U.S. Home Builders Seek New
Lumber Sources In Russia
October 11,
2006 - Addressing the International Forestry Forum here,
U.S. home builders offered to share American home building
technology with their Russian hosts and encouraged them to boost exports of
softwood lumber and other wood products to America.
We support opening up
competition in the U.S. lumber
market because we know that it will be beneficial for those families in our
country who want to buy homes, said Jerry Howard, executive vice
president and CEO of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB). We
also appreciate the benefit it will bring to our home builders, who are seeking
a steady supply of affordably priced
lumber.
Howard and NAHB Immediate Past
President David Wilson, a home builder from Ketchum, Idaho, represented NAHB and the International Housing
Association (IHA) at the conference. NAHB serves as the secretariat of the IHA,
which was established in 1984 to provide a forum for home builders and related
industry groups around the world to share information and discuss issues
related to the housing industry.
As a result of environmental and
regulatory policies that have greatly reduced timber harvests from public
lands, America today does not have the domestic capacity to meet its
demand for lumber. Last year, more than 38 percent of the lumber used in the
U.S. was imported, with Canada supplying
the bulk of that amount.
However, a new softwood lumber accord
between the U.S. and Canada that is scheduled to take effect on Nov. 1 will
create a complex system of border taxes and quotas that will artificially raise
lumber prices during periods of normal or slow demand, and thereby harm housing
affordability. The pact is also expected to cause new uncertainties for
U.S. builders over the availability and price of Canadian
lumber.
Access to a reliable, steady
supply of lumber is the lifeline for any American home builder, said
Wilson, who provided conference participants with an overview of light-frame
wood construction techniques in the U.S. housing
industry. We believe that lumber trade barriers impose an unreasonable
burden on U.S. home buyers and on the industries that depend on
adequate, affordable supplies of lumber to provide the housing and other vital
goods and services America
needs.
While Howard noted that the new trade
pact is a misfortune for Canada, he said
it represents an opportunity for Russia and the
rest of Europe to increase lumber exports to the U.S. over the
long term.
Today, the U.S. is overly
reliant on Canadian imports to meet its lumber needs, said Howard.
We are reaching out to you to correct this problem and we are looking to
Russia to add equilibrium to our market for this essential
commodity for the home building industry."
The Joint
Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University projects
14.6 million household formations over the next 10 years, he added.
In the next 10 years, we conservatively estimate that we will need to
construct 18 million new homes. We want to work with you to open up this new
trading opportunity.
During their week-long visit to
Russia, Howard and Wilson also held productive talks with
representatives of the Builders Association of Russia, the Union of Timber
Manufacturers and Exporters of Russia, Ilim Pulp
Enterprise, BaltRoss, Slavyansky DSK and the Association of Wood
Housing.
The meetings come one week after
Howard visited Stockholm
to discuss with Swedish trade and industry officials ways to secure new import
sources of softwood lumber and other wood products and to export American
building systems and log homes technology.
NAHBs European visits to seek additional sources of
softwood lumber follow the associations September board meeting in
Salt Lake City, where policy was instituted to address the pending
U.S/Canada trade pact. A resolution was adopted that calls on NAHB to work with
the governments and industry of other countries to facilitate softwood lumber
imports and encourages the use of alternative building materials wherever
practical in order to protect the interests of American home builders and
consumers. Pre-existing policy urges the U.S. government
to open up additional forest lands for logging.
National Association of
Homebuilders
www.nahb.org