Ontario backtracks on surcharge for power exports to US

Unlock the White House Watch newsletter without spending a dime

The Canadian province of Ontario suspended a surcharge on exports of power to the US hours after President Donald Trump blamed it for his plan to double tariffs on steel and aluminium imports from Canada to 50 per cent.

Ontario premier Doug Ford said on Tuesday afternoon that he would suspend the 25 per cent surcharge following a “productive” conversation with US commerce secretary Howard Lutnick.

Ford said he would meet Lutnick and US trade representative Jamieson Greer in Washington later this week to debate the trade tensions.

The premier’s U-turn, only a day after the surcharge was imposed, got here hours after Trump said the US would impose 50 per cent tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminium on Wednesday.

“I even have instructed my Secretary of Commerce so as to add an ADDITIONAL 25% Tariff, to 50%, on all STEEL and ALUMINUM COMING INTO THE UNITED STATES FROM CANADA, ONE OF THE HIGHEST TARIFFING NATIONS ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD,” the US president wrote on his Truth Social platform on Tuesday morning.

The most recent trade dispute sparked an additional increase in volatility on Wall Street, briefly sending the US S&P 500 index sharply lower on Tuesday following a heavy sell-off the day before today. The S&P turned positive later within the session, trading up 0.1 per cent in late-afternoon trading.

Trump’s doubling of tariffs on Canadian metal imports is the most recent in a series of tit-for-tat salvos between the US and Canada because the president’s aggressive tariff threats and economic nationalism threaten to fracture North American trade.

Shortly after his inauguration, Trump said he would impose 25 per cent tariffs on Canada and Mexico, but last week he granted a one-month reprieve for goods that met the principles of a 2020 free trade deal.

The aluminium and steel tariffs are a part of a separate set of duties to be imposed on producers internationally, which is as a result of take force on Wednesday.

White House officials said the worldwide 25 per cent tariffs on imports of the metals were intended to guard US domestic industry.

Mark Carney, Canada’s incoming prime minister, described Trump’s latest escalation as “an attack on Canadian staff, families, and businesses”.

Carney added that his government would “ensure our response has maximum impact within the US and minimal impact here in Canada”.

The White House on Tuesday continued to dismiss widespread concerns over the market turmoil.

“With regards to the stock market, the numbers that we see today, the numbers we saw yesterday . . . are a snapshot of a moment of time,” said press secretary Karoline Leavitt.

“We’re in a period of economic transition,” Leavitt added.

A closely tracked measure of the difference in US and London aluminium prices, called the Midwest premium, rose sharply on Tuesday, underscoring the rising costs facing American industrial groups.

Futures tracking the premium, which follows prices of the metal delivered to plants within the US Midwest, rose as much as 18 per cent, based on FactSet data.

Trump said that if Canada didn’t drop its “very long time” tariffs, he would “substantially increase” levies on cars coming into the US, a move he said would “essentially, permanently shut down” the country’s carmaking industry.

Trump, who also suggested the US’s northern neighbour could now not be assured that Washington would protect it militarily, added that “the one thing that is sensible is for Canada to grow to be our cherished Fifty First State. This might make all Tariffs, and the whole lot else, totally disappear.”

Canada has strongly rejected such suggestions by Trump since he became president in January.

Additional reporting by Steff Chávez in Washington