in
changing industries.
Canada’s economy is shifting from reliance to resilience. During
this time of transformation, these measures will ensure Canada’s
softwood lumber industry and workers are able to adapt and
emerge even stronger.
Source: pm.gc.ca