President Trump’s Aluminum and Steel Tariff Actions Hurt America’s Farmers, Food and Beverage Producers, and Can Manufacturers

The Trump Administration must provide immediate, targeted tariff relief for U.S. can manufacturers and food producers as part of an America First trade agenda.

April 3, 2025Can Manufacturers Institute (CMI) President Scott Breen issued the following statement in response to President Donald Trump’s proclamation maintaining a competitive advantage to imported canned goods:

“The Trump Administration’s recent aluminum and steel tariff actions keep costs high to make metal cans in America and low to import canned goods from foreign competitors, like China.

In our derivative inclusion requests, we asked President Trump to level the playing field for America’s farmers and can manufacturers, who have been forced under the high Section 232 metal tariffs to unfairly compete against foreign-filled canned foods and beverages not subject to the same tariffs. Instead, these tariff rate adjustments keep the status quo, solidifying a win for foreign canned goods – the opposite of an America First trade agenda.

President Trump’s proclamation opens the floodgates to more foreign filled cans on grocery store shelves at a time when 98% of Trump voters say America must grow and produce its own food rather than relying on imports.

Keeping foreign canned goods at lower tariffs undermines President Trump’s promises to make groceries affordable again, support American manufacturing, and prioritize American farmers. The Trump Administration must provide immediate, targeted tariff relief for U.S. can manufacturers and food producers, which will support those key sectors and lower the cost of critical U.S. canned goods. We remain committed to working with the Administration to enact trade policies that, first and foremost, benefit American can manufacturers, farmers, and working families.”

American Fruit & Vegetable Coalition Coordinator Denise Bode issued the following statement in response to President Donald Trump’s proclamation maintaining a competitive advantage to imported canned foods:

“American jobs and food production are at stake. Already, more than a dozen American fruit and vegetable canners have been driven out of business by cheap foreign imports. America has become a net food importer, and the lack of action to stop these imports is making this trade imbalance even worse.

Today, an overwhelming share of the produce served to our children in our schools is foreign: 94 percent of fruit and 53 percent of vegetables. At the same time, more and more canned fruits and vegetables in our grocery stores are sourced from abroad, displacing American-grown products and undermining domestic producers.”

The Brewers Association President & CEO Bart Watson issued the following statement in response to President Donald Trump’s proclamation maintaining a competitive advantage to imported canned beer:

“American small brewers are a quintessential part of the domestic manufacturing economy, proudly using U.S.-made agricultural materials and aluminum cans. We agree with the administration that the government has a responsibility to support manufacturers making American products with American inputs, but unfortunately this updated tariff schedule takes us in the opposite direction.

By continuing to tariff key packaging components such as sheet aluminum, the administration’s policy taxes domestic production while now allowing importers to bring in finished beer in lower or tariff-free cans. We believe the solution is to lower costs for American producers, and ultimately consumers, by creating a lower tariff bridge while more American capacity for domestic aluminum comes online.”

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Can Manufacturers Institute (CMI) is the national trade association of the metal can manufacturing industry and its suppliers in the United States. The can industry accounts for the annual domestic production of approximately 135 billion food, beverage, aerosol and general line cans; employs more than 28,000 people with plants in 33 states, Puerto Rico and American Samoa; and generates about $15.7 billion in direct economic activity.

Press Contact: Tim Ebner, CMI’s Vice President of Communications & Marketing | Email: tebner@cancentral.com 

The American Fruit & Vegetable Coalition (AFV) proudly represents approximately 95% of the nation’s fruit and vegetable growers and packers. Our members produce American-grown fresh, frozen, canned, and dried fruits and vegetables, and we advocate to ensure their interests are strongly represented before policymakers in Washington, DC. We are at the forefront of the fruit and vegetable processing sector – an industry that accounts for roughly 10% of all domestic food manufacturing and supports more than 30,000 packing and processing facilities across the country.

Press Contact: Denise Bode, Coordinator | Email: dbode@constitutionpartners.com


The Brewers Association(BA) is the not-for-profit trade organization representing more than 9,300 small and independent American brewers. The craft brewing industry contributes $72.5 billion in economic impact to the U.S. economy with nearly 200,000 direct jobs at breweries and brewpubs.

Press Contact: 
Backbone Media | Email: brewerspr@backbone.media

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