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EU pushes US to honor trade agreement by reducing steel tariffs

On Monday, European Union ministers were to encourage top U.S. officials to implement more of the EU-U.S. July trade agreement by reducing U.S. duties on EU steel as well as removing them on EU goods like wine and spirits.

In their first trip to Brussels after taking office, U.S. commerce secretary Howard Lutnick and U.S. trade representative Jamieson Greer would meet EU ministers for trade in a 90-minute lunch meeting.

Before that meeting, European ministers met to discuss urgent trade issues including Chinese restrictions on rare earth and chips exports.

No IMMEDIATE Breakthroughs Expected

Maros SEFCIOVIC, European Trade Commissioner, said that he didn't expect to make any breakthroughs immediately with his U.S. counterparts.

"I don't think it is about negotiations today. This is a time for a stocktaking exercise. "I think it's also about the political evaluation of EU-U.S. bilateral relations," he added.

The United States imposed a 15% tariff on the majority of EU goods under the deal reached at the end of July, while the European Union agreed that many of their duties on U.S. imported goods would be removed.

The approval of the European Parliament and EU government is required, which EU diplomats claim has frustrated Washington.

While insisting that the process is proceeding, the 27-nation group also points to items agreed upon on which they want to see progress. Chief among these are steel and aluminum.

Since mid-August, the United States has implemented a tariff of 50% on metals. This is applied to metals in 407 "derivatives" such as motorcycles or refrigerators. Next month, more derivatives could be added.

The risk that the July accor gets blown out

EU diplomats claim that these actions, as well as the prospect of new tariffs for trucks, minerals critical, planes and turbines, could undermine the July agreement.

One EU diplomat stated: "We are in a delicate situation." The U.S. looks for ways to criticize the EU, while we try to convince them to resolve steel and other issues.

The bloc wants to see a wider range of products that are only subject to the low tariffs before Trump. The bloc's list of wants includes olives, wine, pasta, biotech, medical devices, and biotech.

The EU is ready to discuss possible areas of regulatory cooperation such as automobiles, the bloc's purchase of U.S. Energy, which reached $200 billion in this year, or joint efforts to improve economic security. Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop. (Editing by Jane Merriman, Conor Humphries and Conor Humphries.)

(source: Reuters)