Trump to
announce 25% aluminum and steel tariffs as China’s levies against US come into
effect
US president
accused of ‘shifting goalposts’ by premier of Ontario for adding further
tariffs on top of existing metal duties, as China’s fossil fuel levies comes
into force
Helen
Davidson and agencies
Mon 10 Feb
2025 08.09 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/feb/09/trump-steel-aluminum-tariffs
Donald Trump
has said he will announce new 25% tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports
into the US on Monday that would affect “everybody’, including its largest
trading partners Canada and Mexico, in another major escalation of his trade
policy overhaul.
Trump’s
pre-announcement came as China’s retaliatory tariffs, announced last week, came
into effect. The measures target $14bn worth of products with a 15% tariff on
coal and LNG, and 10% on crude oil, farm equipment and some vehicles.
The US
president, speaking to reporters on Air Force One on Sunday, also said he would
announce reciprocal tariffs – raising US tariff rates to match those of trading
partners – on Tuesday or Wednesday, which would take effect “almost
immediately”. “And very simply, it’s, if they charge us, we charge them,” Trump
said of the reciprocal tariff plan.
The move on
steel and aluminum brought a swift reaction from Doug Ford, the premier of the
Canadian province of Ontario, who accused the US president of “shifting
goalposts and constant chaos” that would put the economy at risk.
Monday’s
tariffs would come on top of existing metals duties.
The largest
sources of US steel imports are Canada, Brazil and Mexico, followed by South
Korea and Vietnam, according to government and American Iron and Steel
Institute data.
By a large
margin, Canada is the largest supplier of primary aluminum metal to the US,
accounting for 79% of total imports in the first 11 months of 2024. Mexico is a
major supplier of aluminum scrap and aluminum alloy.
During his
first term, Trump imposed tariffs of 25% on steel and 10% on aluminum, but
later granted several trading partners duty-free quotas, including Canada,
Mexico and Brazil.
Joe Biden
extended these quotas to Britain, Japan and the European Union, and US steel
mill capacity utilization has dropped in recent years. White House spokesperson
Karoline Leavitt said that the new tariffs would come on top of the existing
duties on steel and aluminum.
Trump’s
rollout of tariffs has been widely criticised and prompted volatile market
reactions and fear of more to come. Beijing has lodged a complaint with the
World Trade Organization, but otherwise has been muted in its response. The
tariffs imposed by Trump are far below the level he had threatened during the
election campaign, and analysts have said China was prepared for them.
Beijing’s
actions – which also include investigations into several US companies including
Google – were seen by analysts as measured and allowing room for negotiation.
Amid wider
pushback against Trump’s economic heavy-handedness, French President Emmanuel
Macron warned in an interview broadcast on Sunday that he was willing to go
“head-to-head” on tariffs with the US president. “I already did so, and I will
did (sic) it again.”
Macron told
CNN that the EU should not be a “top priority” for the US, saying: “Is the
European Union your first problem? No, I don’t think so. Your first problem is
China, so you should focus on the first problem.”
Macron said
tariffs would harm European economies but also the US, given the level of
economic ties. “It means if you put tariffs on a lot of sectors, it will
increase the costs and create inflation in the US. Is it what your people want?
I’m not so sure,” he said.
He said the
EU must be ready to react to US actions, but stressed that the 27-nation bloc
should mainly “act for ourselves”. “This is why, for me, the top priority of
Europe is competitiveness agenda, is defence and security agenda, is AI
ambition, and let’s go fast for ourselves.
“If in the
meanwhile, we have [a] tariff issue, we will discuss them and we will fix it.”
Trump has
long complained about the EU’s 10% tariffs on auto imports being much higher
than the US car rate of 2.5%. He frequently states that Europe “won’t take our
cars” but ships millions west across the Atlantic every year.
The European
Commission said on Monday it would react to protect EU interests, but said it
would not respond until it had detailed or written clarification of the
measures. “The EU sees no justification for the imposition of tariffs on its
exports. We will react to protect the interests of European businesses, workers
and consumers from unjustified measures,” the commission said in a statement.
Trump has
also flagged tariffs against Taiwan’s semiconductor industry – which he has
repeatedly and without evidence accused of stealing US business. Taiwan now
appears to be scrambling to prevent that happening. This week senior economic
officials will fly to the US to meet their counterparts. Taiwan’s government
and state-run petroleum company are also reportedly taking steps to buy more US
gas and oil to reduce Taiwan’s trade surplus – a key factor cited by Trump in
enacting tariffs.
Financial
markets were mostly muted in response to Trump’s comments but gold reached a
record high and aluminum prices rose on Monday. The spot price of gold
increased by more than 1% to $2,896 (£2,336) an ounce, while aluminum rose 0.3%
to $2,635 (£2,122) a tonne.
Reuters
contributed to this article.

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