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Canada exempts $110M more of U.S. imports from retaliatory tariffs

Earlier this week, the Finance Department quietly added $110 million worth of products and businesses to its list of exemptions from Canada's retaliatory tariffs on U.S. imports. While this relief protects jobs, it undermines pressure the Trudeau government wants to keep on the Trump administration.

Remissions help businesses, but undermine political pressure on U.S. to lift steel, aluminum tariffs

Finance Minister Bill Morneau's office said a cabinet order authorizing the additional refunds will be published in the coming weeks. (Peter Power/Canadian Press)

Earlier this week, the Finance Department quietly added $110 million worth of products and businesses to its list of exemptions from Canada's retaliatory tariffs on U.S. imports.

While this reliefmay protect jobs in Canada, it undermines political pressure the Trudeau government wants to keep on the Trump administration bymaking it less costly to continue to import certain American goods.

The new remissions appear in revised lists posted on Finance Canada's website. Finance Minister Bill Morneau's office said a cabinet order authorizing the additional refunds will be published in the coming weeks.

In last month's federal budget, officials revealed that$1.04 billion in net revenue has been collectedfromCanada's retaliatory tariffs so far.

At that point, Canada had approved up to $285 million in remissions through two previousorders in October and December.

This latest remission ordermeans upto $395million is now being refunded, and more U.S. imports will be exempt on arrival.

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland frequently visits Canadian steel mills as efforts continue to persuade the Americans to lift their tariffs. She's visiting Algoma Steel in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., on Thursday. (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

Morneau's spokesperson, Pierre-Olivier Herbert, said therevised list that came into force on April 15 results from the successful assessment of 30 recent requests for tariff relief. As a result of the new exemptions, 26 additional companies are eligible for remissions.

The government is also extendingthe expiry date of the period of eligibility for refunds from April 30 toJune 30, for 33 companies withpre-existing contractobligations to buysteel or aluminum from the U.S.

"The extension of the time-limited remission provides relief for downstream manufacturers while they continue to undertake efforts to secure new Canadian sources of supply," Herbert said.

Canadian officials were hoping all the tariffs could have been lifted by now.

Instead, despite the signing of the revised North American trade agreement and its pending(but not imminent) ratification, the Trump administration showslittle willingness to end the tariffs soon, despite business pressure on both sides of the border.

Retaliation ramping up

Last July, Canada retaliated against the U.S. for imposing a 25 per cent tariff on steel imports and a 10 per cent tariff on aluminum imports.

The federal government calculated the value of Canadiansteel and aluminum shipments to the U.S. facingthis tariff, and settled ona list of U.S. imports Canada would hit with retaliatory tariffs.

At the time, the federal government saidit was matching the U.S. tariffs "dollar-for-dollar." But in the months that followed, these values haven't actually matched.

Freeland speaks to workers after touring Tree Island Steel, in Richmond, B.C., on Aug. 24, 2018. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Last month, Canadian officials began warning they were consideringstepping up this retaliation, likely addingmore products in the coming months. In the weeks that followed, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland confirmed thatmore retaliation is under examination.

Part of the reason Canada's retaliation hasn't hit as hard as intended is that businesses canapply for remissions that exempt products they need from payingthe extra surtax. Specific criteria were set for these exemptions.

Businesses already locked intocontracts that pre-dated May 31, 2018 when the costly tariff action was announced could get off the hook, as could others who demonstrate that no Canadian supplier was available for the specific goods they needed. The rules allowed companiesfacing "exceptionally challenging circumstances" to try to make their case for an exemption.

Many did, resulting in the nearly $400 million worth of refunds.

Butsmaller businesses complained to the Finance Department, as well as a House of Commons committee, that the effort, paperwork and expertise required to navigate thecomplicatedapplication processfor these remissions was beyond the means of companies that can't affordteams of accountants, lawyers orlobbyists to maketheir case to the government.

A worker straightens Canadian flags in front of rolls of coated steel before a visit by Freeland in Hamilton, Ont., on June 29, 2018. Freeland was there to announce the government's latest response to U.S. tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum. (Peter Power/The Canadian Press)

Canadian approvalsnot transparent

The U.S. Commerce Department publishes information about theapplications for exclusions from its tariffs, making it possible for researchers to study what businesses from which countries are having the most success getting out from under the American levies.

A recent analysis found that about 40per cent of Chinese steel imports are excluded from the U.S. tariffs, but only two per cent of Canadian steel imports to the U.S. successfully dodgedthe added cost.

There is no similar transparency for the Canadian remission process. What's posted online is only the product numbers approved for exemption, with the applicable dates. Insome cases, specific business registration numbers(but no names) are listed the only available hint at who's been successful in the application process.

CBC News has asked for more detail on whichcompanies are getting refunds and in what amounts, but the government says this is commercially sensitive information it will not release.

Based on the total value of the remissions made available by the Finance Department, however, it's likely some companies are being refunded millions of dollars in tariffs they'd otherwise have to absorb as extra costs.

The finance minister's office told CBC News"the vast majority" of companies thathave made successful applications for remissions are downstream manufacturers thatdependon inputs that were targeted by Canada's retaliation list, as well as companies in the energy and construction sectors.