By Divya Rajagopal and Promit Mukherjee
TORONTO (Reuters) -Canadian steel industry representatives told government officials in a meeting this week that their measures to protect the industry from the consequences of U.S. tariffs are insufficient, two of the representatives who attended the meeting told Reuters.
On Thursday, steel producers met with Patrick Haley, assistant deputy minister for trade and finance, and other officials from the ministry, telling them the measures announced earlier this month do not protect the industry from steel dumping and could cause mass layoffs, the representatives said.
U.S. President Donald Trump increased import duties on steel and aluminum to 50% from 25% earlier this month. Canada is the top seller of metals to the United States.
In response, Canada announced a raft of measures, including establishing new tariff-rate quotas of 100% of 2024 levels on imports of steel products from non-free trade agreement partners.
Industry representatives at the meeting asked the government to extend tariff quotas to all countries with unfair trade practices, even if they have free trade agreements. Europe and Asia have started diverting their products to Canada to avoid U.S. tariffs, making domestic steel uncompetitive, they said.
“We don’t think the measures announced meet our needs under this dire time,” Catherine Cobden, President and CEO of the Canadian Steel Producers Association, told Reuters. Cobden attended the meeting with finance ministry officials on Thursday.
The Canadian Steel Producers Association said in a separate statement on Thursday that, in its current form, the tariff-rate quota will do little to support its industry.
Canada’s steel industry has laid off 1,000 workers since the first U.S. tariffs in March, and more layoffs could be coming, the association said.
Keanin Loomis, president of the Canadian Institute of Steel Construction, which includes steel manufacturers, fabricators, and constructors, said that Thursday’s government meeting was heavily steel producers-focused, noting that finished steel products imported to Canada have no tariff protection. Loomis also attended the meeting.
In a text response to Reuters, the Canadian Finance Ministry said that the measures it announced represent a comprehensive and strategic package to defend producers and workers, and were a first step.
Prime Minister Mark Carney has threatened to increase counter-tariffs on U.S.-produced steel and aluminum if Canada does not reach a broader trade deal with Trump by July 21. Trump on Friday abruptly cut off trade talks with Canada over its new tax targeting U.S. technology firms.
“These are temporary and calibrated measures that could be expanded depending on the outcome of ongoing discussions with the United States. We are prepared to adjust our response as needed,” a spokesperson for the finance minister said.
(Reporting by Divya Rajagopal in Toronto and Promit Mukherjee in Ottawa; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Rosalba O’Brien)
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