RPT-COLUMN-Europe's aluminium industry has its own tariff problems: Andy Home

(Repeats June 21 column with no changes. The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.)

* EU Primary Aluminium Production: https://tmsnrt.rs/2FreYe6

By Andy Home

LONDON, June 21 (Reuters) - U.S tariffs on imports of aluminium have changed the pricing landscape for domestic users.

The U.S. Midwest premium, which overlays the London Metal Exchange (LME) cash price, remains stubbornly high and consumers, led by the drinks can industry, are up in arms.

They could do worse than learn a tariffs lesson from the European Union, which has imposed its own duties on aluminium imports for many decades.

As with U.S. tariffs, the rationale is to preserve threatened primary aluminium smelters.

The duty, however, has ended up failing to stop multiple smelter closures while actively undermining the downstream sector, according to the Federation of Aluminium Consumers in Europe (FACE).

FACE, which has lobbied for many years against the duty, is renewing its efforts with a piece of research from the LUISS University of Rome, spelling out the negative impact on Europe's downstream aluminium value chain.

The report also has some interesting things to say about how tariffs really work.

LOST CAUSE?

The EU import duties currently range from 3% for unalloyed aluminium to 6% for alloys.

Countries with preferential trade agreements, such as Iceland, Norway and Mozambique, are exempt.

The explicit aim of the duty has always been the preservation of EU smelters, their workforces and their research and development.

The European Commission has twice reacted to consumer ire by reducing parts of the tariff structure, once in 2007 and again in 2013. The first time around there was even a proposal to eliminate the duties altogether but it wilted in the face of concerted opposition from producer countries.

Since then more EU smelters have shut, with plants closing in France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Britain. The fate of two Spanish plants is now in the balance as U.S. producer Alcoa tries to negotiate a sale rather than close them.

Europe has lost more than 30% of its aluminium smelting capacity since 2008, the LUISS report notes.

Smelting, both primary and from scrap, now represents just 30% of turnover and 7% of jobs in the aluminium supply chain, according to FACE.

Net import dependency has grown steadily to 74% in 2017, when the region sucked in 6.2 million tonnes of aluminium.

PAID IN FULL

The duty has cost the EU downstream aluminium sector somewhere between 10 billion and 18 billion euros ($11 billion-$18 billion) since 2000, according to the LUISS study.