The U.S. government announced on Aug. 19 tariff hikes on more than 400 products, including railcars, compressors, and furniture, subjecting them to the 50 percent steel and aluminum import duties.
“Today’s action expands the reach of the steel and aluminum tariffs and shuts down avenues for circumvention—supporting the continued revitalization of the American steel and aluminum industries,” the undersecretary of commerce for industry and security, Jeffrey Kessler, said.
The derivative products list now includes wind turbines and their parts and components, mobile cranes, bulldozers, railcars, furniture, compressors, and pumps, according to the statement.
The department also added parts for automotive exhaust systems and electrical steel needed for electric vehicles to the new tariffs, as well as components for buses and air conditioners.
Non-steel and non-aluminum content will be subject to reciprocal tariff rates that the U.S. government has imposed on certain countries and other applicable tariffs, according to the notice.
Steel Manufacturers Association President Philip Bell welcomed the department’s decision to expand steel and aluminum tariffs to cover products that contain steel, saying the move would ensure a level playing field for U.S. steelmakers.
“Although the previously imposed steel and aluminum tariffs have helped provide critical price support in the United States market, they have not yet enabled these industries to develop and maintain the rates of capacity production utilization that are necessary for the industries’ sustained health and for projected national defense needs.”






