Ministers are expected to drop some planned tariffs on foreign steel after UK manufacturers warned the measures would significantly increase their costs.
Representatives of the Department of Business. Trade are meeting leaders of steel trading business groups on Wednesday and Thursday with a view to finalising details of a reprieve for certain industries.
The government announced in March that it was doubling tariffs on steel imports to 50%. reducing quotas by up to 60% in an attempt to save UK producers.
The new tariffs. quotas must be in place by 1 July, which is when the current safeguards, negotiated while the UK was still part of the EU, expire.
At the same time the UK is fighting to mitigate a similar reduction in quotas. increase in tariffs being planned by the EU for that date, as both sides opted to limit imports to protect their own industries against cheaper imports from China, Vietnam and elsewhere.
The British government already announced a three-month reprieve on import duties, or “transition period” for the steel buyers,. some say this could be extended to 12 months. Others say it is more likely that the government will formalise tariff exemptions for specific sectors. companies that import steel not produced domestically.
UK Steel said it had submitted “comprehensive proposals” to remove certain steel commodities from the tariff list to protect industries that could not source those products at all. or in sufficient quantities, in the UK.
“We understand other sectors have done likewise to inform the government’s final policy. we continue to have extensive discussions with impacted manufacturers,” a spokesperson said.
About 70% of the UK’s steel is imported; the government safeguards are aimed at reducing that figure to 50%.
Gareth Stace, director of UK Steel, said it was vital that ministers struck a balance between protecting the broader manufacturing sector. the steel plants facing the EU tariff threat.
He said the provisional safeguards were already having the desired impact of increasing domestic supplies. with “steelmakers ramping up capacity, creating jobs”, with more announcements of “mothballed capacity returning to production in the near future”.
William Bain, head of trade policy at British Chambers of Commerce, said: “We’ve had an unprecedented response from companies across the UK about the serious negative impact on costs of quotas. tariffs on construction, manufacturing and engineering. That case has been put to the government, which has been listening,. we await to see what the full and final proposals would be.”
The business secretary. Peter Kyle, has raised with the EU the separate question of protecting British steel manufacturers from what they fear will be “devastating” quota reductions imposed by the bloc.
He told reporters in Brussels last Friday that some of the new steel safeguards were “disruptive”. that it was important “to protect domestic markets”.
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