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Shell, Chevron get first waivers to US steel tariffs

  • : Crude oil, Metals, Natural gas
  • 18/07/12

President Donald Trump's administration has given the oil and gas sector its first exclusions from a 25pc tariff on steel imports, after agreeing with Shell and Chevron that the specialty steel they were importing is not manufactured in the US.

The US Commerce Department today approved tariff exclusions for 243 metric tonnes of steel casing and production tubing that Shell said it will use when drilling wells in the US Gulf of Mexico. It also provided a tariff exclusion to Chevron for 50 metric tonnes of corrosion-resistant stainless steel tubing. The waivers will only last a year and are exclusive to the two companies.

The waiver approval marks a victory for the oil and gas industry, which is concerned that the tariffs could raise their costs. The Commerce Department has been working through a backlog of more than 20,000 steel tariff exclusion requests. The agency has has only processed a total of 241 requests since it began issuing waiver decisions on 21 June.

Shell in its request for a n exclusion said no US mills make the type of steel used in offshore wells, where high temperatures and high pressures are usually present. Shell is importing the product from Japanese steel producer Nippon Steel and Sumitomo Metal. The company also said there was a national security argument for approving the waiver.

"It does not serve the national security to delay or increase the cost of fuel extraction in the absence of domestic alternatives, particularly when the natural resources extracted will only serve to fuel the US economy's continued growth," Shell said in its request.

Chevron's waiver request also covered corrosion-resistant steel manufactured by Nippon in Japan that is not made in the US. The company said that domestic oil production was "critical to national security." Commerce denied one of Chevron's applications for a separate tariff waiver on 330 metric tonnes of corrosion-resistant tubing because it said the request was incomplete.

Chevron and Shell did not immediately respond for comment.

The US last week denied a request for a tariff exclusion for 135,000 t/y of steel tubing and casing that Borusan Mannesmann Pipe US said it would import from Turkey. Commerce said the imported products were manufactured in high enough volumes in the US.


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25/01/22

Eurofer seeks 50pc cut to flat steel quotas

Eurofer seeks 50pc cut to flat steel quotas

London, 22 January (Argus) — EU import quotas for flat carbon steel should be cut by 50pc to create a "healthier" balance between domestic supply and imports, European steel association Eurofer said in a filing to the European Commission as part of its functional safeguard review. The Eurofer response was sent on 10 January, but only made public on the case file today, much to the chagrin of importers. The last day for feedback was 13 January, after distributors' association Eurometal requested an extension, which was granted for just three days, over a weekend. It also suggested that there should be individual quotas on Chinese product, even where dumping duties are in place, and that Chinese material processed elsewhere be counted against this quota with dumping duties applied. The current level of imports is resulting in excess supply of 8.75mn t — 4mn t on hot-rolled coil (HRC), 1.2mn t on cold-rolled coil (CRC) and 2.8mn t on hot-dip galvanised (HDG), Eurofer said. Eurofer reiterated its belief that 25pc duties are not sufficient and that an average rate of 34pc should be applied, with no pro-rata duty on the first day of a new quarter. It also said the 15pc country caps imposed on the other countries' quota for HRC be applied to other categories, such as CRC and HDG. On CRC, a 10pc cap should be imposed, it said. On HRC, that other countries' cap should be lowered from 15pc to 7pc. The carry-over of unused quotas should also be stopped, if not capped, the association said, adding that there should be no liberalisation of quota volume in the last year of the safeguard. By Colin Richardson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Syria issues first post-Assad oil tenders


25/01/22
25/01/22

Syria issues first post-Assad oil tenders

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US trade deficit with Canada is no 'subsidy': TD Bank


25/01/21
25/01/21

US trade deficit with Canada is no 'subsidy': TD Bank

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Trump takes aim at EVs in early actions


25/01/21
25/01/21

Trump takes aim at EVs in early actions

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Texas, Louisiana ports closed by winter storm: Update


25/01/21
25/01/21

Texas, Louisiana ports closed by winter storm: Update

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