US urges countries to make best offers ahead of tariffs, global reactions continue

Tuesday, 03 June 2025 17:48:13 (GMT+3)   |   Istanbul

The US administration is urging countries to present their best offer on trade negotiations by Wednesday, June 4, with the aim to finalize deals with trading partners before the implementation of the new tariffs, according to a report by Reuters. Several agreements are nearing completion, while the US has only reached one agreement so far, with the UK worth an estimated $6 billion, concluded on May 8.

US President Donald Trump will raise the Section 232 tariffs applied to all steel and aluminum imports to 50 percent from 25 percent, effective this Wednesday, as SteelOrbis previously reported.

Reactions continue to be expressed in the global markets to the US decision to increase tariffs. Catherine Cobden, president and CEO of the Canadian Steel Producers Association (CSPA), has stated that the 50 percent steel tariffs will create mass disruption and negative consequences across highly integrated steel supply chains and customers on both sides of the border. “It is vital that the government of Canada responds immediately to fully re-instate retaliatory steel tariffs to match the American tariffs and to implement as quickly as possible new tariffs at our own borders to stop unfairly traded steel from entering Canada,” she added.

Meanwhile, commenting on the issue, Kerstin Maria Rippel, managing director of the German Steel Federation Wirtschaftsvereinigung Stahl (WV Stahl), stated that Trump’s latest move marks a new escalation in the transatlantic trade conflict. Underlining that 50 percent duty is a massive burden for the European steel industry, Rippel stated that the measures will also lead countries that traditionally supply to the US to divert their steel to the EU market, further intensifying the already considerable import pressure on Europe. She added that it is therefore essential for the EU Commission to maintain a balance between tough trade protection measures and prudent negotiations.


Similar articles

US Supreme Court declines to hear steel importer’s Section 232 appeal

30 Oct | Steel News

US and EU fail to reach agreement on Section 232 tariffs, aim for deal later this year

20 Oct | Steel News

US suspends Section 232 tariffs on steel imports from Ukraine

09 May | Steel News

Reactions to US-EU steel tariff news trend positive

02 Nov | Steel News

US Court of International Trade rules doubled tariffs on Turkish steel violated Section 232

14 Jul | Steel News

US Court of Appeals upholds CIT decision to maintain Section 232 tariffs

28 Feb | Steel News

US nail manufacturers ask to intervene in case at Court of International Trade

24 Feb | Steel News

US DOC inspector general finds “improper influence” in Section 232 exemption process

30 Oct | Steel News

New bill to constrain Trump’s tariff powers introduced in US Congress

28 Jun | Steel News

Senator Grassley moves forward with bill to restrain Trump’s tariff powers

11 Jun | Steel News