
Understanding Canada's moves to block cheap steel imports
Here's a look at some of the key questions.
What is dumping?
Dumping refers to foreign firms selling goods at artificially low prices, or prices that don't accurately reflect their cost of production. It can also mean a company selling goods for less in foreign markets than comparable goods are selling for in their home market.
Companies tend to dump goods either by selling below cost to gain market share, or because an excess of production in their home countries has them looking for markets to offload the goods and recover some costs.
Government subsidies can be a significant contributor to firms selling at artificial prices because they distort price structures. Subsidies can include simply giving money to companies to help them grow, more indirect aids like preferential access to land, as well as government loans and loan guarantees and tax breaks.
The Canadian government uses all of these levers to help grow domestic industries, but governments can only go so far within international trade rules. Subsidies that artificially reduce costs so manufacturers can flood foreign markets at unfairly low prices crosses that line.
How big of a problem is steel dumping for Canada?
While dumping cases are determined on specific products, the overall scale of steel imports has swelled over the past decade. Offshore imports have climbed from 19 per cent of the Canadian market in 2014 to 39 per cent in 2022, according to the Canadian Steel Producers Association.
The steel industry also dominates anti-dumping inquiries at the Canadian International Trade Tribunal, the body tasked with determining whether imported goods are being sold at artificially low prices.
The Canadian steel industry has challenged dozens of product categories from cold- to hot-rolled steel, various wires, piping and rods, even including stainless steel sinks. The tribunal has largely ruled in favour of applications that dumping has occurred and is harming Canadian industry.
And while there are problems now, the bigger concern is how much more product, especially from China, might get diverted to the Canadian market as the U.S. moves to close off imports.
It's also expected to be a growing problem in the future as China's domestic demand slows. China already has 50 million tonnes of overcapacity in steel production across its 360 mills, according to Wood Mackenzie, but it said that overcapacity could swell to 250 million tonnes over the next decade. Canada's total production, meanwhile, was 12.1 million tonnes in 2023.
How long has it been a problem?
A long time. Canada introduced the first anti-dumping provisions in the world in 1904, which singled out a 'special duty on under-valued goods,' according to international trade expert Dan Ciuriak in a report.
What was unique about the measure was that it was a flexible tariff, meant to make up the difference between the selling price and the fair market value.
The problem has continued and grown as global trade has increased, leading to growing calls to do more about it.
For steel, concerns grew as China's exports surged to 110 million tonnes in 2015 before starting to retreat, only for it to surpass that total in 2024 with 115 million tonnes in exports, according to the International Trade Administration.
Back in 2020, United Steelworkers union national director for Canada Ken Neumann said the problem of illegal steel dumping needs to stop.
'Our union will continue to aggressively defend the jobs of steelworkers across Canada who for too long have been harmed by steel imports dumped into our country and sold at unprofitable, below-market prices.'
What do the latest tariffs aim to achieve?
Canada already imposed 25 per cent tariffs on imports of steel and aluminum from China last year, with the move coming into place in October.
But the steel industry and others have maintained that other countries are taking steel produced in China, processing it further and then trying to export it as originating from the there.
The latest measures are meant to help protect against that work-around. That's why the government imposed the 25 per cent tariff on steel products that were 'melted and poured' in China.
The move is the culmination of years of efforts to increase transparency in steel imports, including a requirement that went into effect only last November for importers to declare the country the metal is melted and poured.
Catherine Cobden, CEO of the Canadian Steel Producers Association, said the measures will go some ways to tackle China's actions as an 'egregious' overcapacity practitioner.
'Canada is taking direct aim at global steel overcapacities, and frankly, it's a strong position, and I think will be applauded around the world. This is something that even the United States hasn't yet done.'
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 18, 2025.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Epoch Times
9 minutes ago
- Epoch Times
China Sets Steep Duties on Canadian Imports, Opens New Probe
China announced on Aug. 12 that it would impose tariffs on rapeseed and rubber products imported from Canada, escalating trade tensions between Beijing and Ottawa. China will implement a 26.2 percent duty on halogenated butyl rubber imported from Arlanxeo Canada, and a 40.5 percent duty will be levied on the same products from other Canadian companies, according to a statement from the Chinese Ministry of Commerce.


The Hill
37 minutes ago
- The Hill
The back-and-forth of trade negotiations between the US and China
TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — The United States and China have extended a trade truce for another 90 days, the latest development in a months-long showdown between the world's two biggest economies. Both U.S. President Donald Trump and China's Commerce Ministry both announced postponing the date for a further increase of U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports, which are already at a relatively high 30%. Beijing would have likely responded by raising retaliatory levies on U.S. exports to China. The announcement came late Monday in the U.S. and early Tuesday in China. The pause, which clears the way for a possible meeting later this year between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, is the latest development in a high-stakes back-and-forth of tariff threats and negotiations that have rattled the two economic powerhouses. Here is a play-by-play of how U.S. and Chinese tariffs and trade truces have unfolded since the beginning of Trump's second term in office: Feb. 1, 2025 Trump signs an executive order imposing 10% tariffs on China, as well as 25% duties on Mexico and Canada. He later announces a 30-day reprieve on the Mexican and Canadian tariffs. Feb. 4 The 10% tariffs on all Chinese imports to the U.S. come into effect. China retaliates the same day by announcing a flurry of countermeasures, including duties on American coal, liquefied natural gas and agricultural machinery. March 4 Trump imposes additional 10% tariffs on all Chinese goods, bringing the total level of duties to 20%. China responds with tariffs of up to 15% on imports of key U.S. farm products including chicken, pork, soy and beef, and expanded controls on doing business with key U.S. companies. March 10 Chinese tariffs and measures announced on March 4 go into effect. April 2 On Trump's so-called tariff 'Liberation Day,' he announces additional 34% duties on all Chinese imports, alongside tariffs on goods from countries around the world. The sweeping tariffs are to come into effect April 9. April 4 China fights back by imposing 34% tariffs on all U.S. goods, effective April 10, as well as other retaliatory measures including more export controls on rare earth minerals. China also suspends imports of sorghum, poultry and bonemeal from several U.S. companies, adds 27 firms to lists of companies facing trade restrictions, and starts an anti-monopoly probe into DuPont China Group, a subsidiary of the U.S. company DuPont. April 7 Trump threatens China with additional 50% tariffs if it doesn't roll back its 34% reciprocal tariffs. April 9 Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs come into effect. The U.S. raises tariffs on China even higher than previously announced, to 104%. Beijing retaliates with duties of 84% on U.S. goods, effective April 10. Trump further raises tariffs on all Chinese goods to 145%, effective immediately. April 11 China raises its tariffs on all U.S. goods to 125%, effective April 12. Beijing says it would not raise the duties any further. May 10-12 Chinese and U.S. trade negotiators meet in Geneva, Switzerland, for talks meant to de-escalate their trade war. The negotiators agree to a 90-day deal to slash massive tariffs and restart stalled trade, setting off a rally in global financial markets. U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods go from 145% down to 30%, and Chinese tariffs on U.S. goods go from 125% to 10%. June 9-10 Chinese and U.S. trade officials hold two days of negotiations in London, at the end of which they say they have agreed on a framework for resolving their differences. The talks focus on finding a way to resolve disputes over critical minerals and technology exports that had shaken the fragile truce on trade reached in Geneva the previous month. July 28-29 The two countries hold another round of trade talks, this time in Stockholm. The talks conclude without a deal to prevent tariffs from surging again.
Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Immigration crackdown causing ‘Trump slump' in Las Vegas tourism, unions say
The Trump administration's immigration policies are affecting workers and driving, in part, a decline in tourism, including international tourists, to Las Vegas, according to workers and the largest labor union in the state of Nevada. Visitors to Las Vegas overall dropped 11.3% in June 2025, compared to the same month last year. According to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, international visitors to one of the world's largest tourist destinations dropped 13% in June. 'A lot of departments are having a lot of layoffs,' said Norma Torres, a housekeeper for eight years at Mandalay Bay and a member of the Culinary Union, who has worked in the hospitality industry since she was 18 years old. 'In the housekeeping department, the people on call are barely called into work.' Canada is Nevada's largest international market. Flair Airlines, a Canadian airline, reported a 55% drop in passengers compared to last year. Air Canada reported a 13.2% drop in passengers from May to June this year to Las Vegas, and one third lower compared to last year. Trump administration officials have reportedly pushed for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) agents to arrest 3,000 people a day as part of their anti-immigration agenda. They have subsequently denied that those quotas exist. But they have continued to revoke immigration statuses, delayed action for childhood arrivals, and other humanitarian immigration programs. 'If you tell the rest of the world you're not welcome, they are going to listen. Our members are telling us that they're quite nervous, and that's why they're calling it a Trump slump,' said Ted Pappageorge, secretary treasurer of Culinary Workers Union Local 226. But the Ice raids, trade wars with trading partners and fears that rising tariffs will hit the finances of potential visitors are all having an impact on Sin City tourism. 'You have Canadians that have said, 'We're going to go elsewhere.' Some of our best customers are Mexican tourists. But the biggest one is southern California and visitation is down because they're nervous about raids, the tariffs, the economy riled up,' added Pappageorge. 'The way these kind of chaotic immigration policies have been handled have a direct impact, we think, on what's happening with this slowdown in Las Vegas and our members are quite concerned.' The union noted its members come from 178 different countries and speak 40 different languages. The union represents 60,000 workers in Las Vegas and Reno, and 45% of its members are immigrants. Nearly a quarter (24%) of Nevada's workforce are immigrants, and an even higher share of Nevada's leisure and hospitality industry are immigrants. Immigrants contribute an estimated $20.2bn to Nevada's economy annually. Norma Torres, who was born in Mexico, currently has Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (Daca) immigration status, a policy enacted in 2012 for immigrant individuals brought to the US as children. Torres explained she is worried about how the Trump administration will impact her immigration status. 'Before I had a Daca, I was living in fear. Since I've had DACA, I've been living free, I've been working, I've been having the best life with my daughters, but now with this administration that we have going on with Daca and TPS, they are in danger and again I'm living in fear,' said Torres. 'I can be driving on the street, they can pull me over. I can be separated from my daughters, they are US citizens who were born here and just thinking about that makes me afraid. For me and my family, we live in fear now.' Nery Martinez, a bartender at Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas and Culinary Workers Union Local 226 member for 10 years, has been in the US for decades under temporary protected status from El Salvador and is worried about the push from the Trump administration to revoke TPS for thousands of immigrants from El Salvador and other countries. 'That would be devastating, not only for me but for thousands of families,' said Martinez. 'After 25 years in this place, what would I do if they separate me from my children, from my wife, from my life I had built from scratch? Those things hurt not just me and people like me, but also hurt citizen children, the community and the economy we help sustain.' He said he loves working in Las Vegas, working alongside others from all around the world and interacting with tourists from abroad and throughout the US, but emphasized he now worries about what is going to happen to his immigration status. 'We are working people with families who love this country. We don't want privilege, just that we are allowed to stay here legally as we have done for decades. Our families are American, I also feel part of this nation. Taking away TPS (temporary protected status) would be tearing away my life. I can't have a nice night, go to bed, wake up the next day, because every night I have those thoughts about what's going to happen.' Ted Pappageorge noted that for 20 years the culinary union has secured in their contracts that any worker who has their immigration status removed or expired is able to maintain their job, seniority, and pay until they get their status resolved, a support mechanism he argues should be legally provided to all workers. 'The idea that you're bringing in Marines and arresting dishwashers or landscapers, people that actually contribute to society, pay taxes, that go to our churches, their kids go to our schools, they're neighbors, is just crazy. This is just chaos what's going on here,' concluded Pappageorge. 'There needs to be a complete 180 course correction on this damage being done to the travel, tourism, and hospitality industry, that's ground zero here in Las Vegas.' The Nevada governor's office did not respond to multiple requests for comment. Solve the daily Crossword