TRA Final Decisions on Steel Tariff Rate Quota Reviews
Summary
The Trade Remedies Authority (TRA) published final decisions on three tariff rate quota (TRQ) reviews affecting UK steel safeguard measures. TQ0077 maintained existing TRQs for categories 4 and 7 steel; TQ0078 varied category 12A by removing three commodity codes; and TQ0085 recommended a country-specific quota for Turkey after its developing country exemption threshold was exceeded. All changes take effect 1 April 2026.
What changed
The TRA issued final decisions in three separate TRQ reviews under the UK's steel safeguard measure. TQ0077 maintained current quotas for metallic coated sheet (category 4) and non-alloy/other alloy quarto plates (category 7), finding UK industry produces competing products and that removal would harm domestic steel. TQ0078 varied the alloy merchant bars and light sections quota (category 12A) by removing three of eight commodity codes where no UK production was found during the investigation period. TQ0085 assessed Turkey's Developing Country Exemption status for category 4 steel, recommending a country-specific quota after imports exceeded the 9% collective threshold during the Period of Investigation.
Steel importers and exporters must review their commodity codes against the updated TRQ categories, particularly those handling category 12A products (now reduced to five commodity codes) or importing category 4 steel from Turkey (now subject to a country-specific quota). UK steel manufacturers should verify that their products remain protected under the maintained safeguards. All three decisions take effect on 1 April 2026.
What to do next
- Verify that imported steel products are correctly classified under the updated category 12A commodity codes (three codes removed effective 1 April 2026)
- Review imports from Turkey under category 4 steel to prepare for new country-specific quota requirements
- Confirm eligibility under developing country exemption thresholds if applicable
Source document (simplified)
News story
TRA makes final decisions in steel quota reviews
The TRA has published its decisions in three tariff rate quota (TRQ) reviews on the UK’s steel safeguard measure.
From: Trade Remedies Authority Published 31 March 2026
The Trade Remedies Authority (TRA) has today (31 March 2026) published its decisions in three tariff rate quota (TRQ) reviews on the UK’s steel safeguard measure.
TRQs are part of the World Trade Organization (WTO) framework and are used to help implement safeguard measures. They specify how much of a product can be imported from a country before its imports are subject to higher tariffs.
The first of these reviews, TQ0077, reviewed the TRQs concerning categories 4 and 7 steel - metallic coated sheet and non-alloy and other alloy quarto plates. The TRA’s final decision was to maintain the current TRQ on both categories as we found that UK industry produces steel products that compete with those in the applications, and that removing these goods from the safeguard would risk harming the UK steel industry.
TQ0078 reviewed the TRQ on category 12A - alloy merchant bars and light sections. The TRA’s final decision was to vary the TRQ by removing three of the eight commodity codes in category 12A, having found no evidence of UK production during the period of investigation for the goods subject to review in those commodity codes.
TQ0085 reviewed the Developing Country Exemption (DCE) status of Turkey relating to category 4 steel products. Imports from developing countries are given exceptions to TRQs if the goods imported are less than 3% of the total imports of that product and if, collectively, these low volume exporters account for no more than 9% of the total imports of that product. The TRA assessed whether the exceptions for imports from Turkey needed to be amended based on updated import data.
The TRA has subsequently recommended a country-specific quota for Turkey as category 4 steel imports from that country exceeded the threshold during the Period of Investigation.
The effects of all three TRQ reviews will come into place on 1 April 2026.
Background information:
- The Trade Remedies Authority (TRA) is the independent UK government body that investigates whether trade remedy measures are needed to counter unfair import practices and unforeseen surges of imports.
- Safeguard measures are one of three types of trade remedies that are allowed under World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules. Safeguard measures are emergency actions responding to increased imports of particular products, which cause serious injury to the importing country’s domestic industry. They apply to all imports (with some exceptions), rather than being focused on imports from particular countries. They impose duties when imports exceed a level reflecting traditional trading patterns.
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Published 31 March 2026
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