A major export from Canada is pulp and paper.
Canada and the U.S.A together export more than 50% of the worlds' wood pulpReferences: Wiggers, Cindy. Trail Guide to World Geography. Nancy, KY: Geography Matters, 2002. Print.
Canada and the U.S.A together export more than 50% of the worlds' wood pulpReferences: Wiggers, Cindy. Trail Guide to World Geography. Nancy, KY: Geography Matters, 2002. Print.
Quebec and Ontario
automobile manufacturing, oil refining, paper and pulp industries, beer brewing, and high-tech industries.
Pulp exports are the largest part of our forest products. Note that some lumber numbers include raw logs. Canada exports some of it's largest trees as raw logs which makes determining lumber exports difficult but even with logs we export more Pulp by value.
A major export from Canada is pulp and paper.
lumber, pulp, and paper
Canada is the country that exports the largest percentage of the world's wood pulp and lumber. Its vast forested areas and well-developed forestry industry contribute to its significant role in wood pulp and lumber exports globally.
USA, includes Raw Logs, lumber, paper and pulp.
Canada and the US trade many things such as; wood products, uranium, car parts, fruits and vegetables, wood pulp, maple syrup, lumber, and much more.
[...]Sweden competes with Canada for world leadership in the export of wood pulp[...] source: http://www.nationsencyclopedia.com/Europe/Sweden-FORESTRY.html
From the United States, IP exports market pulp to more than 40 countries
Lumber, pulp and paper, steel, aluminum ingots, shoes, clothing, plastics, food products of every kind, ships, furniture, and so much more.
Forest based products such as Lumber, timber, wood pulp and paper are some of the products manufactured in BC, Canada
Pulp and Paper meant that logs were not being export raw as they are today. By processing the resources in Canada value is added to the exports making Canada richer than if they just exported the resource in it's raw form. This is why today most countries trading with Canada want the raw resources, they want the logs, not pulp or paper.
Canada and the U.S.A together export more than 50% of the worlds' wood pulpReferences: Wiggers, Cindy. Trail Guide to World Geography. Nancy, KY: Geography Matters, 2002. Print.