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Canada announces new tariffs on imported steel in order to protect domestic industry

Canada announces new tariffs on imported steel in order to protect domestic industry

Mark Carney, Canada's Prime Minister, said on Wednesday that Canada would introduce a tariff-rate quota to protect its domestic steel industry. The quota will be for countries with whom it has free trade agreement, but not the United States.

Canada will also implement an additional 25% tariff on all steel imports from non-U.S. nations that contain steel melted and pour in China by the end of July.

Carney's response is in response to complaints made by the domestic steel industry. The industry had complained that other countries divert steel to Canada, making the Canadian industry uncompetitive because of U.S. Tariffs.

The Canadian steel industry asked the government for tougher antidumping measures in order to protect its domestic industry. U.S. president Donald Trump raised import duties on aluminum and steel to 50%, up from 25% in the beginning of this month. Canada is the largest supplier of steel to the United States. Carney said that domestic steel companies will be given priority in government procurement, and he introduced a C$1billion fund to assist steel companies in advancing projects in industries like defence. Carney stated on Wednesday that the measures would make Canadian steel producers more competitive, by protecting them from trade diversion due to a rapidly changing global steel environment. (Divyarajagopal in Toronto and Ryan Patrick Jones; Editing by Caroline Stauffer).

(source: Reuters)