The Scotsman

US tariffs having bigger impact on whisky industry than Covid lockdown

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS paris.gourtsoyan­nis@jpress.co.uk

American import tariffs on Scottish single malt are having a bigger impact on the whisky industry than the coronaviru­s lockdown, sector leaders have warned MPS.

Scots Whisky Associatio­n (SWA) chief executive Karen Betts said the economic fallout from a trade war between the EU and the US was greater than the hit from Covid-19, with distillers now fearing the dispute could deepen and rumble on into 2021.

Washington imposed a 25 per cent tariff on single malt in October last year in an escalating row over subsidies between aircarft manufactur­ers Boeing and Airbus. Appeals from the UK government, including a personal interventi­on from Boris Johnson with Donald Trump, have failed to get the measures eased.

Ms Betts said that in the first six months after the tariffs were imposed, exports to the US – the largest and most valuable foreign market for Scotch whisky – fell by a quarter. In April, the first full month under the coronaviru­s lockdown, exports fell by nearly half, potentiall­y putting thousands of jobs in rural Scotland at risk.

“If we can’t resolve this US tariff issue, it is a more strategic threat to the industry than Covid is, because there’s a risk that we start to lose longerterm market share that takes a very long time to win back,” Ms Betts told MPS on the Scottish Affairs Committee.

The SWA chief executive told MPS that the coronaviru­s outbreak had also delayed a World Trade Organisati­on judgement on an appeal from the EU in the Boeing-airbus dispute, which had been expected in May but would now not be issued before September.

“What that means is that a really substantiv­e negotiatio­n between the EU and the US on the Airbus-boeing dispute is not going to happen before the US elections,” Ms Betts said. “If this tariff cannot be resolved this summer we’re looking at having it in place probably for at least another six months. That’s really concerning.”

The Office of the US Trade Representa­tive also announced on Wednesday that it will undertake the first six-monthly review of the tariffs already imposed under the Boeing-airbus dispute.

“We think that they could make some substantia­l revisions,” Ms Betts said. “They could raise the tariffs on single malt. They could bring in a tariff on blended whiskey. They’ve also got some other new UK products on the list, including gin. It’s important to note that 70 per cent of gin produced in the UK is produced in Scotland.”

 ?? PICTURE: JEFF J MITCHELL/GETTY ?? ↑ Distillers fear the dispute between the US and EU, over subsidies between Boeing and Airbus, could deepen and rumble on into 2021
PICTURE: JEFF J MITCHELL/GETTY ↑ Distillers fear the dispute between the US and EU, over subsidies between Boeing and Airbus, could deepen and rumble on into 2021

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