
The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) announced on April 14 that it has begun investigations into alleged dumping and subsidisation of decorative and non-structural plywood imported from China. The inquiry, launched under the Special Import Measures Act (SIMA), stems from a complaint filed by Columbia Forest Products and the Canadian Hardwood Plywood and Veneer Association. While primarily a trade issue, the probe illustrates CBSA’s broader mandate to police Canada’s borders and enforce fair-trade rules. Increased inspections and potential provisional duties could slow clearance times at marine and land ports, affecting logistics schedules for companies that combine goods shipment with intra-company personnel transfers. Mobility and supply-chain managers should monitor whether additional border checks spill over into passenger processing resources, especially at busy Pacific Coast ports of entry where CBSA officers are already stretched.
For businesses juggling trade compliance and the movement of staff, obtaining the correct travel documentation quickly is just as critical as clearing goods. VisaHQ’s Canada portal (https://www.visahq.com/canada/) lets employers and travellers arrange eTAs, work permits, and visas through a single online dashboard, helping teams sidestep paperwork bottlenecks that can arise when border resources are under pressure.
In past dumping cases, short-staffing occasionally led to secondary inspection queues for work-permit holders arriving on the same vessels carrying targeted goods. If preliminary duties are imposed (a decision is due by July 9), importers may need to place higher security bonds, diverting cash flow that could otherwise fund cross-border project staffing. Companies that rely on Chinese plywood for retail fit-outs or construction should map alternative sourcing options to avoid project delays that, in turn, could postpone expatriate assignments tied to site openings. The Canadian International Trade Tribunal (CITT) will make an initial injury determination by June 9. A finding of injury could lock in duties for five years, reinforcing the need for long-term procurement and mobility planning.
For businesses juggling trade compliance and the movement of staff, obtaining the correct travel documentation quickly is just as critical as clearing goods. VisaHQ’s Canada portal (https://www.visahq.com/canada/) lets employers and travellers arrange eTAs, work permits, and visas through a single online dashboard, helping teams sidestep paperwork bottlenecks that can arise when border resources are under pressure.
In past dumping cases, short-staffing occasionally led to secondary inspection queues for work-permit holders arriving on the same vessels carrying targeted goods. If preliminary duties are imposed (a decision is due by July 9), importers may need to place higher security bonds, diverting cash flow that could otherwise fund cross-border project staffing. Companies that rely on Chinese plywood for retail fit-outs or construction should map alternative sourcing options to avoid project delays that, in turn, could postpone expatriate assignments tied to site openings. The Canadian International Trade Tribunal (CITT) will make an initial injury determination by June 9. A finding of injury could lock in duties for five years, reinforcing the need for long-term procurement and mobility planning.