U.S. Transformer Coalition to Oppose Steel Tariffs
U.S. transformer manufacturers have launched a coalition to urge the U.S. Department of Commerce to find that imports of those products do not threaten the national security of the United States.
Called The Core Coalition, it comprises of companies active throughout the transformer industry’s value chain, including U.S. and international companies that are involved in supplying products covered by the investigation. The Coalition supports a competitive market in the US for these products, which depends on continued access to imports by US producers.
The “Section 232” investigation of electrical steel imports could lead to tariffs or other restrictions that would severely harm companies and their employees in the U.S. transformer industry and supply chain.
In May 2020, the U.S. Commerce Department initiated a “national security” investigation of imports of transformers, cores, laminations and other transformer inputs, despite the fact that over 85% of imported cores and laminations come from two closely allied U.S. trading partners—Canada and Mexico.
“On July 1, the U.S. government announced implementation of a new trade agreement (USMCA) with Canada and Mexico, replacing NAFTA,” said Core Coalition Counsel Lewis E. Leibowitz.
“As outlined in the Coalition’s comments to the Department of Commerce, transformers are a major part of the strategically important electric grid. The three countries’ electric transmission grids are inextricably linked, assuring our mutual security and interdependence in this sector. A decision to authorize the President to impose injurious trade restrictions would be a serious step, and the notion of a national security threat arising from electrical steel imports from these two countries is dubious at best. It is difficult to imagine two countries more clearly defined as reliable trading partners of the United States than our USMCA trading partners.”
“The U.S. power grid cannot rely on domestic production capacity to support the total requirements for inputs of much-needed power transformers, because the capacity does not exist,” said Phillip James, General Manager of WEG Transformers in Washington, Missouri.
“The single producer of GOES in the U.S. today, AK Steel, even with its competitors paying 25 percent steel tariffs under Section 232, cannot make its products price-competitive. The answer is not to have the U.S. government erecting ever higher import barriers through new Section 232 actions. This would not address the underlying structural cost disadvantages that are at the heart of the domestic producer’s failure to compete in today’s marketplace.”
“The Core Coalition is confident that, if the Commerce Department looks at the facts, this investigation will conclude that the circumstances and quantity of imports of transformers, cores, laminations, and other transformer inputs simply do not threaten the national security of the United States,” said Leibowitz.
Source and Image courtesy of The Core Coalition