City
Epaper

Canada hits back with tariffs on USD 29.8 billion worth of US goods

By ANI | Updated: March 12, 2025 22:01 IST

Ottawa [Canada], March 12 : In response to US President Donald Trump's decision to impose tariffs on Canadian steel ...

Open in App

Ottawa [Canada], March 12 : In response to US President Donald Trump's decision to impose tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminium on Wednesday morning, Canada's federal government hits back with tariffs on USD 29.8 billion worth of American goods effective March 13 morning, CBC News reported.

Addressing a news conference, Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc described Trump's action as "unjustified and unjustifiable."

LeBlanc stated, "We will not stand idly by while our iconic steel and aluminium industries are being unfairly targeted."

Further, LeBlanc said the American products being hit with these tariffs include U.S.-made steel and aluminium, computers, sports equipment and certain cast iron products, among others.

US and Canada are embroiled in a trade dispute, with the US imposing metals tariffs that took effect just after midnight. These tariffs are separate from previous ones imposed by President Trump to pressure Canada into tightening its border controls on drugs and migrants.

In response to the initial tariffs, Canada swiftly imposed its own tariffs on USD 30 billion worth of American goods. Notably, Canada did not lift these tariffs even after Trump rejigged his tariff regime, as per CBC News.

Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly said Trump has claimed he needs to impose tariffs now because Canadian steel and aluminium imports pose a "national security threat" something she called a bogus and insulting justification.

"The excuse for these tariffs shifts every day. The only constant seems to be President Trump's talks of annexing our country through economic coercion. We will not back down and we will not give in to this coercion," she said. "We need to fight back against this nonsense."

Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said Trump's tariffs will push up the price of virtually everything US factories produce, given just how dependent they are on Canadian metals. The US, for example, produces only 16 per cent of the aluminum it needs, while 60 per cent of its supply comes from Quebec alone.

Champagne said Trump's relentless trade attacks likely aren't going away anytime soon and Canada needs an attitude shift to become more independent and resilient.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentCardi B celebrates 1st Christmas as mom of 4 kids

EntertainmentMartin Scorsese pays homage to Rob Reiner and wife

Other SportsUPKL Season 2: Noida Ninjas defeat Kanpur Warriors in opening match

NationalThree accused in rape, murder cases escape from Khachrod sub-jail in MP

International"Rahman's return is politically very significant": Ex Indian HC to Bangladesh

International Realted Stories

International'Paris climate deal designed to include and bind India'

International"Ready to strengthen communication with India," China slams Pentagon report

InternationalBangladesh interim govt condemns Rajbari killing

InternationalKathmandu Mayor Balen Shah gears up for 2026 Nepal polls

InternationalBush, Putin privately cast China as a long-term strategic challenge