US planning to impose steel, aluminum tariff on EU: report

Press Trust of India  |  Washington 

The is planning to go ahead with its plan to impose tariffs on and aluminum imports from the EU, which could draw sharp retaliation from the bloc, a media report has said.

On April 30, he extended for 30 days the temporary exemption from the and aluminum tariffs for Canada, and the EU to allow for further negotiation.

The decision, likely to be announced as early as today, comes after the administration's inability to win concessions from European countries, said.

The deadline for getting concessions from ends tomorrow, June 1.

"The move, which has been threatened for months, is almost certain to draw response from the EU, which has threatened to retaliate with its own tariffs on such American products as motorcycles, jeans and bourbon," the daily said.

Trump had granted indefinite exemptions to Argentina, and Brazil, given agreements in principle reached with those trading partners.

also received a permanent exemption from steel tariffs, having negotiated instead an absolute quota equivalent to 70 per cent of 2015-2017 imports. has not negotiated an exemption for its aluminum exports.

Among major to the US, which are not exempted, are India, Japan, Russia, Taiwan, Turkey, China, Vietnam, Thailand, and the

Major suppliers of aluminum which are not exempted are China, Russia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Iran, South Africa, Qatar, Japan, and

In 2017, US imports of steel and covered by Section 232 tariffs totalled USD 29 billion and USD 17.4 billion respectively.

The EU alone accounts for USD 5.9 billion or 20.6 per cent of the total steel imported into the US.

on the other hand exports USD 761 million worth of steel to the US, which is 2.6 per cent of the total import.

On the other hand, with USD 7 billion or 40.5 per cent of the exports, is the top supplier of aluminum to the US followed by the EU (USD 1.2 billion or 7.2 per cent).

In 2017, exported million worth of aluminum to the US, amounting to 2.2 per cent of total aluminum into the country.

According to Wilbur Ross, the US wants to keep negotiating a possible deal that opens markets in to US exports.

"It's not that you can't talk just because there are tariffs," Ross said in at the

"God knows there are plenty of tariffs the EU has in place on us," he said.

The EU disputes the American argument.

"We have not seen any analysis that shows these exports pose a problem to national security," David O'Sullivan, the EU in was quoted as saying by the daily.

"If the wants to open discussions on a possible sort of trade deal, we don't think slapping tariffs on our aluminum and is a way to start off," he added.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, May 31 2018. 12:00 IST