Unfortunately, I've spent way too much time in front of trade committees and tribunals. Hopefully, we can resolve that.
Thank you for taking the time today. I'm pleased to be before the committee to help in this important task of examining North American and global steel trade issues. It's vital that the members of Parliament know the challenges the steel business faces today and the impact on Canadian employees and their families who are dependent on steel companies like our own.
I should mention that we are a steel consumer. Atlas Canada is part of the Zekelman group, Canadian-owned but with major operations on both sides of the border. We employ hundreds of people in our Harrow, Ontario, facility and are a vital part of the southwestern Ontario economy. We make mostly carbon steel structural tubing and piling, both critical to infrastructure projects.
I want to talk about two things: first, the direct impact on Atlas of the U.S. and Canadian reciprocal steel surcharges; and second, how offshore steel is being diverted to Canada because the U.S. market is effectively closed to imports.
Because of our extensive cross-border operations, we have direct experience in Canada and U.S. steel trade, but also in the damaging impact of low-priced offshore products that have been flooding into Canada over the years.
Whatever product we are talking about, the world is awash in excess steel. The OECD has been studying the problem of massive excess global capacity for years. Because of that, countries like China and others in Asia and elsewhere have to export, and this steel floats around the world looking for a home. Exporters and huge trading operations will seek any opportunity to liquidate these supplies at whatever price they can get.
Canada has been a target of these opportunists for many years. It's becoming worse now that the U.S. market isn't open. For example, the data shows huge increases in structural tubing imports into Canada after President Trump imposed his national security measures. The question is this: What should Canada do to protect our industry and the families that depend on us?
Anti-dumping and subsidy complaints are only a partial remedy. They are cumbersome and expensive, designed in an era when the steel business moved very slowly. Today the trade moves at an amazing speed. Deals can be done in a second, and there are multiple ways to circumvent these actions.
Canada needs to initiate rapid safeguard action for threatened steel products like HSS, following the ones that were just announced for seven categories of steel, but we need to move beyond safeguards—they are temporary—to permanent and more rapid measures to deal with the reality of unfair steel trade.
Although the implementation of safeguards is welcome, they're really just a feel-good measure. Canada is already awash in dumped steel and steel-intensive products. We have witnessed two of our biggest steel producers bounce in and out of CCAA protection for many years. This has been a direct result of dumped steel. Nothing else caused that problem.
I must say that as the single largest hot-rolled coil consumer in both Canada and the U.S., we purchase over 2.5 million tonnes of this steel a year. As a taxpayer, I'm appalled that this has happened. I have a tube plant in Welland, Ontario, that has been closed for three years while imported tube floods into the Canadian market. My tax dollars are going to bail out pensions and mills that could be economically viable if illegally dumped imports were stopped. Safeguards will still allow the current level of imports to flood our markets, while only charging duties on the amounts over the ridiculously high historical norm.
Here are my suggestions for some immediate steps.
We must implement quotas at levels such as, let's say, 30% less than the 2015 to 2017 average level for non-United States or Mexico countries. The tariff rate quota in the present temporary safeguard simply allows imports at present injurious levels, with foreign producers averaging their costs over total exports by paying 25% on their additional exports.
Also, implement reductions on all imported steel products to levels that will support full utilization of domestic output. Then provide a streamlined exemption system for products not produced in Canada or that fall in short supply, so as not to hurt our steel-consuming businesses.
In addition, we must agree to a two-way quota with the U.S. to immediately eliminate tariffs.
These measures will provide significant relief to both the steel industry and consumers so that businesses can continue to prosper, employ Canadians and make long-term investment decisions.
Thank you.