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EU discusses support for Europe’s steel industry in the face of U.S. tariffs

Ursula von der Leyen, the European Commission's chief, hosted executives from the steel industry on Tuesday to discuss how to maintain its future health in light of high energy costs and decarbonisation as well as impending U.S. Tariffs.

The debate will examine how the EU can respond to unfair trade practices, including in China, and global overcapacity. It was launched eight days prior to President Donald Trump's planned 25% tariffs.

In a press release published following the meeting, Stephane Sejourne (Commissioner for Industrial Strategy) announced that he would present on March 19th a plan with additional sector-specific priorities and long-term actions to replace the trade safeguard measures which expire in June 2026.

Participants included executives from ArcelorMittal, the second-largest steelmaker in the world, and ThyssenKrupp, as well as leaders from global union federation IndustriALL and the major steel users from carmaking and construction.

The key question is how to protect EU producers against a possible flood of imports of steel diverted from the U.S. market into the more liberal European market.

The 18 million tons that the US imports today with the exemptions (...), will have to go somewhere else. They are looking for a market open, and the European Union is it," said Axel Eggert.

Since 2018, when Trump introduced metal import tariffs during his first term, the EU has provided safeguards for steel in the form of quotas that are tariff-free per quarter and country.

According to World Trade Organization regulations, these safeguards are only valid for eight years. They will expire during Trump's second presidential term, which is mid-2026.

The European Commission (which oversees EU Trade Policy) has stated that it is looking at extending safeguards or setting up an alternative mechanism. The current system could be tightened.

Eggert stated that, in order to comply with WTO rules the Commission could not alter the total import quotas, but it could better control sudden surges of steel imports which negatively impact the EU market.

He added, "The rest is the world protects its domestic steel industry while Europe simply looks at an open market and does not react with firm measures. This will change now."

The EU steel market is expected to be down for the second year in a row by 2024. Despite the reduction of capacity and the elimination of 18,000 jobs, steel plants in the European Union support more than 2.5 million jobs.

According to Eurostat, the EU's statistics office, iron and steel exports to the U.S. totaled 5.4 billion euro, while iron and steel imports to the EU totaled 39.5 billion euros.

The Commission will also seek to understand the views of industry on energy prices. This includes potential for low carbon hydrogen as fuel, supply of raw materials, and how to best promote low-carbon steel demand and secure investment.

(source: Reuters)