BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union’s government fee mentioned Thursday it’ll put commerce retaliation measures on maintain for 90 days to match President Donald Trump’s pause on his sweeping new tariffs and depart room for a negotiated resolution.
European Fee President Ursula von der Leyen mentioned that the fee, which handles commerce for the bloc’s 27 member nations, “took be aware of the announcement by President Trump.”
New tariffs on 20.9 billion euros ($23 billion) of US items will probably be placed on maintain for 90 days as a result of “we need to give negotiations an opportunity,” she mentioned in a press release.
However she warned: “If negotiations usually are not passable, our countermeasures will kick in.”
Trump imposed a 20% levy on items from the EU as a part of his onslaught of tariffs of 10% and upward towards world buying and selling companions however mentioned Wednesday he’ll pause them for 90 days to present nations an opportunity to barter options to U.S. commerce considerations.
Nations topic to the pause will face Trump’s 10% baseline tariff.

Earlier than Trump’s announcement, EU member nations voted to approve a set of retaliatory tariffs on $23 billion in items in response to his 25% tariffs on imported metal and aluminum that took impact in March. The EU, the biggest buying and selling companion of the U.S., described them as “unjustified and damaging.”
The EU tariffs had been set to enter impact in phases, some on April 15 and others on Could 15 and Dec. 1. The EU fee didn’t instantly present a listing of the products.
Members of the EU — the world’s largest buying and selling bloc — have mentioned they like a negotiated deal to resolve a commerce struggle that damages the economies on either side. The bloc’s prime commerce official has shuttled between Brussels and Washington for weeks attempting to go off a battle. The EU has provided Trump a “zero for zero” deal during which either side would remove tariffs on industrial items together with autos. Trump has mentioned that’s not sufficient to reply U.S. considerations and raised the potential of Europe shopping for giant extra quantities of U.S. liquefied pure fuel.
The focused items are a tiny fraction of the 1.6 trillion euros ($1.8 trillion) in U.S.-EU annual commerce. Some 4.4 billion euros in items and companies crosses the Atlantic every day in what the European Fee calls “crucial industrial relationship on this planet.”
The EU has focused smaller lists of products in hopes of exerting political strain and avoiding financial injury from a wider escalation of tit-for-tat tariffs.
The EU can be engaged on an additional set of countermeasures in response to Trump’s blanket 20% tariff on all European items, now suspended. That would embody measures aimed toward U.S. tech firms and the companies sector in addition to commerce in items.
Nonetheless, von der Leyen mentioned that Europe intends to diversify its commerce partnerships.
She mentioned that the EU will proceed “partaking with nations that account for 87% of worldwide commerce and share our dedication to a free and open trade of products, companies, and concepts,” and to carry boundaries to commerce inside its personal single market.
“Collectively, Europeans will emerge stronger from this disaster,” von der Leyen mentioned.
McHugh reported from Frankfurt, Germany