Welcome to the Brussels Edition. I’m Suzanne Lynch, Bloomberg’s Brussels bureau chief, bringing you the latest from the EU each weekday. Make sure you’re signed up.
For an organization that began as the European Coal and Steel community in the early 1950s, it seems apt that the EU is flexing its trade muscles over steel. EU commissioners sign off on a proposal today to slap 50% tariffs on steel imports into the bloc – twice the current rate. The move, first reported by Bloomberg last week, is an attempt to shore up the EU’s domestic steel industry and build a tariff wall against cheap imports mainly from Asia. The EU is also drastically reducing import quotas as part of the package. “It is a very restrictive clause that does not have precedent in Europe,” the EU’s industry commissioner, Stephane Sejourne, told Jorge Valero in an interview. The EU currently slaps a 25% tariff on most steel imports once quotas are exhausted. But that mechanism expires next year, prompting the EU to develop more permanent protections. A draft proposal seen by Bloomberg shows that the total quota across all steel categories will be cut to 18.35 million tons – a whopping 43.7% reduction on average compared to 2024 levels through July. Shares of European steelmakers like ArcelorMittal SA and Voestalpine AG jumped on the news last week. The background to the decision is Chinese over-capacity in the steel sector, long a gripe for other markets. Brussels is hoping to find common ground with President Donald Trump’s administration on the issue. Steel and aluminum were not part of the trade deal struck between European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen and Trump in Scotland in July — and the EU continues to face a 50% tariff on steel exports to the US. Now the EU is trying to convince Trump to lower that rate for EU steel and jointly target China instead. “We hope we can have talks as quickly as possible that will get a result,” Sejourne told Bloomberg, referring to discussions with Washington. “But we share the same industrial agenda as the US — we want more local production, more economic growth and protection for our industry.” While trade relations with the US are looming over today’s decision, other steel exporters are looking on in alarm, not least the UK, which is a big exporter of the metal to the bloc. |