Trump
says EU must buy $350B of US energy to get tariff relief
Brussels’
zero-for-zero tariff offer not enough, U.S. president says, but indicates he’s
open to a deal if the bloc commits to closing the trade deficit in goods.
April 8,
2025 3:21 am CET
By Zoya
Sheftalovich
The European
Union will have to commit to buying $350 billion of American energy to get a
reprieve from Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs, the U.S. president said late
Monday, dismissing Brussels' offer of "zero-for-zero" tariffs on cars
and industrial goods.
Trump's
comments at a White House press conference were in response to European
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen saying earlier Monday that the EU had
offered to drop the bloc's tariffs to zero on cars and industrial goods
imported from the U.S. if Trump reciprocated.
Asked by a
reporter whether the offer was enough for him to back down, Trump said:
"No, it's not."
"We
have a deficit with the European Union of $350 billion and it's gonna disappear
fast," Trump said. "One of the ways that that can disappear easily
and quickly is they're gonna have to buy our energy from us ... they can buy
it, we can knock off $350 billion in one week. They have to buy and commit to
buy a like amount of energy."
Von der
Leyen’s offer came after Trump last week slapped 20 percent tariffs on the EU
and a minimum 10 percent levy on other trade partners. In response, financial
markets across the world have lost trillions of dollars in value, with European
stocks on Monday suffering their biggest one-day falls since the start of the
Covid-19 pandemic.
"A lot
of people say, 'Oh, it doesn't mean anything having a surplus.' It means a lot,
in my opinion. It's almost like a profit or loss statement," Trump said.
The
president was speaking in the Oval Office Monday alongside Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who traveled to Washington to hold talks with
Trump and seek relief from the U.S. tariffs. In comments to the press after the
meeting, the American president doubled down on his criticism of the EU but
indicated he was up for doing a deal with the bloc, as long as it committed to
closing its trade deficit with the U.S. by buying more American energy.
The idea of
buying U.S. energy in a bid to stave off tariffs is not a new one. Almost as
soon as Trump was reelected, von der Leyen suggested opening negotiations to
buy more American liquefied natural gas (LNG). But POLITICO reported that the
U.S. had, in response, offered no clarity about how a deal would work.
On Monday,
asked whether his global tariffs were a strong-arm negotiation tactic or
permanent, Trump said: "There can be permanent tariffs and there can also
be negotiations, because there are things we need beyond tariffs."
He added:
"If we can make a really fair deal and a good deal for the United States,
not a good deal for others, this is America first. It's now America
first."
Later in the
press conference, a reporter asked Trump whether there were two or three
countries on his list that he felt were further along in getting their tariffs
lowered, and Trump name-checked the EU: "European Union. I mean as badly
as they've treated us, they've brought their car tariffs essentially off. I
guess they brought it down to 2.5 and I hear maybe to nothing."
But he also
indicated that he wanted the EU to reduce its standards to allow more U.S.
goods to enter its market, referring to safety measures as "non-monetary
tariffs."
"It's
tariffs where they put things on where they make it impossible for you to sell
a car ... they make it so difficult, the standards and the tests," Trump
said. "They come up with rules and regulations that are just designed for
one reason: that you can't sell your product in those countries. And we're not
gonna let that happen. Those are called non-monetary barriers."
In an
indication of what is driving Trump's actions, the president harked back to a
time when U.S. tariffs were sky high.
"You
know our country was the strongest from 1870 to 1913," Trump said.
"You know why? It was all tariff-based. We had no income tax. Then in
1913, some genius came up with the idea of let's charge the people of our
country, not foreign countries that are ripping off our country."
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