EU trade ministers plan countermeasures to Trump's 'unacceptable' 30%
tariffs
[July 15, 2025] By
SAM McNEIL
BRUSSELS (AP) — EU trade ministers agreed Monday that U.S. President
Donald Trump's announcement of 30% tariffs on the European Union was
“absolutely unacceptable," and they are studying a new set of
countermeasures to respond to the move.
The ministers met Monday in Brussels following Trump’s surprise
announcement over the weekend of such hefty tariffs, which could have
repercussions for governments, companies and consumers on both sides of
the Atlantic. The EU is America’s biggest business partner and the
world’s largest trading bloc.
Maroš Šefčovič, the EU’s trade representative in its talks with the
U.S., said after the meeting that it was “very obvious from the
discussions today, the 30% is absolutely unacceptable.”
He said that the commission was sharing proposals with the 27 member
countries “for the second list of goods accounting of some 72 billion
euros ($84 billion) worth of U.S imports. They will now have a chance to
discuss it. This does not exhaust our toolbox and every instrument
remains on the table.”
Lars Lřkke Rasmussen, foreign minister of Denmark, which recently
assumed the presidency of the EU, said the ministers vowed to work
together in negotiating a trade deal with Washington or agreeing on
countermeasures.
“The EU remains ready to react and that includes robust and
proportionate countermeasures if required and there was a strong,
feeling in the room of unity," Rasmussen told reporters after the
meeting.

The tariffs, also announced for Mexico, are set to start on Aug. 1 and
could make everything from French cheese and Italian leather goods to
German electronics and Spanish pharmaceuticals more expensive in the
U.S., and destabilize economies from Portugal to Norway.
Meanwhile, Brussels decided to suspend retaliatory tariffs on U.S. goods
scheduled to take effect Monday in hopes of reaching a trade deal with
the Trump administration by the end of the month.
The “countermeasures” by the EU, which negotiates trade deals on behalf
of its 27 member countries, will be delayed until Aug. 1. Trump’s letter
shows “that we have until the first of August” to negotiate, European
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told reporters in Brussels on
Sunday.
Maroš Šefčovič, the EU's trade representative in its talks with the
U.S., said negotiations would continue Monday.
“I’m absolutely 100% sure that a negotiated solution is much better than
the tension which we might have after the 1st of August," he told
reporters in Brussels on Monday. But he added that “we must be prepared
for all outcomes.”
“I cannot imagine walking away without genuine effort. Having said that,
the current uncertainty caused by unjustified tariffs cannot persist
indefinitely and therefore we must prepare for all outcomes, including,
if necessary, well-considered proportionate countermeasures to restore
the balance in our transit static relationship.”
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European Commissioner for Trade and Economic Security Maros
Sefcovic arrives for a meeting of EU trade ministers at the European
Council building in Brussels, May 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Omar Havana,
File)
 The letters to the EU and Mexico
come in the midst of an on-and-off Trump threat to impose tariffs on
countries and right an imbalance in trade.
Trump imposed tariffs in April on dozens of countries, before
pausing them for 90 days to negotiate individual deals. As the
three-month grace period ended this week, he began sending tariff
letters to leaders, but again has pushed back the implementation day
for what he says will be just a few more weeks.
If he moves forward with the tariffs, it could have ramifications
for nearly every aspect of the global economy. The American Chamber
of Commerce in the European Union, an influential industry group
representing major American corporations in Europe, said the tariffs
could “generate damaging ripple effects across all sectors of the EU
and US economies” and praised the EU's delay of countermeasures.
In the wake of the new tariffs, European leaders largely closed
ranks, calling for unity but also a steady hand to not provoke
further acrimony.
Just last week, Europe was cautiously optimistic.
Officials told reporters on Friday they weren't expecting a letter
like the one sent Saturday and that a trade deal was to be inked in
“the coming days." For months, the EU has broadcast that it has
strong retaliatory measures ready if talks fail.
Reeling from successive rebukes from Washington, Šefčovič said
Monday the EU is “doubling down on efforts to open new markets” and
pointed to a new economic agreement with Indonesia as one.

The EU top brass will visit Beijing fora summit later this month
while courting other Pacific nations like South Korea, Japan,
Vietnam, Singapore, the Philippines, and Indonesia, whose prime
minister visited Brussels over the weekend to sign a new economic
partnership with the EU. It also has mega-deals in the works with
Mexico and a trading bloc of South American nations known as
Mercosur, and Šefčovič will meet with his counterpart from the
United Arab Emirates next week.
While meeting with Indonesia's president on Sunday, Von der Leyen
said that “when economic uncertainty meets geopolitical volatility,
partners like us must come closer together.”
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