
Starmer Says US Not Targeting Steel Ownership in Trade Talks
Speaking to journalists at the G7 summit in Canada, Starmer said there was 'further work to do in relation to steel' in negotiations with President Donald Trump but that 'doesn't require us to change the ownership of British Steel.'
It comes a day after Starmer and Trump announced they had finalized the details of a trade deal that will allow the UK to avoid the higher tariffs that the US is imposing on other countries. Its main terms — initially agreed to in May — gave the US greater access to the UK's beef and ethanol market in return for lower tariffs on UK steel and automobiles exported to the US.
But while the two leaders on Monday agreed to implement a reduction in tariffs on UK cars from 27.5% to 10%, an exemption for Britain's civil aerospace sector from Trump's baseline 10% tariff, and for increased access to US beef and ethanol exporters, steel was left off the list.
The US has demanded that the UK meet its 'requirements on the security of the supply chains of steel and aluminum' including on the 'nature of ownership' of relevant steel plants — provisions that were included in the original May agreement and the one struck this week. That had prompted speculation that the ownership of British Steel by China's Jingye Group was problematic — even though the government took operational control of struggling British Steel earlier this year.
But Starmer dismissed that suggestion on Tuesday.
'There's further work to do in relation to steel, but we're getting on and doing that work, and that doesn't require us to change the ownership of British Steel,' Starmer told reporters in Kananaskis, Canada on Tuesday. He added that in the meantime, the tariff reductions for cars and aerospace will be implemented 'within days.'
Last week, UK Business and Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds told reporters in London that the real hurdle was so-called 'melt-and-pour' provisions. They've been a feature of previous trade deals with the US and demand that steel must be melted down and poured in the UK to benefit from preferential tariff rates.
That's a requirement that is becoming increasingly hard for UK steel manufacturers to fulfill. British Steel owns the country's last remaining blast furnace. Tata Steel shut its down last year, and a new electric arc furnace that can create steel from scrap will not be up and running until late 2027.
'One has to remember that while the Biden administration also insisted on conditions to have steel melted and poured in exporting countries, there were also product-specific exemptions which the UK benefited from given its niche orders from US customers,' said Allie Renison, director at SEC Newgate and a former adviser to the previous government's business and trade secretary. 'In reintroducing steel tariffs, the Trump administration scrapped these so that duties also extended to derivative products, and trying to negotiate back to these or asking for an exclusion will naturally take some time.'
Currently, the UK is contending with US tariffs on steel of 25%. It is the only country not to have been hit by Trump's 50% tariffs on the sector, though some manufacturers have already reported their US orders drying up.
The US has said that it would exempt the UK up to a certain quota on steel imports, but that has not yet been set because technical details have held up the negotiations. US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick will later determine what that quota is without being subject to the 25% tariffs, a White House official said.
Starmer's decision to push ahead with the automotive, beef and ethanol parts of the deal while leaving steel negotiations for later raises the risk that Trump might ask the UK to sweeten the negotiating package, Renison said.
'The US is never above trying to extract an extra pound of flesh in return - even if this is something they've already committed to in principle,' she said.
Previously, the US has indicated it would like the UK to reduce or eliminate its digital services tax, charged on the revenues of search engines and social media platforms. Vice President JD Vance has also suggested that he would like to see the UK's hate speech laws relaxed.
But Crawford Falconer, Britain's former top trade negotiator, said Starmer probably had very little choice but to agree to what Trump proposed. 'If there was any mistake it was over-hyping on steel to begin with,' he said. Even the Biden administration had been tough on melt-and-pour provisions, 'it's not clear why they ever thought it was in the bag.'
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.
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