National Post (National Edition)

Canadian aluminum firms want exemption

- SUNNY FREEMAN

Canada’s aluminum industry wants an exemption from a U.S. investigat­ion into whether aluminum imports threaten national security, the latest in a series of American trade offensives hitting Canadian industries.

U.S. President Donald Trump opened an investigat­ion Wednesday into the impact of aluminum import on national security, which could lead to duties on the metal crossing its borders. The White House is concerned unfairly traded imports are hurting the American aluminum industry.

A majority of aluminum used in U.S. manufactur­ing and constructi­on is imported and about 60 per cent of those imports originate in Canada. China, the secondbigg­est supplier to the U.S., has been accused of flooding the market by exporting the product at a lower price than is charged domestical­ly.

The United Steelworke­rs in both Canada and the U.S. issued a statement Thursday calling on the U.S. to exclude the Canadian-produced lightweigh­t metal used in manufactur­ed goods, saying China is the problem.

It said it will make submission­s to the U.S. Commerce department arguing for the exclusion of Canada.

“The action will help identify the importance of aluminum but it may not identify the right response: China’s overcapaci­ty is swamping world markets, driving down prices and making some operations unprofitab­le,” said Leo Gerard, USW Internatio­nal president.

“Canadian aluminum, like Canadian steel, is not a threat to American national security,” said USW’s Canadian director Ken Neumann. “Quite on the contrary, the Canadian industry is a stable and reliable source of aluminum, in close proximity to the American market.”

The Aluminium Associatio­n of Canada said it’s confident investigat­ors will recognize that Canadian aluminum supplies are part of the solution, not the problem. Rio Tinto, the largest aluminum producer in Canada, also said Canadian aluminum complement­s U.S. industry.

Rio Tinto has previously said its 10,000 employees in Canada support some 150,000 industry jobs in the U.S. and any increased cost to import aluminum from Canada could affect American jobs.

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