A 200% duty on the import of products with aluminum from the Russian Federation into the United States came into force

INTERFAX.RU - A 200% duty on the import of aluminum products into the United States, in which the metal of Russian origin is present, comes into force on Monday.

The tariff applies to products regardless of their nominal origin. A month earlier, a similar duty on the import of aluminum and aluminum products produced directly in Russia came into force.

Since the beginning of the conflict in Ukraine last year, no restrictions have been imposed on Russian metal and Rusal, which produces it. Rusal is the world's second largest aluminum producer outside of China, with a global market share of about 6%. Although the US administration considered sanctions against Russian aluminum back in February 2022, the authorities backed it down then, as such measures could undermine global supplies of this metal.

The US administration noted that these measures in the current situation will help American aluminum producers to withstand competition.

Such harsh tariffs will effectively stop the import of metal from Russia to the United States, Bloomberg reported earlier, which announced in early February that a 200% duty would soon be introduced. This measure has been under consideration for several months, the agency's interlocutors said. They also added that the US is targeting Russian metal because Russian companies, in their opinion, are dumping the US market, hurting US companies.

Last year, the US accounted for 4.6% of Rusal's revenue (6.2% a year earlier). Aluminum from Russia has traditionally accounted for about 10% of total US imports.

One of the lobbyists for restrictive measures against Russian aluminum was the American Alcoa. Alcoa has previously sought to remove Russian metal from the LME listing. The company expressed concern that the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, in addition to the resulting humanitarian and energy crisis, could distort the market nature of aluminum prices and increase systemic risks to the reliability of the LME aluminum contract. The exchange refused to impose restrictions on Russian metal, saying in mid-November that it "should not make or impose ethical judgments on the broad market."

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