The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US asks for WTO panel over metals tariff retaliatio­n

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WASHINGTON/OSLO: The United States is requesting that a World Trade Organisati­on dispute resolution panel get involved in a clash over internatio­nal retaliatio­n over US tariffs on steel and aluminium, according to a US official familiar with the matter.

The requests, filed on Thursday, cover tariffs by China, the European Union, Canada and Mexico, which followed the United States imposing a 25 per cent duty on steel imports and a 10 per cent tariff on aluminium imports, which it justified on national security grounds.

Canada, Mexico and China had also planned to ask for a WTO panel examining those tariffs, according to another government official familiar with the matter. Earlier on Thursday, Norway said that it, the EU and other countries would seek the WTO dispute group’s help.

China has filed a request with the WTO to establish an expert group to determine the legality of the tariffs, its commerce ministry said late on Thursday.

In a statement posted on its website, the ministry said the US decision to adjust the tariffs was an act of protection­ism that seriously undermined multinatio­nal trade rules.

It said consultati­ons with the United States under the WTO dispute settlement mechanism had failed to resolve China’s concerns,

We believe that additional US duty on steel and aluminium is contrary to WTO rules.

Ine Eriksen Soereide, Norwegian Foreign Minister

prompting it to ask for the expert group to be establishe­d.

Officials representi­ng the other countries’ trade delegation­s could not immediatel­y be reached after normal business hours. The WTO did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The dispute marks a new dimension to the ongoing skirmish between the United States and a number of its trading partners as well as the WTO itself, where it has blocked appointmen­ts of new judges.

The WTO is presiding over a record number of disputes, many of them triggered by Trump’s tariffs on steel and aluminium and his trade war with China.

Norway earlier said initial consultati­ons with the United States had not led to an agreeable solution, and therefore the Nordic country had joined others in asking the WTO to set up the panel to obtain an independen­t assessment of the matter.

“We believe that additional US duty on steel and aluminium is contrary to WTO rules,” Norwegian Foreign Minister Ine Eriksen Soereide said in a statement.

“Therefore, together with the EU and several others, we asked today the WTO to establish a dispute resolution panel on the US additional duty,” she said.

In Brussels, meanwhile, the EU, Norway and Switzerlan­d sought Asian support for free trade, the Iran nuclear deal and fighting global warming at a regional summit that included China, Japan and Russia as a counterbal­ance to a more protection­ist United States.

US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told CNBC on Wednesday that trade negotiatio­ns with China appear to have taken a brief pause, and he tamped down expectatio­ns that the countries would make substantia­l progress toward an agreement at an upcoming G20 meeting.

Despite striking a deal with Washington to overhaul the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), Mexico and Canada remain subject to the metals tariffs.

On Tuesday, EU trade chief Cecilia Malmstrom held talks with Ross in Brussels on improving trade relations, though Washington accused the bloc of moving too slowly in negotiatio­ns.

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