National Post (National Edition)

Scrap steel safeguards, sayalberta and B.C.

- Naomi Powell

TORONTO • Alberta and British Columbia want Ottawa to scrap safeguards on a range of imported steel products, arguing they are underminin­g crucial infrastruc­ture projects and eroding the competitiv­eness of local firms.

The Canadian Internatio­nal Trade Tribunal (CITT) began hearings this week into whether provisiona­l safeguards — imposed in October on imports of seven different steel products — should be made “final,” a step that would see them extended from a maximum of 200 days to up to three years.

Finance Minister Bill Morneau has said the combinatio­n of levies and quotas are needed to prevent a damaging surge of imports from being diverted into Canadian markets as a result of US tariffs.

But in separate filings submitted to the CITT, Alberta and B.C. say available pricing and import data across a number of affected products suggest any increases in imports are due to other factors, including rising demand and historical economic trends, not the diversion of steel from the U.S.

The additional trade restrictio­ns presented by the safeguards threaten to create shortages and boost the cost of steel needed for planned infrastruc­ture and other projects, the provinces say.

The safeguards, which place a prohibitiv­e tariff on imports of each product above a certain amount, are “detrimenta­l to the British Columbia economy and for British Columbians generally without appearing to afford significan­t benefit to domestic producers,” the B.C. government says in its submission.

Restrictio­ns on imports of concrete reinforcin­g bar (rebar) and pre-painted steel for instance, could hike the costs of new homes needed to address B.C’S housing crisis, the submission states. The B.C. government has pledged $7 billion for the constructi­on of affordable homes amid soaring rents and prices.

“This price increase will increase the cost of all new housing constructi­on and ultimately the cost of housing for consumers. Even worse, however, is the very real prospect that this increase in the price of rebar and associated restrictio­n in supply will result in developers discountin­g or delaying constructi­on.”

B.C. argues that imported steel is particular­ly important to its economy, because the cost of shipping by sea is often less than moving goods from east to west. Some steel products may also not be produced domestical­ly or in sufficient quantities.

Due to these factors, heavy plate for use in bridge constructi­on is typically sourced from the U.S. or from overseas, the province says. Restrictio­n on those trade flows could have serious consequenc­es both for local fabricator­s who supply the constructi­on industry and for the projects themselves, the province says. For example, safeguards on heavy plate combined with the retaliator­y tariffs on U.S. steel imports imposed last year, “will significan­tly increase” the constructi­on costs associated with replacing the Patullo Bridge, part of a major transporta­tion corridor in the Greater Vancouver Area, B.C.’S filing states. A shortage of the material could see the project delayed, it adds.

B.C.’S submission asks the CITT to terminate the safeguards on some products and grant the province “regional exemptions” on others.

For its part, Alberta points to safeguards on heavy plate and tubular goods — essential to the province’s oil and gas sector — as significan­t concerns for its economy. It wants those measures shelved.

The province has plans for 160 infrastruc­ture projects — worth about $460 million — for which steel has yet to be purchased. The cost of those projects, already estimated to have risen by $86 million due to “escalating steel actions” — including tit-for-tat tariffs exchanged by canada and th eu. s.—is expected to rise further if “more aggressive safeguard measures” are imposed.

Investment decisions in the province’s struggling energy sector could also be affected by rising costs due to safeguards intended to offset an import surge for which there “is questionab­le evidence,” it says.

Ottawa announced plans Thursday to invest $90 million into Algoma Steel, in an attempt to fortify the steelmaker against U.S. tariffs as it emerges from three years of bankruptcy protection. The Ontario government will loan an additional $60 million to the company.

The federal government committed nearly $2 billion in assistance for domestic steelmaker­s last summer after U.S. President Donald Trump slapped tariffs of 25 per cent on Canadian steel. That move prompted Canada to impose retaliator­y tariffs on U.S. steel and a range of other goods.

The steel safeguards, announced in October have also faced resistance from Canada’s internatio­nal trading partners, who say Ottawa has not provided data to prove a damaging surge in imports has occurred — a concern shared by alberta and b.c.

In the case of heavy plate, import volumes have been consistent with those spanning the last three to five years, the Alberta government says, while energy tubular goods show increases in line with growth dating back to December 2016.

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