The
group's president, Kevin Dempsey, said it was essential that
Washington maintain "strong and effective trade measures to
prevent surges in steel imports from around the world that could
quickly undermine the U.S. industry and our national security."
The comments came after a U.S.-EU summit at which the two sides
agreed to suspend tariffs in a pair of cases involving aircraft
subsidies, saying the move would strengthen cooperation in other
areas, including steel and aluminum.
The EU had pushed Washington to agree to lift tariffs on steel
and aluminum imports by Dec. 1, but U.S. officials refused to
commit to that deadline, mindful of the complexity of reaching a
broader agreement on the long-simmering dispute.
U.S. and EU officials did agree to discuss the 25% steel and 10%
aluminum U.S. tariffs imposed three years ago under former
President Donald Trump, before the end of the year, and to
address excess market capacity, notably from China.
U.S. officials face conflicting demands from U.S. steel industry
groups and unions, who want the tariffs to remain in place, and
U.S. manufacturers who use steel and aluminum, who want them
lifted.
"The 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum should have never been
applied to our allies in the first place. They have only served
to increase the costs of goods manufactured in America compared
to overseas competitors," said the Coalition of American Metal
Manufacturers and Users (CAMMU).
The steel producers' Dempsey said the market situation was
changing constantly, and it would be difficult to find a
bilateral solution to what was essentially a multilateral
problem, especially given concerns that a drop in tariffs could
trigger import surges.
"We're pretty much at the beginning of this process - the U.S.-EU
steel discussions," he said. "The real work has yet to be done."
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; editing by Richard Pullin)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|