Steel Orbis reported that European Commissioner for Trade Mr Valdis Dombrovskis on 11th May, during a webinar titled EU Trade Policy in a Post-Covid World, said that a proposal on extending EU''s steel safeguard measures beyond June is likely to be announced in late May. Mr Dombrovskis however warned that proposing an extension of the safeguard would risk causing retaliations from countries such as Turkey and Russia. He said "There is one more factor which we need to keep in mind if we extend the steel safeguard for a period longer than three years. It means that the EU would open itself to retaliation by third countries.”
The safeguard was introduced in 2018 as a response to a 25% tariff that US President Donald Trump imposed on most steel imports. Under global trading rules, countries affected by safeguards that last longer than three years have the right to ask for compensation. If no agreement is reached on compensation, a country can retaliate by imposing import tariffs of a value corresponding to the damage it suffers.
EU steel producers want the safeguard to be maintained as, in their views, the critical conditions that led the EU to impose them are still present, such as protectionism in third country markets, global excess capacity, trade diversion towards the EU triggered by the US Section 232 import tariff having drastically reduced US imports, and the need for the domestic steel industry to recover from the pandemic-induced economic crisis. On the other hand, traders and distributors completely disagree, pointing at the ongoing severe shortage of material, and also at the risk of retaliations by third countries.
- Stainless Steel exhibition,2021
Stainless Steel exhibition, China Stainless Steel exhibition,
Guangzhou Stainless Steel expo,Guangzhou
Stainless Steel exhibition, 2021 Stainless Steel expo,
China Stainless Steel expo
|