The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 02, 2025
Today: April 02, 2025

Miner Teck plans to sell to Asia to avoid US tariffs

Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada (PDAC) annual conference in Toronto
March 04, 2025
Divya Rajagopal - Reuters

By Divya Rajagopal

TORONTO (Reuters) - Canadian miner Teck has been developing plans to sell zinc to Asia instead of the U.S. to circumvent tariffs from President Donald Trump's administration on Canadian imports, CEO Jonathan Price on Tuesday.

Teck, which sells most of its refined zinc to the U.S., has been working on a contingency plan for months, Price told the PDAC mining industry conference in Toronto. "We have been reserving warehousing capacity, looking to reserve space in ports to export the metals to Asia," Price said

"We will find buyers and prices will adjust."

The additional warehousing and port spaces would be in Canada, a company representative said.

Trump's 25% tariffs on imports from Canada as well as Mexico took effect on Tuesday, launching new trade conflicts with the United States' three biggest trading partners. Economists expect U.S. companies to bear the cost of those tariffs.

Teck produces about 260,000 metric tons of refined zinc annually.

That equates to less than a third of total U.S. demand in 2024 when it stood at 848,000 metric tons, or 6% of the world's total, according to the International Lead and Zinc Study Group (ILZSG).

BNP Paribas estimates that the United States imports 62% of its zinc needs, mainly from Canada and Mexico.

Price said he expects the tariffs to raise the cost of commodities and drive inflation, and that "there is little upside".

Vale Base Metals, the base metals spinoff of iron ore giant Vale that sells Canada-produced nickel to the U.S., is also looking to adapt to the tariffs, Vale Base Metals Chair Mark Cutifani said.

"We are talking to everyone on this to see how this can be resolved," he told reporters.

(Reporting by Divya Rajagopal, Additional reporting by Polina Devitt and Pratima Desai in London; Writing by Daina Beth Solomon; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Veronica Brown and Barbara Lewis)

Share This

Popular

Americas|Economy|Political|US

Canadian PM explains what โ€˜makesโ€™ him a liberal as Trump's tariffs loom

Canadian PM explains what โ€˜makesโ€™ him a liberal as Trump's tariffs loom
Americas|Crime|Health|Lifestyle

โ€˜What kind of piece of sh*t uses when pregnant?โ€™: Young mother speaks out on fentanyl addiction

โ€˜What kind of piece of sh*t uses when pregnant?โ€™: Young mother speaks out on fentanyl addiction
Americas|Crime|Political|US

Priscilla Alvarez on what we know about father mistakenly deported, sent to El Salvador prison

Priscilla Alvarez on what we know about father mistakenly deported, sent to El Salvador prison
Americas|Business|Economy

Michael Klein aims to retake chairman role in Brazil's Casas Bahia

Michael Klein aims to retake chairman role in Brazil's Casas Bahia

Americas

Americas|Crime|Political|US

Unsolved violent crimes in Native American communities to get more attention with FBI surge

Unsolved violent crimes in Native American communities to get more attention with FBI surge
Americas|Crime|Political|US

Migrant arrests at US-Mexico border in March lowest ever recorded

Migrant arrests at US-Mexico border in March lowest ever recorded
Americas|Political|US|World

Costa Rican former President Oscar Arias says US revoked his visa

Costa Rican former President Oscar Arias says US revoked his visa
Americas|Political|US|World

Argentina's Milei to travel to US on Wednesday, source says

Argentina's Milei to travel to US on Wednesday, source says