CanadaTrump announces higher steel and aluminum tariffs for Canadians
SDA
11.3.2025 - 16:36
ARCHIVE - US President Donald Trump delivers a speech in the Oval Office of the White House. Photo: Uncredited/Pool/dpa/Archive image
Keystone
US President Donald Trump wants to impose additional high tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from Canada. He has instructed his Secretary of Commerce to impose tariffs of a further 25 percent on such imports from there, so that the total tariff will be 50 percent from Wednesday morning. This was in response to Canada imposing a 25 percent price increase on electricity exports to the US, Trump wrote on his Truth Social news service.
Keystone-SDA
11.03.2025, 16:36
SDA
In February, Donald Trump introduced tariffs of 25 percent on steel and aluminum imports, which are to apply generally to imports from all other countries. They are also expected to come into force on Wednesday. Trump argues that excessive steel and aluminum imports threaten US national security. He also accuses China of flooding the global market with cheap metal.
In the post on Truth Social, the US President complained about what he considers to be excessive tariffs imposed by Canada and described the neighboring country's spending on national security as too low. He reiterated his aim for Canada to become a federal state of the USA - a demand that has sparked fierce criticism and protests there for weeks.
According to the latest data, around a quarter of the steel used by industry in the USA is imported. The figure for aluminum is more than 40 percent. The figure is even higher for secondary aluminum, which comes from recycled material.
Economists expect that the higher import costs will increase the production costs of many American industrial companies. Customers would be threatened with price increases and the competitiveness of companies abroad would fall.
Steel and aluminum are actually covered by the North American free trade agreement USMCA. Last week, Trump granted a one-month tariff deferral for these goods after imposing blanket tariffs on goods from Canada and Mexico. It remains to be seen whether this will now also apply to steel and aluminum from Canada and Mexico.
Since taking office, Trump has pursued a lurching course in his tariff policy. For example, he partially suspended tariffs on goods from Canada and Mexico shortly after their introduction - and threatened new punitive measures at the same time.