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A worker walks over bundles of steel pipe stacked at a stockyard on the outskirts of Shanghai in this file photo. Photo: Bloomber

China and Europe join WTO challenge to Trump metals tariffs, opening new front in trade war

  • There are fears a showdown over steel and aluminium tariffs could lead the US to exit the World Trade Organisation
  • Opponents want a WTO dispute panel to investigate the US ‘national security’ justification for the tariffs

China and the EU have joined a group of countries asking the World Trade Organisation to investigate the Trump administration’s decision to impose metals tariffs on national security grounds, creating a new front in a trade war that has shaken global markets.

The move sets the stage for a showdown at the WTO that some fear could either lead to a US exit or a flood of new protectionist measures invoking what has until now been a rarely used national security loophole in global trade rules.

The US has said the tariffs on imported steel and aluminium imposed earlier this year are allowed under the WTO’s national security exemption, which permits governments to take “any action which it considers necessary for the protection of its essential security interests.” This has drawn the ire of affected countries, many of which are close American allies, such as the European Union and Canada.

An employee works next to molten iron at a steel mill of Dongbei Special Steel in Dalian, Liaoning province. Photo: Reuters

Countries so far have refrained from challenging that at the WTO. But in a statement issued Thursday, Norwegian Foreign Affairs Minister INE Eriksen Soreide said her country and other nations had chosen to request the establishment of a dispute panel at the WTO.

EU embraces China and other Asian powers in defence of free trade

“We believe that the US’s additional duty on steel and aluminium is in violation of the WTO rules,” she wrote.

A spokeswoman for the office of the US Trade Representative didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. A WTO spokesman declined to comment on the matter.

The dispute puts the Geneva-based trade organisation in a difficult position: If it rules in support of the US it could encourage other members to enact protectionist measures under the guise of national security. If it rules against the US it could draw further ire from the largest economy in the world and a possible withdrawal by the Trump administration.

The “worst outcome” for the WTO is if the dispute settlement system “decided that it was in a position to judge whether something was or was not in the national security interests of the US or any other member,” Deputy US Trade Representative Dennis Shea said in an October speech in Washington.

Metals Tariffs

The requests will be considered at the next meeting of the WTO dispute settlement body, which is scheduled for October 29.

Builders weld steel bars at a construction site in Shenzhen in this file photo. Photo: Xinhua

Nine WTO members – Canada, China, the EU, India, Mexico, Norway, Russia, Switzerland and Turkey – have filed initial complaints that allege Trump’s tariffs on steel and aluminium violated WTO rules. But Thursday’s move takes the disputes an important step closer to a formal case.

The complaints differ slightly, but each country alleges that the measures violate core WTO agreements such as the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, or GATT, and the WTO Safeguards Agreement, which govern the use of temporary trade restrictions, known as safeguards.

In July, the US said its tariffs were authorised under Section 232 of the US Trade Expansion Act of 1962 – which permits the president to impose trade restrictions if imports are found to harm US national security.

The US argued that WTO members have a legal right to impose national security tariffs under Section 21 of the GATT, which permits a government to take “any action which it considers necessary for the protection of its essential security interests.”

If the WTO determines that national security measures aren’t permitted under the WTO’s national security exemption it could then ask Trump to roll back a key tool in his “America First” trade arsenal.

Conversely, if the WTO agrees with the US argument it could encourage Trump to implement national security tariffs on cars and spur a proliferation of other new trade restrictions authorised under the guise of national security.

The US Commerce Department is conducting an investigation to determine if foreign imports of autos and auto parts are having a detrimental impact on US national security. The inquiry is identical to the process the Trump administration pursued earlier this year when it triggered 25 per cent tariffs on steel and 10 per cent tariffs on aluminium in the name of protecting US national security.

The move also comes as the Trump administration has mounted a broader attack on the WTO’s dispute system, which it accuses of overreach.

Since last year the US has blocked the appointment of new members of the WTO’s appellate body, bringing the number of appellate judges in Geneva from the usual seven down to three.

If nothing changes, that number is due to fall further by the end of next year, leaving the body unable to form the requisite three-member appeals panel to hear a dispute.

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