Breaking
ESRyunosuke Sato, el primer japonés del Valencia, sigue la estela de KuboESMarine Le Pen condenada a 15 meses de ineligibilidad y 3 años de cárcel en suspensoESGabi regresa al Atlético de Madrid para unirse al cuerpo técnico de SimeoneESCastilla-La Mancha votará en contra del nuevo modelo de financiación autonómicaESEspaña aprueba ley para proteger el honor, la intimidad y la imagen ante la IA y el 'true crime'ESAnastasia Berezovskaya, buscada por explosión en Mónaco, hallada muerta cerca de KievESEspaña busca semifinales del Mundial ante BélgicaESBélgica golea a EE.UU. y se burla de Trump y la FIFA tras polémica sanción a BalogunESUna sola exposición a la cocaína deja cambios cerebrales duraderosESEl Gobierno aprueba un techo de gasto récord de 226.032 millones para los Presupuestos Generales del EstadoESRyunosuke Sato, el primer japonés del Valencia, sigue la estela de KuboESMarine Le Pen condenada a 15 meses de ineligibilidad y 3 años de cárcel en suspensoESGabi regresa al Atlético de Madrid para unirse al cuerpo técnico de SimeoneESCastilla-La Mancha votará en contra del nuevo modelo de financiación autonómicaESEspaña aprueba ley para proteger el honor, la intimidad y la imagen ante la IA y el 'true crime'ESAnastasia Berezovskaya, buscada por explosión en Mónaco, hallada muerta cerca de KievESEspaña busca semifinales del Mundial ante BélgicaESBélgica golea a EE.UU. y se burla de Trump y la FIFA tras polémica sanción a BalogunESUna sola exposición a la cocaína deja cambios cerebrales duraderosESEl Gobierno aprueba un techo de gasto récord de 226.032 millones para los Presupuestos Generales del Estado
Newsgather
BackEU and US reach deal on industrial goods tariffs
EU and US reach deal on industrial goods tariffs
Developing
Euronews Business5/20/2026World2 min read

EU and US reach deal on industrial goods tariffs

Quick Look

  • EU diplomats and MEPs agreed to implement a contentious EU-US deal eliminating duties on most US industrial goods.
  • The agreement, clinched last summer, faced delays due to US tariff threats and other geopolitical disagreements.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Diplomats and MEPs reached an agreement late on Tuesday to implement the contentious EU-US agreement, which eliminates duties on most US industrial goods imported into Europe. The negotiations concluded two weeks after US President Donald Trump threatened to impose 25% tariffs on EU cars if Europeans did not implement the agreement.

Font size

Diplomats and MEPs reached an agreement late on Tuesday to implement the contentious EU-US agreement, which eliminates duties on most US industrial goods imported into Europe.

The negotiations concluded two weeks after US President Donald Trump threatened to impose 25% tariffs on EU cars if Europeans did not implement the agreement — clinched by Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in Turnberry, Scotland, last summer — by 4 July.

The so-called "Turnberry Agreement," criticised by MEPs as unbalanced, raises US tariffs on EU goods to as much as 15%.

“The EU and the United States share the world’s largest and most integrated economic relationship. Maintaining a stable, predictable and balanced transatlantic partnership is in the interest of both sides," Cyprus trade Minister Michael Damianos said, adding: "Today, the European Union delivers on its commitments."

MEPs had kept the deal frozen for several weeks following Trump’s threats over Greenland earlier this year. They also suspended it after the US adopted new tariffs following a Supreme Court ruling that declared illegal the tariffs imposed by the White House since Trump’s return to power.

Demanding clarity from the Americans, EU lawmakers finally agreed to enter into negotiations with the EU Cyprus presidency — representing EU member states — after the Commission assured them that the US would honour its side of the agreement and cap its tariffs at 15%, as agreed.

Fragile EU-US relations

However, EU-US relations remain fragile and there is concern in Brussels that the US administration could still use tariffs to put political pressure on the EU if the bloc does not comply with the White House’s demands on other issues.

Trump’s threats over EU cars two weeks ago also targeted Germany, whose Chancellor Friedrich Merz has criticised the war in Iran launched by the Americans alongside Israel.

Trump has repeatedly called on European countries to deploy ships to help secure the Strait of Hormuz, a move Europeans have been reluctant to make.

Many disagreements also continue to strain EU–US relations over Ukraine — including the recent US extension of a sanctions waiver allowing purchases of Russian oil — and over NATO, which Trump has repeatedly threatened to leave.

On Tuesday night, MEPs tried to secure the deal by attaching conditions, risking US anger with additional provisions to which Washington had not agreed.

Under the Turnberry Agreement, the EU also committed to investing $600 billion across strategic sectors in the United States through 2028 and to purchasing $750 billion worth of US energy.

Open Questions

  • Will the US administration use tariffs to exert political pressure on the EU on other issues?
  • What specific additional provisions did MEPs try to attach to the deal?
  • How will the EU's investment and purchase commitments be implemented across strategic sectors and energy?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Euronews Business.

Related Stories

More on this topictariffs