President Trump on Tuesday directed his Commerce secretary to investigate the need for possible tariffs on copper, the latest industry to potentially be targeted by Trump’s sweeping trade agenda.
Tariffs, if they are imposed, could boost U.S. production of a valuable resource but also raise costs for automakers, construction companies and others. By Ana Swanson and Shawn McCreesh Ana ...
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said President Trump plans to introduce steep tariffs on copper imports after he directed Cabinet officials to investigate the country’s ability to rely on its ...
China's growing copper reserves have caught the eye of President Donald Trump, who on Tuesday ordered an investigation into what administration officials say is Beijing's move to "gain control of ...
President Donald Trump signed an executive order Tuesday directing the Commerce Department to open an investigation into new potential tariffs for copper imports. The move came after the president ...
President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Tuesday instructing the Department of Commerce to investigate whether to impose tariffs on copper and derivative products, key industrial ...
President Donald Trump ordered the Commerce secretary to compile a report about whether U.S. reliance on foreign copper threatens national security. In his order, the president sought policy ...
BEIJING, Feb 26 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday ordered a probe into possible tariffs on copper imports to rebuild U.S. production of a metal critical to electric vehicles ...
Fusing science with sleep, mattress manufacturers are increasingly using copper materials for two main reasons: copper is an excellent conductor of heat, allowing it to absorb and disperse heat ...
WASHINGTON, Feb 25 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump opened yet another front on Tuesday in his assault on global trade norms, ordering a probe into potential new tariffs on copper imports to ...
BHP (ASX: BHP) continues its global search for copper to meet soaring demand driven by the energy transition, but a shortage of high-quality deposits— particularly in stable jurisdictions ...
More than a decade ago in a city nearly 1,200 miles away, people were dying for copper wires. It was around 2006 in Houston, and police Sgt. Robert Carson noticed that more and more would-be ...