Trump offered 3 options on steel, aluminum


Staff/wire report

WASHINGTON

The Commerce Department is urging President Donald Trump to impose tariffs or quotas on imported aluminum and steel, which it calls a national security threat.

The recommendations unveiled by Secretary Wilbur Ross on Friday are likely to escalate tensions with China and other U.S. trading partners. Stepped-up foreign production of steel and aluminum, especially by China, has driven down prices and hurt American producers.

The Commerce Department is recommending tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports, higher tariffs on imports from specific countries or a quota on imports.

The measures are meant to increase U.S. production to 80 percent of capacity in both industries. U.S. steel plants are running at 73 percent of capacity and aluminum plants at 48 percent.

Trump has to make a decision on steel by April 11 and on aluminum by April 19.

U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown, a Democrat from Cleveland, called on Trump to make a quick decision in the administration’s investigation into the impact of steel imports on national security after Ross shared the department’s findings of its investigation. Earlier this week, Brown joined Trump and Ross at a meeting at the White House on steel and aluminum and urged action in the case.

Last year, the president ordered an investigation into whether aluminum and steel imports posed a threat to national defense. On Friday, Ross said: “In each case, the imports threaten to impair our national security.” He said, for example, that only one U.S. company now produces a high-quality aluminum alloy needed for military aircraft.

Ross is offering the president three options:

Impose tariffs of 24 percent on all steel and 7.7 percent on aluminum imports from all countries.

Impose tariffs of 53 percent on steel imports from 12 countries, including Brazil, China and Russia, and tariffs of 23.6 percent on aluminum imports from China, Hong Kong, Russia, Venezuela and Vietnam. Under this option, the United States also would impose a quota limiting all other countries to the aluminum and steel they exported to the United States last year.

Impose a quota on steel and aluminum imports from everywhere, limiting each country 63 percent of the steel and 86.7 percent of the aluminum they shipped to the U.S. last year.

On Wall Street, investors reacted by buying the stock of companies that make steel and aluminum. In the early afternoon, shares of United States Steel Corp. were up 10 percent, shares of AK Steel Holding Corp. were up more than 11 percent and shares of Century Aluminum Co. were up nearly 7 percent.