Houston Chronicle Sunday

Tariffs lift hopes of creating more jobs in the heart of steel country

- By David Koenig

In the heart of America’s diminished steel country, support for President Donald Trump’s tariffs on imports is broad and bipartisan. It is tempered, though, by a strong streak of realism.

Trump’s tariffs are expected to raise U.S. prices for steel and aluminum. That would help domestic producers and create several hundred new steelworke­r jobs.

But the tariffs aren’t going to return American steel anywhere close to its peak output in the 1970s. Even some steelworke­rs feel it in places like Canonsburg, Pa., about 20 miles southwest of Pittsburgh.

People in Canonsburg are proud of their past. A statue of singer and native son Perry Como adorns downtown. The borough claims to have the secondlarg­est July Fourth celebratio­n in the state, behind only Philadelph­ia. Coal and steel once dominated the landscape, but many of the mills have closed in recent decades.

“Our union has asked for tariffs for years, but I have a feeling myself that it’s too late,” said Denny Cregut, a steelworke­r in Canonsburg. “I wish to God this thing would work and steel mills would come back and coal mines would come back and jobs would come back, but unfortunat­ely I don’t believe it.”

The details of the Trump administra­tion’s tariffs — 25 percent on foreign steel, 10 pecent on aluminum — are still unclear, and that helps explain why they are likely to have limited effect.

The president exempted Canada and Mexico temporaril­y while they renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement with the U.S. Other countries also want to be excused. European nations are threatenin­g to retaliate with tariffs against some American products.

History suggests the tariffs could be temporary, which would further blunt their impact. That’s what happened to former President George W. Bush’s 2002 steel tariffs, which were withdrawn due to potential retaliatio­n. And while tariffs might help a few steelworke­rs they could hurt many more workers in autos and other industries in the Midwest steel states that helped elect Trump in 2016.

Ned Hill, an Ohio State University professor who studies manufactur­ing including the steel industry, said the tariffs will be symbolic but useless. He said that because the tariffs are perceived as temporary and will exempt some countries and steel products, most U.S. steel companies won’t make the multi-billion-dollar investment­s needed to make older mills competitiv­e.

A few companies, however, are planning to fire up long-idled mills and smelters:

United States Steel Corp. says it will restart a blast furnace in Illinois and recall 500 workers.

Alcoa’s partial reopening of an aluminum smelter in Indiana, announced last year, is expected to happen this spring.

Nucor Corp. announced in November that it will open a new micro mill in Missouri in 2019, creating about 255 jobs.

Even those hundreds of jobs will hardly be noticed in a nationwide labor market of more than 150 million people.

Employment in the steel industry peaked at 650,000 jobs in 1953. With lower production and more automated plants, mills don’t need as many workers today. By the start of this year, there were 143,000 steelworke­rs.

The tariffs were announced as American steel has turned more profitable. Thanks to rising prices because of strong demand in a growing economy, the domestic steel industry made $2.8 billion last year after losing money as recently as 2015. Aluminum prices have been rising too.

U.S. steel production fell sharply in 2009 as the world reeled from the global financial crisis. Despite a partial recovery, total domestic production fell 20 percent from 2007 to 2016, according to figures from the Internatio­nal Iron and Steel Institute.

Over that same 10-year period, China’s production soared 65 percent, dwarfing U.S. output. China’s steel industry grew to feed a massive constructi­on boom, but slower growth has resulted in too many half-idle mills.

China only accounts for 2 percent of U.S. imports, but global prices have fallen as China has ramped up its production over the past decade, putting pressure on U.S. producers.

For much of the last century, coal mining and steel mills were the key industries in Washington County, Pa. The region prospered from a boom in demand to build highways, suburbs and skyscraper­s, all requiring steel. That demand peaked in the 1960s, but many of the mills were shut down by the 1990s.

Tariffs are popular in the region around Pittsburgh.

“There is a rich heritage of steel production in southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia. This may help bring that back — we’re hoping anyway,” says Tim Solobay, the Canonsburg fire chief. “It could be a really good positive for jobs, economic growth, economic developmen­t.”

Several hundred people turned out recently in New Madrid, Mo., to hear the news that Magnitude 7 Metals will open a smelter on the site of a Noranda Aluminum plant that closed two years ago.

“It devastated this area” when Noranda closed, said W.D. Prince, a 72-year-old barber whose son and son-in-law lost their jobs at the smelter. “Those were good jobs — $24, $25 an hour. All the overtime you wanted.”

The new smelter figures to be a big employer in the town, which sits in Missouri’s impoverish­ed Bootheel area, but it will offer only half the 900 jobs that were lost when Noranda shut down.

Philip Gibbs, an analyst with KeyBanc Capital Markets, said mills and smelters will have to run closer to full capacity to replace imports that get priced out of the U.S. market, providing a short-term kick, but he doesn’t expect many more mills to restart besides those already announced.

“The tariffs will allow the mills to feel like somebody has their back, and it will probably help them put a little more money in their pocket,” Gibbs said. “But further job growth? I don’t see that, not dramatical­ly.”

 ?? Zia Nazami / Associated Press file ?? This U.S. Steel Corp. coke plant is part of the company's complex in Granite City, Ill. U.S. steel production fell sharply in 2009 during the global financial crisis. Despite a partial recovery, total domestic production fell 20 percent from 2007 to...
Zia Nazami / Associated Press file This U.S. Steel Corp. coke plant is part of the company's complex in Granite City, Ill. U.S. steel production fell sharply in 2009 during the global financial crisis. Despite a partial recovery, total domestic production fell 20 percent from 2007 to...
 ?? Mark Duncan / Associated Press file ?? An employee checks coils of steel at ArcelorMit­tal Steel's hot dip galvanizin­g line in Cuyahoga Heights, Ohio. By the start of this year, there were only 143,000 steelworke­rs in the U.S.
Mark Duncan / Associated Press file An employee checks coils of steel at ArcelorMit­tal Steel's hot dip galvanizin­g line in Cuyahoga Heights, Ohio. By the start of this year, there were only 143,000 steelworke­rs in the U.S.

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