Modern European manufacturers are being subjected to a high-stakes audit by US customs, tasked with the near-impossible job of tracing the origin and value of every steel component in their products. The penalty for failing this audit is a catastrophic 200% tariff, turning every shipment into a game of regulatory roulette.
The core of the problem lies in the complexity of global supply chains. A European company assembling a crane or a motorcycle may source thousands of individual parts from dozens of suppliers across multiple countries. The idea of producing a “definitive paper trail” for every nut, bolt, and bracket is a logistical fantasy.
As German MEP Bernd Lange pointed out, it’s incredibly difficult to know if a minor component has an “element of Chinese steel in them.” Yet, the US rules place the burden of proof squarely on the exporter. The system assumes a level of transparency and traceability that simply does not exist in many industries.
This high-stakes audit creates a chilling effect. Rather than risk failing, some companies are preemptively surrendering by over-declaring their metal content. They are choosing to accept a smaller, self-imposed penalty rather than face the judgment of the auditors.
This situation highlights a fundamental clash between protectionist trade policy and the reality of 21st-century manufacturing. The demand for perfect, simplistic traceability is unworkable in an interconnected global economy, creating a system where honest businesses can be punished for the unavoidable complexities of their own supply chains.
A High-Stakes Audit: The Impossible Task of Tracing Every Steel Component
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