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India's Vedanta says Trump's tariffs damaging, seeks import curbs

Vedanta, an Indian conglomerate that converts metals into oil, said Wednesday that President Donald Trump’s decision to double the aluminium tariffs from 25% to 50% is a threat to Indian industry which already struggles with soaring imports.

The global markets have been shaken by the latest round of Trump's tariffs on steel and aluminium, which went into effect on Wednesday.

Vedanta's spokesperson said that the 50% tariff announced by Trump was damaging to India's aluminium industry. The industry is already being pressured from a surge in imports, which threatens to create excess and put domestic market access at risk.

The Indian government was urged by the miner, the largest producer of aluminium in the country, to impose tariffs on imports.

The spokesperson stated that "..duty guardrails should also be in place for the aluminum industry, which has invested more than 20 billion dollars to date in setting up the current domestic primary aluminum capacity."

According to data from the government, India's total aluminum exports dropped 19% in fiscal year ending March 2025 to 2,24 million metric tonnes.

Separately the country's federal minister of steel said earlier this year that Trump's tariffs on steel would have a minimal impact on the local industry as India, which is the second largest crude steel producer in the world, does not export significant quantities to the U.S.

India implemented a temporary 12% tariff on certain steel imports in April. This is known locally as a "safeguard duty" and was imposed to stop a rush of cheap shipments, primarily from China.

(source: Reuters)