Arlington, VA, March 08, 2018 -- The Aluminum Association today responded to the president’s announcement of a 10 percent tariff on aluminum entering the United States. The association was pleased that the decision excluded vital NAFTA countries Canada and Mexico and urges the administration to exempt other key trading partners that share our concerns about chronic Chinese aluminum overcapacity. A more targeted approach on tariffs will also protect vital supply chains for the 97 percent of U.S. aluminum workers in mid and downstream manufacturing processes.
“The president’s decision represents an opportunity to engage our critical trading partners on addressing persistent Chinese aluminum overcapacity,” said Heidi Brock, President & CEO of the Aluminum Association. “Now is the time to negotiate a long-term, enforceable agreement with China that tackles this perennial problem once and for all.”
As noted in a letter to the president earlier this week, China’s illegal subsidies to producers of both primary aluminum and semi-fabricated aluminum products have resulted in significant overcapacity in the market, hurting the plants and people of the U.S. industry. Chinese primary aluminum overcapacity continues to grow unabated, significantly distorting markets and encouraging illegal dumping. Excess capacity alone in China last year totaled 11 million metric tons of aluminum -- 40 percent of the rest of the world’s total production of 27.5 million metric tons.
“We look forward to continued dialogue with the administration as the tariff program is implemented and on constructive ways to promote a thriving U.S. aluminum industry,” added Brock.
President Trump has a great deal of discretion and flexibility in how the final tariff program is implemented. He has the authority to adjust the scope, the countries impacted, the nature of the remedy and the period of time the restrictions are in place. The Aluminum Association looks forward to working with the administration on monitoring market conditions to ensure the approach meets our shared goal of a robust and growing U.S. aluminum industry.
|
|||
###
About the Association
The Aluminum Association represents aluminum production and jobs in the United States, ranging from primary production to value added products to recycling, as well as suppliers to the industry. The Association is the industry’s leading voice, providing global standards, business intelligence, sustainability research and industry expertise to member companies, policymakers and the general public. The aluminum industry helps manufacturers produce sustainable and innovative products, including more fuel-efficient vehicles, recyclable packaging, greener buildings and modern electronics. In the U.S., the aluminum industry creates $186 billion in economic activity. For more information visit http://www.aluminum.org, on Twitter @AluminumNews or at Facebook.com/AluminumAssociation.
Attachment:
A photo accompanying this announcement is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/f7f4f1e9-efc6-427e-a159-ea2f720545f3
Matt Meenan Aluminum Association 703-358-2977 [email protected]


Missouri Judge Dismisses Lawsuit Challenging Starbucks’ Diversity and Inclusion Policies
DBS Expects Slight Dip in 2026 Net Profit After Q4 Earnings Miss on Lower Interest Margins
Indian Refiners Scale Back Russian Oil Imports as U.S.-India Trade Deal Advances
Amazon Stock Rebounds After Earnings as $200B Capex Plan Sparks AI Spending Debate
Kroger Set to Name Former Walmart Executive Greg Foran as Next CEO
Rio Tinto Shares Hit Record High After Ending Glencore Merger Talks
Samsung Electronics Shares Jump on HBM4 Mass Production Report
SoftBank Shares Slide After Arm Earnings Miss Fuels Tech Stock Sell-Off
OpenAI Expands Enterprise AI Strategy With Major Hiring Push Ahead of New Business Offering
Baidu Approves $5 Billion Share Buyback and Plans First-Ever Dividend in 2026
FDA Targets Hims & Hers Over $49 Weight-Loss Pill, Raising Legal and Safety Concerns
Global PC Makers Eye Chinese Memory Chip Suppliers Amid Ongoing Supply Crunch
Alphabet’s Massive AI Spending Surge Signals Confidence in Google’s Growth Engine
Weight-Loss Drug Ads Take Over the Super Bowl as Pharma Embraces Direct-to-Consumer Marketing
Toyota’s Surprise CEO Change Signals Strategic Shift Amid Global Auto Turmoil
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang Says AI Investment Boom Is Just Beginning as NVDA Shares Surge
American Airlines CEO to Meet Pilots Union Amid Storm Response and Financial Concerns 



