When the US imposed 50% tariffs on Canadian aluminum, Canadian producers redirected their exports to Europe, causing US aluminum prices to spike to record levels while European manufacturers gained access to cheaper Canadian supply. This demonstrates how protectionist trade policies can backfire by disrupting established supply chains, forcing domestic industries to compete at higher costs while global shortages develop from multiple simultaneous disruptions.
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Europe BEGS for MORE Canadian Aluminum — Trump's Tariff Backfire Just Got WORSEAñadido:
Here's something nobody in the White House wants to explain. The moment Donald Trump slapped 50% tariffs on Canadian aluminum, he didn't kill Canadian aluminum, he just handed it to Europe. And Europe is now paying record prices to take as much of it as it can get. While American manufacturers are stuck paying the highest aluminum costs in history, competing against the same European rivals now getting the Canadian metal America pushed away. That is not a theory. That is the documented, verified chain of events playing out right now in the global aluminum market. And the numbers are going to make your head spin. Let's start from where this actually began. In March 2025, the Trump administration re-imposed a 25% tariff on Canadian aluminum under section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act, framed as a national security measure.
By June 2025, that rate had been doubled to 50%.
All previous exemptions that had been negotiated for allied nations were stripped away. Canada, which had historically supplied roughly 75% of all aluminium imported into the United States, suddenly found its primary customer had made it economically painful to keep selling south of the border. So what did Canadian producers do? They did the only rational thing available to them. They turned around and started shipping east across the Atlantic. Quebec is the center of Canada's aluminium universe. Eight of Canada's nine smelters operate there.
The province accounts for roughly 90% of Canada's total aluminium making capacity. The big names Riotinto, Alcoa, and Illuminary Alouette run sprawling operations built over decades with the American market as their default destination. The United States had been receiving 95% of Quebec's aluminium exports in the first quarter of 2025. By the second quarter of that same year, that number had dropped to 78%. Europe's share in that same window jumped from 0.2% to 18%. Those are not gradual adjustments. That is a structural redirect happening in real time.
Aluminary Aluet, North America's largest aluminium smelter, 40% owned by Riotinto, confirmed the numbers directly. In the first quarter of 2025, 4% of its production went to Europe. By the second quarter, 57% did. Jean Simar, president of the Aluminium Association of Canada, put it plainly when he spoke to reporters in Montreal. It's an easy call. you ship anything you can to Europe. Alcoa announced in its second quarter earnings report that it had diverted approximately 100,000 metric tons of aluminium shipments away from the United States. Riotinto reportedly curbed its crossber exports entirely and began reselling metal sourced from rivals to American customers, effectively becoming a middleman in its own supply chain to avoid the tariff burden. Before we go any further, if you're watching this and you're not subscribed, now is the time. Hit the button and stay with us because this story is about to get a lot more complicated. Now, here's where it gets worse for Washington. The administration's argument was always that punishing Canadian imports would force American producers to fill the gap, reviving domestic smelting and strengthening the industrial base. What actually happened was the opposite. The United States has only one aluminina refinery left on its soil. Multiple smelters were already idled before the tariff escalation began. The Horesville, Kentucky facility had cailed operations due to unsustainable power costs. The US Geological Survey recorded a sharp decline in domestic production capacity that no tariff alone could quickly reverse. As of early 2026, the United States can only produce roughly onethird of its own annual aluminum demand from domestic sources. Even with the Mount Holly smelter in South Carolina being brought back to full capacity, an expansion expected to increase US output by about 10%. The structural gap remains enormous. And the new smelter being planned in Inola, Oklahoma, a joint venture between Century Aluminum and Emirates Global Aluminium, backed by a $500 million Department of Energy grant, won't be producing a single ton before the end of the decade. So, while the policy is supposed to boost domestic production long-term, American buyers are living in a completely different short-term reality. US domestic aluminum inventories dropped from 750,000 tons at the start of 2025 to under 300,000 tons by the end of the year according to data from Harbor Aluminium and Witsend Commodity Advisers and the price signal has been deafening. The US Midwest premium, the sir charge American buyers pay on top of the London Metal Exchange benchmark price, hit an all-time record of $2,182 per metric ton in January 2026.
That put the all-in cost of aluminium for American manufacturers above $5,340 per ton. Their European competitors were paying nearly 70% less for the same metal on global benchmarks. Products from beverage cans to automotive components to aerospace parts are all downstream of this number. Historical data from the 2018 tariff period shows that between 70 and 85% of premium related cost increases eventually get passed on to consumers. The math is not kind. Now overlay what happened simultaneously in the Middle East. The Iran war, which began with joint USIsraeli strikes on February 28th, 20126, immediately disrupted global aluminium supply chains in ways nobody in Washington appears to have accounted for when the tariff architecture was being built. The Middle East accounts for roughly 9% of global aluminium smelting capacity. The Gulf Cooperation Council, the UAE, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia had become a critical backup supply source for the United States precisely because Canada had been priced out of the American market. The UAE and Bahrain together had come to account for nearly one quarter of US unorroought aluminium imports. When the Iran conflict began and the straight of Hormuz effectively closed to Western shipping, those Gulf sources went dark simultaneously.
Emirates Global Aluminium reported significant damage at its Abu Dhabi facility. Aluminium Bahrain shut down 19% of its 1.6 million ton annual capacity due to shipping disruptions alone. The GCC's aluminium exports, which Europe also relied upon heavily, collapsed. Europe imported approximately 1.3 million tons, 21% of its primary aluminium from the Middle East in 2025.
That volume was now gone. combined with the EU's earlier phase out of Russian aluminium following the war in Ukraine and the closure of South 32's Mosal smelter in Mosamb beek, Europe was staring at an acute structural shortage.
Bank of America analyst Michael Whidmer estimated that Europe faces a 5.6 million ton aluminium deficit in 2026.
The global shortfall was assessed at 2.2 2 million tons. The United States separately faces a 3.8 million ton deficit of its own. In a market where everyone is short, Whidmer described the situation in one sentence. We are in a situation where the Europeans and the Americans are competing for limited aluminium units. And right now, Europe is winning that competition because Europe didn't impose 50% tariffs on the supplier that both sides need. European duty paid aluminium premiums surged 73% from the start of the Iran War to a record $621 per metric ton. That number, while painful for European consumers, is still less than onethird of what American buyers are paying in their Midwest premium. Canadian producers looking at comparable netback values, what they actually pocket after accounting for tariffs, are finding Europe the clearly superior destination. As Simard explained to Reuters, when comparing US and EU prices from an export perspective, one has to shave off the portion going to the US Treasury in tariffs to get to comparable netbacks.
This is why the EU option remains attractive to Canada, adding pressure on the US market. Canadian aluminium exports to the EU range between 6% and 40% of monthly totals between April 2025 and March 2026, compared to near zero in the first quarter of last year. Even before the Iran war started, Canadian shipments to Europe had already jumped 276% from 2024 levels to more than 590,000 tons. The war didn't create this dynamic. The tariffs did. The war just accelerated and locked in what was already happening. The Fraser Institute put the conclusion in the starkkest terms in an April 2026 analysis. The United States had increased its reliance on Middle Eastern aluminium suppliers, the UAE and Bahrain, specifically because Canadian producers had been driven away by tariffs. And now those Middle Eastern suppliers are themselves disrupted by a conflict the United States is actively participating in.
There is no available substitute lined up. Canadian smelters are operating at full utilization. There is no excess capacity to redirect back toward American buyers, even if the producers wanted to. The relationships and shipping contracts that took years to build in European markets are not going to be dissolved on short notice because Washington decides it wants a reset. The Fraser Institute assessment was direct.
With global demand for non-Gulf aluminum at extreme levels and Canadian smelters fully committed, there's little chance producers in Canada will redirect back to US buyers in the near term. So, let's be precise about what has actually happened here. The tariffs were imposed to reduce US dependence on foreign aluminum. They reduced US dependence on Canadian aluminum specifically the most geographically logical historically integrated lowcarbon source of supply the United States had to partially replace it. The US turned to Gulf state producers. Those Gulf state producers are now offline because of a regional conflict. The Canadian metal that used to flow into American factories is now flowing into European ones instead because Europe has the price advantage the tariffs created. And American manufacturers are paying record premiums, competing in global markets against rivals who are buying the same Canadian aluminium at a substantial discount. The US Midwest premium representing more than 40% of the total cost of the metal inside America. That number is the policy outcome. That is what the tariff architecture produced.
The administration's response has been to announce the Oklahoma smelter project, a genuinely significant development, and cite the long-term goal of domestic sufficiency. But construction hasn't started. Meaningful production is projected by the end of the decade at the earliest. American manufacturers in the automotive sector, the aerospace sector, the packaging industry, and the construction sector are absorbing the costs right now, not at the end of the decade. The Aluminium Association of Canada's Jean Seimar speaking to reporters didn't bury his conclusion in diplomatic language. He described the European premium market as simply a better business environment for Canadian sellers and said the shift away from the United States was a rational response to the signals the market was sending signals the US government created. The question nobody in Washington has answered clearly is this.
If the stated goal of the tariffs was to protect and grow domestic American aluminium production and the documented result is record aluminium prices for American manufacturers, a structural supply gap filled partially by Gulf state producers who are now offline and Canadian metal flowing in record volumes to European competitors. At what point does the policy get re-examined against its own stated objectives? The 2026 renegotiation of the US Mexico Canada agreement provides a potential diplomatic window to revisit Canadian aluminium tariffs. The Fraser Institute noted this explicitly, but that window is only useful if the administration is willing to use it and so far there is no public signal that Washington is prepared to walk back the core tariff position. In the meantime, the tugofwar that Bank of America described, Americans and Europeans competing for limited aluminium units is being won by the side that didn't tax its own supply chain. Join the discussion in the comments below. Who do you think bears the cost of this? The manufacturers, the consumers, or both? Let me know your thoughts. Subscribe and like this video if you want to stay updated on where this is heading next.
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