Friday, September 12, 2008

Canadian Industries Operate at Lower Capacity in Second Quarter as Demand Stalls

(The Canadian Press)

Canadian industries operated at 78.9% of their capacity in the second quarter of 2008, down from 79.6% in the first quarter. It was the fourth straight quarterly drop as the automotive and forestry sectors saw a continued drop in demand from abroad, Statistics Canada said Friday.
The drop, which affected all sectors in the second quarter, was less pronounced than in the two previous quarters, the agency noted.

“The decline in the utilization rate, while general, was especially pronounced in the forestry, mining and electrical power sectors,” Statistics Canada said. Manufacturers reduced production capacity utilization, operating at 76.7% compared with 77.2% in the first quarter, mostly due to reductions in the transportation equipment, wood products and plastic and rubber products industries. Transportation equipment manufacturing industry utilization fell 2.4 points to 74.5% on a slowdown in U.S. demand for automobile products. Wood products makers saw production capacity fall to 65% from 66.8%, also on weaker U.S. demand.

Increases were seen in machinery manufacture and the petroleum and coal products industries. Machinery manufacturers boosted production capacity utilization four points to 84.5% on increased production of machinery for agriculture, construction and mining extraction. Oil and gas and coal products sharply increased capacity utilization 5.2 points to 82.9%. Output rose 5.9%.

The forestry sector’s dismal performance continued, with output down 4.3% and capacity utilization falling to 74.8% from 76.8%, the lowest rate since the first quarter of 2002.
Summary statistics and a link to the data file are on the Statistics Canada website.