COLUMN-The United States' aluminium tariff wall is crumbling: Andy Home

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(Repeats Feb. 19 column, no changes. The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters)

By Andy Home

LONDON, Feb 19 (Reuters) - It is almost a year since the United States imposed duties on imports of aluminium and steel on national security grounds.

If the aim of the so-called "Section 232" tariffs was to lift domestic production, President Donald Trump's administration can claim a degree of success.

U.S. output of primary aluminium has started rising sharply thanks to restarts of idled capacity, although not all of them have been directly down to the 10-percent import tariff.

If, however, the aim was also to tackle rising import penetration, particularly by Chinese aluminium producers, tariffs may already have passed peak effectiveness.

Ever more gaps are appearing in the aluminium trade wall as the number of exclusions granted for specific products lengthens.

China has been a major beneficiary of the exclusions process with approved import tonnages not far off actual volumes in 2017.

It has fared considerably better than Canada, long-standing U.S. ally and a strategic supplier of aluminium to its neighbour.

Hardly any Canadian metal has been excluded from the tariffs, which is why the country's Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland is lobbying hard for a full exemption.

So runs the law of unintended consequences but it also highlights the limited effectiveness of tariffs if, like the United States, you are heavily import dependent.

PRODUCTION RISING

The Commerce Department's January 2018 report recommending action on aluminium imports explicitly targeted lifting domestic production capacity utilisation from 39 percent in 2017 to 80 percent.

By the end of last year U.S. primary aluminium output was running at an annualised rate of 1.15 million tonnes, equivalent to 63 percent of domestic capacity, according to figures from the Aluminum Association.

It should rise further as Century Aluminum reactivates a third idled line at its Hawesville smelter in Kentucky. The first line kicked back into life in the third quarter and the second was due by the end of last year.

Century is one of three companies actively rekindling U.S. production.

Magnitude 7 Metals has resumed operations at the New Madrid smelter in Missouri. The import tariff has certainly helped but the restart plans were underway as soon as the plant was bought in 2016.

Similarly, Alcoa's restart of idled capacity at its Warrick smelter in Indiana was announced at the end of 2017, before Commerce had submitted its report, and was driven, the company has since stressed, by plant-specific economics not tariffs.