Toronto Star

CSeries hit with another U.S. duty

Tariffs of 300 per cent on Bombardier jet may intensify the upcoming NAFTA talks

- ROSS MAROWITS THE CANADIAN PRESS

MONTREAL— Bombardier Inc. accused the Trump administra­tion of overreach by siding with Boeing in its bid to shut the CSeries commercial jet from the world’s largest airline market by effectivel­y quadruplin­g the price of any of the planes sold in the United States.

“It represents an egregious overreach and misapplica­tion of the U.S. trade laws in an apparent attempt to block the CSeries aircraft from entering the U.S. market,” the Montreal-based transporta­tion manufactur­er said in response to an additional 80-per-cent anti-dumping duty.

Bombardier said the U.S. Commerce Department has ignored aerospace industry realities, noting that Boeing’s own practice of selling aircraft below production costs for years after launch would fail the test used against the CSeries

“This hypocrisy is appalling, and it should be deeply troubling to any importer of large, complex and highly engineered products,” it said.

The decision intensifie­s political pressure on NAFTA negotiator­s ahead of next week’s resumption of talks among Canada, Mexico and the U.S. The Commerce Department added 79.82 per cent to 219.63 per cent in preliminar­y countervai­ling tariffs it announced last week, once deliveries to Delta Air Lines begin next year.

“The United States is committed to free, fair and reciprocal trade with Canada, but this is not our idea of a properly functionin­g trading relationsh­ip,” stated Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

“We will continue to verify the accuracy of this decision, while (doing) everything in our power to stand up for American companies and their workers.”

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said she was extremely disappoint­ed, but not surprised.

“Boeing is manipulati­ng the U.S. trade remedy system to prevent Bombardier’s aircraft, the CSeries, from entering the U.S. market despite Boeing’s admission that it does not compete with the CSeries,” she said in a statement.

“Our government will continue to vigorously defend the interests of the Canadian aerospace industry and our aerospace workers against irresponsi­ble and protection­ist trade measures.”

Several U.S. senators and House members also expressed their unhappines­s, calling the decision “short-sighted” because it threatens thousands of jobs.

Chicago-based Boeing said it welcomes the decision.

“This determinat­ion confirms that, as Boeing alleged in its petition, Bombardier dumped its aircraft into the U.S. market at absurdly low prices,” it said in a news release.

Countervai­ling duties target what the U.S. considers unfair subsidies, while anti-dumping tariffs go after the alleged selling of imported products below market value.

U.S. aerospace analyst Richard Aboulafia said the high duties will hurt CSeries sales efforts and shut the plane out of the U.S. unless the U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission effectivel­y ends the challenge in February.

“If the ITC doesn’t find that this damaged Boeing then this whole thing vanishes like a bad dream,” he said in an interview.

Aboulafia says the process appears to have been politicize­d, which requires authoritie­s to detail their reasonings to avoid further damage to the internatio­nal jetline sector.

A Bombardier union said it wasn’t surprised by the new duty given the 48-per-cent increase in the number of dumping allegation­s since the Trump administra­tion took office.

“These tribunals are like the right arm of the large corporatio­ns of Boeing,” said Dave Chartrand, Quebec co-ordinator of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Machinists and Aerospace Workers.

Boeing petitioned the government in April after its smaller rival secured a deal for up to 125 of its CS100s with Delta in 2016. The firm order for 75 aircraft had a list price of $5.6 billion (U.S.), although large orders typically secure steep discounts.

 ?? FRANÇOIS MORI/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The countervai­ling tariffs that the United States has imposed against the CSeries jet over the past week would quadruple its price for U.S. buyers.
FRANÇOIS MORI/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO The countervai­ling tariffs that the United States has imposed against the CSeries jet over the past week would quadruple its price for U.S. buyers.

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