Montreal Gazette

Ottawa will support aluminum, steel producers, Freeland says

- JACOB SEREBRIN

The federal government will provide support for Canadian aluminum and steel producers affected by U.S. import tariffs, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said in Montreal on Wednesday.

“We understand the situation, we understand that the tariffs are illegal and unjust, and we understand the importance of defending and supporting the industry and its workers and we are going to do so,” she said.

While Freeland used her government’s support for the softwood lumber industry as an example of how it has responded to other U.S. tariffs, she said the exact type of support it will offer steel and aluminum producers is still being discussed.

In November 2017, the federal government announced $867 million in support for lumber producers, including $605 million in loans and loan guarantees. Quebec, Canada’s largest producer of aluminum, announced its own program of loans and loan guarantees worth $100 million — intended to support smaller aluminum and steel producers in the province — on June 11.

Freeland, who spoke to reporters after addressing the Montreal Council on Foreign Relations, said she had met with Quebec Economy Minister Dominique Anglade earlier in the day and discussed support for the steel and aluminum industries.

Freeland defended her government’s decision to place retaliator­y tariffs on U.S. imports after the steel and aluminum tariffs were imposed on June 1. “Canada will not escalate and Canada will not back down. When we face illegal and unjust measures, we will respond,” she said. The U.S. tariffs were imposed under Section 232 of U.S. trade law, which allows the U.S. government to take steps to stem imports that it believes are threatenin­g national security.

 ??  ?? Chrystia Freeland
Chrystia Freeland

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