UK trade secretary says ‘essential steps’ happening ‘at pace’ to turn UK-US tariff pact into deal – business live


Reynolds says ‘essential steps’ happening ‘at pace’ to turn UK-US tariff pact into deal

Lisa O’Carroll

UK trade minister Jonathan Reynolds has said “essential steps” are taking place “at pace” to turn Keir Starmer’s recent tariff pact with Donald Trump into an implementable deal that once entered into force will see 27.5% tariffs on cars and 25% tariffs on steel eliminated.

He was speaking at a brief press conference in Brussels, unveiling 13 new partnerships with third countries to develop critical minerals supplies, including one pact to financially support Tungsten West, a closed mine in Devon.

Reynolds welcomed Trump’s decision last might to British made steel and aluminium from the a doubling to a 50% tariff saying it “reflects the recent breakthroughs” with the US.

But he added:

The two essential steps we are continuing to progress at pace is, first of all, the implementation of the agreement we have on sectoral tariffs. Steel and aluminum is part of that, alongside automotive, aerospace and the other critical sectors.

We’ve had the decision not to extend 50% but we need to bring that 25% down to effectively zero… that is one piece of work which we continue to progress at pace.

Reynolds, who met the US trade representative Jamieson Greer on the sidelines of the OECD summit in Paris yesterday, said the “deeper negotiation about reciprocal tariffs” was “ongoing”.

We don’t want to see additional barriers to trade being put in place, and we continue to work constructively with all partners to secure that.

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