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Protectionist Policies & Paradoxical Pitfalls Proliferate

The Coalition of American Metal Manufacturers and Users has strongly criticized the Biden administration's decision to double Section 232 tariffs on imported steel and aluminum. Originally implemented under the guise of national security, the tariffs are now viewed by many in the industry as a counterproductive constraint on U.S. manufacturers. CAMMU warns that this move may trigger an exodus of production overseas, erode global competitiveness, and further imperil already strained domestic supply chains.

 

Price Parity & Paralyzing Premiums Perplex Producers

Data from SteelBenchmarker reveals the price disparity plaguing American manufacturers. Hot-rolled steel in the U.S. costs around $993 per metric ton, in stark contrast to $384 in China and $715 in the EU. This glaring gap forces metal users to either absorb punitive costs or seek finished goods from abroad, undermining U.S. production. CAMMU fears that instead of protecting U.S. jobs, the tariffs may inadvertently promote offshoring and damage long-term domestic industrial capacity.

 

Facility Failures & Fabrication Fractures Fuel Fears

Despite tariff protections in place since 2018, U.S. steel production continues to decline. CAMMU cites recent closure announcements by Cleveland-Cliffs facilities in Pennsylvania and Illinois as evidence that the protective policy has not bolstered domestic output. The closures signify not expansion, but contraction, raising urgent questions about the effectiveness of tariffs as a tool to revive industrial robustness.

 

Allied Anxieties & Arbitrary Application Aggravate Affairs

CAMMU emphasizes the harmful impact on allied trade relations, particularly with trusted partners like Canada, South Korea, Japan, and members of the European Union. Many of these countries produce specialized steel & aluminum products that are not manufactured in the U.S. Nonetheless, the tariffs apply indiscriminately, even in the absence of viable domestic alternatives. The lack of a clear exclusion process exacerbates market instability, pricing distortions, and delays in production schedules.

 

Strategic Supply Chains & Sovereign Synergies Strained

Tariffs on Canadian imports are seen as especially damaging, given Canada’s deep integration into the North American automotive and defense production chains. Since 1956, a binational defense production-sharing agreement has strengthened U.S.-Canada industrial ties. CAMMU warns that these tariffs could fracture transcontinental supply chains, risking not only economic setbacks but also national security cooperation.

 

Aluminum Anomalies & Availability Asymmetries Acknowledged

The domestic aluminum sector faces capacity shortfalls similar to steel. Even with a new smelter underway in Oklahoma, U.S. producers can only meet 30% of national aluminum demand. The remainder must be sourced globally, often from allied nations. Tariffs on such vital inputs, CAMMU argues, inflate costs unjustly, penalize downstream manufacturers, and suppress innovation in sectors like aviation, construction, and renewable energy.

 

Customs Calculations & Classification Conundrums Complicate Compliance

Recent guidance from U.S. Customs and Border Protection stipulates that the 50% tariff only applies to the steel or aluminum content in derivative products. This has opened doors to potential evasion tactics, such as misclassification or value understatement, and does little to deter importers from sourcing finished products that remain outside the tariff structure. CAMMU believes this loophole incentivizes importers to circumvent penalties, thereby defeating the policy’s core intent.

 

Industrial Integrity & Investment Imperatives Imperiled

CAMMU concludes that the current trade policy framework is stifling investment, raising uncertainty, and weakening the foundation of U.S. manufacturing. Without a more nuanced & strategic approach, the doubling of tariffs risks reducing America’s industrial resilience at a time when global competitiveness and supply chain security are more critical than ever. The group calls for a balanced trade environment that champions stability, affordability, and sustainable growth for metal-using manufacturers across the nation.

 

Key Takeaways

  • Doubling of Section 232 tariffs on steel & aluminum could drive U.S. manufacturing overseas.

  • U.S. firms pay $993 per metric ton for steel versus $384 in China & $715 in the EU.

  • Lack of exclusions & supply chain disruption with allies like Canada may harm national interests.

FerrumFortis

Tariff Turbulence & Transnational Tensions Tarnish U.S. Metal Manufacturing

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Synopsis: - The Coalition of American Metal Manufacturers and Users has raised alarms over the U.S. doubling Section 232 steel & aluminum tariffs, warning it will damage domestic manufacturing, increase costs, and undermine supply chains shared with allies like Canada and Japan.

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