Zürcher Nachrichten - Trump tariffs threaten Latin American steel industry

EUR -
AED 4.322109
AFN 75.320329
ALL 95.610423
AMD 437.176284
ANG 2.106486
AOA 1080.379579
ARS 1620.281661
AUD 1.642671
AWG 2.118391
AZN 1.998982
BAM 1.957037
BBD 2.370298
BDT 144.401258
BGN 1.963162
BHD 0.443873
BIF 3499.511601
BMD 1.176884
BND 1.496446
BOB 8.132139
BRL 5.838639
BSD 1.176844
BTN 109.979504
BWP 15.777971
BYN 3.33811
BYR 23066.921701
BZD 2.366896
CAD 1.607217
CDF 2719.778084
CHF 0.917149
CLF 0.026385
CLP 1038.435457
CNY 8.0237
CNH 8.021133
COP 4213.232093
CRC 535.33832
CUC 1.176884
CUP 31.18742
CVE 110.334729
CZK 24.304356
DJF 209.562438
DKK 7.474483
DOP 70.824759
DZD 155.544609
EGP 60.938449
ERN 17.653256
ETB 183.754628
FJD 2.584378
FKP 0.869176
GBP 0.870511
GEL 3.159965
GGP 0.869176
GHS 13.010222
GIP 0.869176
GMD 85.912641
GNF 10328.527363
GTQ 8.994684
GYD 246.215602
HKD 9.215765
HNL 31.268761
HRK 7.535474
HTG 154.107392
HUF 362.20483
IDR 20158.724241
ILS 3.520742
IMP 0.869176
INR 110.044513
IQD 1541.674298
IRR 1557017.214109
ISK 143.250161
JEP 0.869176
JMD 186.427818
JOD 0.834458
JPY 187.186885
KES 151.959872
KGS 102.91672
KHR 4704.973422
KMF 491.937379
KPW 1059.178196
KRW 1729.230559
KWD 0.362422
KYD 0.98072
KZT 546.445339
LAK 25964.408838
LBP 105386.401493
LKR 372.525426
LRD 216.536846
LSL 19.255669
LTL 3.475031
LVL 0.711885
LYD 7.450709
MAD 10.875473
MDL 20.241792
MGA 4872.079029
MKD 61.655151
MMK 2471.379128
MNT 4209.873933
MOP 9.492399
MRU 46.686505
MUR 54.571504
MVR 18.182836
MWK 2040.689663
MXN 20.36991
MYR 4.649865
MZN 75.267585
NAD 19.255669
NGN 1584.50915
NIO 43.307369
NOK 10.969204
NPR 175.967207
NZD 1.991058
OMR 0.452515
PAB 1.176844
PEN 4.042255
PGK 5.104226
PHP 70.418812
PKR 328.133472
PLN 4.230133
PYG 7483.729524
QAR 4.290311
RON 5.099556
RSD 117.417242
RUB 88.205924
RWF 1719.686798
SAR 4.414164
SBD 9.460633
SCR 15.870613
SDG 707.307191
SEK 10.749833
SGD 1.496343
SHP 0.878663
SLE 29.010069
SLL 24678.659498
SOS 672.525019
SRD 44.073144
STD 24359.117718
STN 24.515493
SVC 10.297508
SYP 130.095066
SZL 19.262173
THB 37.719355
TJS 11.062291
TMT 4.124978
TND 3.422463
TOP 2.833654
TRY 52.835732
TTD 7.980043
TWD 36.997109
TZS 3065.781898
UAH 51.919312
UGX 4359.755253
USD 1.176884
UYU 46.78957
UZS 14192.969591
VES 565.646948
VND 30987.349407
VUV 138.943713
WST 3.196377
XAF 656.37181
XAG 0.014864
XAU 0.000245
XCD 3.180587
XCG 2.12094
XDR 0.814833
XOF 656.37181
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.863667
ZAR 19.266181
ZMK 10593.391052
ZMW 22.389149
ZWL 378.956091
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    -0.0398

    22.73

    -0.18%

  • BCC

    0.9300

    83.97

    +1.11%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.13

    +0.3%

  • RIO

    -0.3200

    99.83

    -0.32%

  • NGG

    -0.9000

    86.02

    -1.05%

  • CMSD

    0.0050

    23.085

    +0.02%

  • BCE

    -0.1400

    23.95

    -0.58%

  • RELX

    0.0600

    36.74

    +0.16%

  • AZN

    -4.1100

    200.69

    -2.05%

  • GSK

    -1.0000

    57.35

    -1.74%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4600

    17.2

    -2.67%

  • VOD

    0.1700

    15.65

    +1.09%

  • BP

    0.5300

    45.12

    +1.17%

  • BTI

    0.3800

    57.06

    +0.67%

Trump tariffs threaten Latin American steel industry
Trump tariffs threaten Latin American steel industry / Photo: STR - AFP

Trump tariffs threaten Latin American steel industry

Chile's largest steel plant shut down last year, yielding to cheaper production in China.

Text size:

Now, six months later, the tariffs that President Donald Trump has imposed on US imports of the metal threaten the livelihood of 1.4 million workers in Latin America.

As he did during his first term in office from 2017 to 2021, Trump is trying to protect American producers by making steel imports costlier with a 25 percent tariff that kicked in on March 12.

The United States imports 25 million tons of steel each year, and Canada is it main supplier, followed by Brazil and Mexico, each with products tailored to other industries like car manufacturing and construction.

The United States relies on Latin America for specialized steel products, said Ezequiel Tavernelli, head of the Latin American Steel Association, Alacero.

With the world awash steel production overcapacity, and China the main offender, the Trump tariffs will distort the market.

"The only thing they will bring is a flood of steel" that had been headed to the United States and is now rerouted to regions that are less protected and have less ability to defend themselves, like Latin America, said Tavernelli.

To explain the threat he gives these figures: in 2000 China exported less than 100,000 tons of steel a year to Latin America, but today it is more than 14 million tons. The growth is exponential.

Steel production in Latin America has been falling for three years. And the Chinese share of what is consumed is getting bigger and bigger .

And now, due to the Trump tariffs Latin American producers will not only lose market share in the United States but also miss out in some markets of their own region due to Chinese competition.

- When it rains it pours-

The numbers are jarring. China accounts for more than 45 percent of the world's steel production capacity and produces 140 million tons it does not need.

It dumps this excess cheaply on the international market, says Alacero, which says China produces 23 percent of the world's excess steel.

"The main problem of our region, and that of the United States, is world steel overcapacity," Tavernelli told AFP.

And China behaves disloyally, he argued, by selling steel below cost thanks to government subsidies.

In September of last year Chile endured what Tavernelli is talking about. Its Huachipato steelworks, the country's largest, shut down its blast furnaces for good.

With the smoke that drifted out of its chimneys went nearly 75 years of company history. Chinese steel was 40 percent cheaper and Huachipato simply could not compete.

Alacero argues that regionalization of supply chains -- for instance, US steel producers, car makers and construction companies buy Latin American steel -- "is the best way to defend against disloyal business by China and countries of Southeast Asia."

As Brazil's vice president Geraldo Alckmin, who is also the minister of development and industry, put it, the region's goal should be to achieve "economic complementarity."

Brazil and Mexico are negotiating with the United States to try to win exemptions from the US tariffs, and managed to pull this off during Trump's first term in power.

In the same vein, Mexico's iron and steel producers association, Canacero, said last month there is a high level of production integration between the US and Mexican steel industries and regional benefits should be the priority in the face of the threat of excess capacity of China and Southeast Asia.

So there is the risk that more long-standing firms like Huachipato will have to shut down, said Tavernelli, who insisted the countries of Latin America have to work together.

D.Smith--NZN