Prime Minister Mark Carney on Wednesday denounced U.S. President Donald Trump’s doubling of tariffs on steel and aluminum to 50 percent in a heightening of trade tensions between the neighbouring nations.
“The latest tariffs on steel and aluminum are unjustified, they’re illegal, they’re bad for American workers, bad for American industry and of course for Canadian industry as well,” Carney told reporters in Ottawa.
He vowed that Canada — the largest supplier of foreign steel and aluminum to the United States — will “take some time, not much” to respond.
At the same time, the prime minister noted that “intensive discussions” continued with the U.S. administration to rewrite Canada-U.S. trade relations.
Doug Ford, the premier of Ontario — the province which has a large number of steel producers — accused the Trump administration of breaking a “verbal agreement” not to escalate tariffs on Canadian metals.
That deal with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, he said, had been reached after Ford agreed to suspend a 25 per cent surcharge on electricity exported to three American states.
“We can’t sit back and let President Trump steamroll us,” he said, adding that “everything’s on the table” in terms of retaliatory measures.
Canada exported 5.95 million tonnes of steel and 3.15 million tonnes of aluminum to the United States last year, according to U.S. government data.

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