The EU plans tariffs of up to 25 per cent on U.S. goods in retaliation for levies on metals, but will spare bourbon to shield European wine and spirits from reprisals, according to a document seen by AFP on Tuesday.
The proposed tariffs — drawn up since President Donald Trump’s duties on steel and aluminium took effect last month — aim to show EU strength while Brussels seeks to negotiate over Washington’s broader tariffs onslaught.
Brussels scrapped bourbon from a preliminary list of targeted goods, after bowing to demands from major wine exporters France and Italy, which were spooked by Trump’s threat to hit European alcoholic beverages with a 200 per cent tariff in retaliation.
The U.S.-produced whiskey does not feature on the final list, which was sent to representatives of EU member states ahead of a vote on Wednesday.
The list proposes levies on goods including soybeans, poultry, rice, sweetcorn, fruit and nuts, wood, motorcycles, plastics, textiles, paintings, electrical equipment, make-up and other beauty products.
Brussels has so far refrained from hitting back at the 20 per cent duties on the bloc’s imports ordered as part of Trump’s global tariff onslaught, with EU states rallying behind a push to avert an all-out trade war through negotiations.
But EU trade spokesman, Olof Gill, said on Tuesday that the European Commission could present its planned countermeasures to the new levies “as early as next week.”
He added that the EU would consult with member states and industry on the plan before agreeing on “final measures” that EU capitals would then vote on.
‘Counterproductive’
Brussels has already launched its retaliation to Trump’s 25-per cent metals tariffs, with a two-step response set to play out over the next six weeks.
First, it will let levies dating from Trump’s first term — but currently suspended — snap back into place in mid-April.
Part two of the response involves a new set of tariffs targeting U.S. goods, as per the document.
If approved, the majority of the levies will take effect mid-May, while some, like tariffs on almonds, will begin in December, according to the document.
Initially, Brussels estimated the U.S. tariffs would target US$28 billion worth of its exports, and the European response would affect the same amount of U.S. products.
But EU trade chief Maros Sefcovic on Monday said “it will not be up to the level of €26 billion [US$28 billion], because we’ve been listening very carefully to our member states.”
Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani reiterated on Monday that Rome did not want bourbon included as it would be “counterproductive.”
“It would be detrimental to our wine exports,” he said to reporters in Luxembourg as EU trade ministers met to discuss Trump’s sweeping new tariffs announced last week.
