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UK steel industry wants clarity on timeline for US 0% tariffs

The British steel industry demanded clarity on Friday regarding the date when U.S. Tariffs will be removed under a historic first agreement to remove President Donald Trump’s levies against the sector.

Britain announced a deal on Thursday with the United States that would lower steel tariffs from 25% to 0%, allowing British producers to continue exporting to the United States.

Details released late Thursday revealed that both sides still have to formalise security requirements and quotas for the steel industry, which leaves sector representatives unsure of when levies are going to be implemented.

Chrysa glystra, Director of Trade and Economic Policy for industry body UK Steel, said: "It is not just a formality. There are still many things that haven't yet been determined and defined."

Glystra said that companies did not know what conditions they had to meet in their supply chains to be eligible for the tariffs.

We don't know when it will go into effect or what the timeline will be.

The steel industry in Britain contributed £1.7 billion, or 0.1%, to the UK's economy in 2024. Its future has been a little uncertain.

Last month, the UK government intervened in order to maintain the blast furnaces at the UK's final producer of virgin steel by seizing control from the Chinese owners.

The British government released details of the U.S. agreement. It showed that the access to zero tariffs was conditional on Britain's commitment to "work quickly to meet U.S. demands on the security supply chains of steel products and aluminium intended for export into the United States, and on the ownership of relevant production plants."

The General Terms of the Agreement stated that "understanding the United Kingdom would meet these requirements, United States will quickly construct a quote."

The Office of the United States Trade Representative stated that the U.S., UK and Canada "will negotiate a different arrangement" regarding the steel tariff.

The British trade ministry refused to provide a timeline for the formalisation of the steel deal.

Glystra, from UK Steel, said that the ongoing engagement between UK Steel and the British government has been constructive.

She said, "The fact we have now a better foundation than before is positive."

It's not as good as if you told us that there are no tariffs on steel as of today. That would be better." (Reporting and editing by Toby Chopra; Alistair Smout)

(source: Reuters)