Trump set to announce 50 percent tariff on copper

Trump set to announce 50 percent tariff on copper

United States President Donald Trump has said he will announce a 50 percent tariff on copper, hoping to boost domestic production of a metal critical to electric vehicles, military hardware, the power grid and many consumer goods.

Trump told reporters at a White House cabinet meeting that he planned to make the copper tariff announcement later in the day, but did not say when the tariff would take effect.

“I believe the tariff on copper, we’re going to make 50 percent”, Trump said.

US Comex copper futures jumped more than 12 percent to a record high after Trump announced the planned tariff, which came earlier than the industry had expected, with the rate steeper.

After Trump spoke, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick said in an interview on CNBC that the tariff would likely be put in place by the end of July or August 1. He said Trump would post details on his Truth Social media account sometime on Tuesday.

In February, the administration announced a so-called Section 232 investigation into US imports of the red metal. Such an investigation allows the US Department of Commerce to analyse the impact of an import on national security. The deadline for the investigation to conclude was November, but Lutnick said the review was already complete.

“The idea is to bring copper home, bring copper production home, bring the ability to make copper, which is key to the industrial sector, back home to America”, Lutnick said.

The National Mining Association declined to comment, saying it preferred to wait until details were released. The American Critical Minerals Association did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Copper is used in construction, transportation, electronics and many other industries. The US imports roughly half of its copper needs each year.

Copper supplies

Major copper mining projects across the US have faced strong opposition in recent years due to a variety of reasons, including Rio Tinto and BHP’s Resolution Copper project in Arizona and Northern Dynasty Minerals’s Pebble Mine project&nbsp, in Alaska.

Shares of the world’s largest copper producer, Phoenix-based Freeport-McMoRan, shot up nearly 5 percent in Tuesday afternoon trading. The company, which produced 1.26 billion pounds of copper in the US last year, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Freeport, which would benefit from US copper tariffs but worries that the duties would hurt the global economy, has advised Trump to focus on boosting US copper production.

Chile, Canada, and Mexico, the top producers of refined copper, copper alloys, and copper products in the US in 2024, are the countries that are most likely to be affected by any new US copper tariff, according to US Census Bureau data.

Three of the US’s biggest copper suppliers, Chile, Canada, and Peru, have informed the Trump administration that imports from their nations are not subject to tariffs and do not violate US interests. With the US, all three countries have free trade agreements.

The Mexican Department of Finance, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Chile, and the Secretariat of Mexico’s Economy did not respond to requests for comment right away. The leading copper miner in Chile, Codelco, and the country’s mining ministry both declined to comment.

Because the nation is years away from meeting its needs, a 50% tariff on copper imports would have an impact on US businesses that use the metal, according to Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank.

Source: Aljazeera

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