Trump imposes sweeping 25% steel and aluminum tariffs. Europe immediately retaliates... cnn mar12 2025
President Donald Trump imposed
sweeping 25% tariffs on all steel and aluminum imported into the United States
Wednesday, a policy aimed at leveling the playing field for US manufacturing
but a move that threatens to drive up prices on a broad range of consumer and
industrial goods for Americans.
It’s the latest salvo in Trump’s multifaceted tariff
plan aimed at correcting perceived trade imbalances and reigniting domestic
industry. But it risks igniting a global trade war. The European Union, hit for
the first time by higher US tariffs since Trump returned to the White House,
retaliated within hours with countermeasures on US goods exports.
The tariffs on steel and aluminum mark the first time
in Trump’s second term that a set of tariffs has been applied to all countries.
Imposing steel and aluminum tariffs poses a risky bet:
Although it could give America’s steel and aluminum industries a boost, it will
raise prices on a key ingredient for American manufacturers, which could be
passed on to consumers. The costs could outweigh the benefit.
That’s what happened in Trump’s first term: Although
Trump’s 2018 metals tariffs expanded US production modestly, it sent costs
rising for cars, tools and machines and shrank those industries’ output by more
than $3 billion in 2021, the International Trade Commission found
in a 2023 analysis.
It could also backfire on the industries it’s designed
to protect: Trump’s tariffs could cost 100,000 American jobs,
including 20,000 from the aluminum industry, William Oplinger, CEO of Alcoa,
one of the largest US aluminum makers, warned last month.
Trump 2.0’s
first worldwide tariff escalation
Before Wednesday, Trump had
only enacted tariffs that applied to China, Mexico and Canada this term. In the
case of Mexico and Canada, businesses can avoid paying tariffs through April 2
if they comply with the USMCA.
The EU responded to the
“unjustified” tariffs Wednesday by unveiling countermeasures on up to €26
billion ($28 billion) worth of American goods exports, including tariffs on
boats, bourbon and motorbikes. The measures, which will come into force in
April, are “swift and proportionate,” it said in a
statement.
The US was the second-biggest
destination for the EU’s iron and steel exports last year, according to official
figures released Wednesday. In 2023, the latest year for which
data is available, it was also the second-largest buyer of European aluminum.
However, the latest tariff
hikes do not “move the (macroeconomic) needle much for Europe,” S&P Global
Ratings said earlier this month, after the 25% duties were announced. China has
replaced the US as the top export destination for steel and aluminum, it added
in a note.
Shortly before the tariffs
went into effect, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese criticized them as
“entirely unjustified” and “against the spirit of our two nations’ enduring
friendship,” but said Canberra will impose no reciprocal levies.
“Tariffs and escalating trade
tensions are a form of economic self-harm and a recipe for slower growth and
higher inflation,” he said in a statement. “This is why Australia will not be
imposing reciprocal tariffs on the United States.”
Steel tariffs of 25% launched
in Trump’s first administration and continued by former President Joe Biden
resulted in American importers shifting to other sources.
However, the Biden
administration had allowed for exceptions on the duties from US allies,
including Canada, Mexico, Japan and South Korea. Trump’s latest action reverses
that with no exceptions on any countries’ steel imports to the US. The same
applies for aluminum, with rates climbing to 25% from 10%.
China is the only country
whose aluminum and steel will be tariffed at rates higher than 25%. That’s
because a 20% across-the-board tariff on Chinese imports was already in effect
prior to Wednesday, and the 25% steel and aluminum tariffs will be tacked on
top of that, bringing the total tariff rate to 45% on steel and aluminum from
there.
America imports very little
steel directly from China, by far the world’s largest producer of steel.
Yet Chinese steel does make
its way into the United States secondhand. Some is purchased by foreign
countries and reshipped to the US. And some of it is mislabeled and resold
through various channels.
From cars to
appliances, steel and aluminum are critical inputs
While Trump’s aim is to hurt
the Canadian economy by imposing higher steel and aluminum tariffs on them, the
move risks hurting the American economy as well.
In total, the US imported
$31.3 billion worth of iron and steel and $27.4 billion of aluminum last year,
according to data from the US Commerce Department. (The government data groups
iron and steel together.)
Canada was the top source of
iron, steel and aluminum sent to the US last year, with the US importing $11.4
billion worth of aluminum and $7.6 billion worth of iron and steel from there.
With aluminum, other top
foreign sources shipping to the US include China, Mexico and the United Arab
Emirates. With steel, Brazil, Mexico and South Korea are top sources, according
to US trade data from last year.
Aluminum and steel are used
heavily in an extensive list of goods. Tariffs on both metals could
significantly raise prices for Americans.
For example, cars contain
hundreds, if not thousands, of pounds of steel and aluminum. So, while Trump
said his “substantially” higher auto tariffs will “shut down” the auto industry
in Canada, they are more likely to backfire on US auto production, given how intertwined the
North American car supply chain is.
Appliances, machinery,
infrastructure, medical devices, cans and power lines are all among the many
commonly used products that also rely on steel and aluminum. And to prevent
companies from importing finished goods to skirt tariffs, as many did during
Trump’s first term, this round of tariffs includes many items manufactured with
steel and aluminum.
Even before Wednesday, the
prospect of higher tariffs on steel and aluminum led to sharp increases in
market-traded spot prices for the metals, said Phil Gibbs, an analyst at
KeyBanc.
The price of domestic steel is
up more than 30% in the last two months, he said, while the domestic price of
aluminum has risen about 15%.
Many large industrial
customers might be protected from those price increases in the near term
because of long-term contracts they’ve locked in, but should the steel and
aluminum tariffs stay in place, they can expect to pay more even if the
products they are buying come from domestic mills.
And the tariffs are likely to
affect not only the raw products being imported but also the cost of imported
parts made using the metals. For instance, the price of an aluminum bumper or
radiator purchased by an automaker from a Canadian or Mexican parts supplier
would likely increase.
On again, off
again
Trump’s policy has had plenty
of fits and starts. Hours before enacting the latest tariffs, Trump reversed a threat to
double the rate on steel and aluminum from Canada, the US’s top source of
imports for the metals. Instead, steel and aluminum from there will be subject
to the 25% levy.
“It may go up higher,” Trump
said Tuesday of the 25% tariffs on all countries’ steel and aluminum sent to
the US at an event hosted by the Business Roundtable. “The higher it goes, the
more likely it is they’re going to build,” he said, referring to more companies
moving their production to the US.
Trump backed off his threat to
double the steel and aluminum tariff rates for Canada after Ontario Premier
Doug Ford agreed to pause surcharges on electricity for US customers.
Ford and US Commerce Secretary
Howard Lutnick announced they’d meet Thursday, along with Canadian Finance
Minister Dominic LeBlanc, to renegotiate the free trade treaty known as the
USMCA.
This story has been updated
with additional reporting and context.
CNN’s Chris Isidore, Angus
Watson, Edward Szekeres, James Legge and Olesya Dmitracova contributed
reporting.
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