The Scotsman

UK’S steelmaker­s hit back at Trump tariff bombshell

Trade body warns of ‘unintended consequenc­es’ of protection­ist move

- MARTIN FLANAGAN

By Britain’s steelmaker­s are braced for “serious damage” from US president Donald Trump’s “unilateral” decision to slap a swingeing 25 per cent tariff on steel imports into the United States, it emerged yesterday.

Industry trade body UK Steel said the new tariffs – flagged on Thursday and including a 10 per cent tariff on aluminium imports as well – were short-termist and “rife with unintended consequenc­es”.

Industry sources said all British steelmaker­s faced a severe backwash from such a “trade war”, including Scunthorpe­based British Steel, Tata Steel and Sanjeev Gupta’s Liberty House Group, the latter owning Scottish plants at Dalzell and Clydebridg­e.

Richard Warren, head of policy at UK Steel, said: “Whilst we still await the precise detail of these measures, and there is still a lingering hope that these tariffs may not tarour get the UK and EU, President Trump’s comments do indicate the introducti­on of blanket measures to restrict all steel imports regardless of their origin.

“This would be a unilateral, and extremely blunt approach to what is a complex global problem of overcapaci­ty in the steel sector.

“This requires a co-ordinated global approach. Whilst we all too well understand the frustratio­ns of the US sector, measures such as these smack of short-termism, protection­ism and would be rife with unintended consequenc­es for global trade and for the users of steel in the US.”

Currently, the UK steel industry exports £360 million of high-value steel products into the US each year. The UK sector has seen major jobs bloodletti­ng and consolidat­ion in recent years in the wake of high energy and environmen­tal costs, cheap imports from China and the weakness of sterling.

Warren said of Trump’s new tariffs: “These measures would seriously undermine ability to compete in this market. Equally there is significan­t apprehensi­on about the indirect impacts of these measures in the form of steel trade diverted away from the US to other markets, such as the UK. In short, these measures would cause serious damage to the prospects of many steel producers here.”

He added that UK Steel wanted the UK government to “push for and fully support a robust response from the EU”.

Lukman Otunuga, analyst at FXTM, said Trump’s move had “sparked fears of a global trade war”. He added: “This bombshell developmen­t is likely to fuel concerns of retaliator­y actions from major US trade partners. Investors are clearly jittery [at] the threat of a potential global trade war and its possible effect on stock markets.”

Dalzell is fully operationa­l, with 176 workers. Clydebridg­e is used part-time as a finishing plant for some of the steel made at Dalzell. The Liberty House aluminium smelter at Fort William employs 180 people and the aluminium wheels factory being built next door will employ more than 400.

mflanagan@scotsman.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom