By AFP
March 16, 2025

US President Donald Trump's 25 percent tariffs on steel and aluminum imports fuel material costs for beer cans - Copyright AFP/File SAUL LOEB
Beiyi SEOW
For US craft brewer Bill Butcher, President Donald Trump’s expanding range of tariffs have sparked an unexpected impact — a shortage of bottles to package his beer — while uncertainty looms over his business costs.
From Canadian malted barley to aluminum beer cans, Trump’s tariffs have hit multiple products that American craft breweries need, buffeting businesses in the world’s biggest economy.
Turbulence in supplies could ultimately translate to higher beer prices for consumers, brewers warn, even as importers and breweries try to absorb additional costs triggered by the levies and their consequent supply shocks.
Similar conditions are playing out in various industries across the country, including construction and appliance production.
In Trump’s latest salvo, 25 percent levies on US steel and aluminum imports took effect this week.
“As the aluminum tariffs have kicked in, the major beer suppliers in the country are switching a lot of their production back to bottles,” said Butcher, founder of Port City Brewing Company in the state of Virginia.
As a result, his provider can no longer supply bottles to him after shipments through March. Aluminum levies also raise the cost of producing cans, threatening higher prices down the line.
“There’s a lot of uncertainty. There’s a lot of chaos that’s been injected into our supply chain,” Butcher told AFP.
He typically goes through 90,000 bottles per month or so — forming 70 percent of his packaged products — and the rest goes into cans.
But in the absence of bottle supplies he expects to use more aluminum cans anyway, or sell more beer in kegs.
Atlas Brew Works founder Justin Cox, who packages his beers in aluminum cans, estimates their price form about a third of the total cost for a case of 24 beers.
Aluminum tariffs add to packaging costs “in what’s already a small-margin product going into the wholesale market,” Cox said.
“All of this ends up with a higher price of our beer on the shelf,” added Cox, who has facilities in Washington and Virginia.
“On average, about 10 percent of every can in the US is Canadian aluminum,” said Bart Watson, president of the Brewers Association, a trade group.
This piles further cost pressures on American craft brewers, he said.
– ‘Impossible’ –
For Butcher, uncertainty also lingers over costs of the Canadian pilsner malt that forms the base of his beers — and the bottle caps he imports from Mexico.
While both products were hit by Trump’s blanket tariffs on Canadian and Mexican goods this month, the president’s partial rollback of them within days has allowed him temporary relief.
But it remains unclear if duties will return from April 2, when Trump has promised a new wave of “reciprocal tariffs” to tackle trade deemed as unfair. These will be tailored to each country, taking into consideration their tariff levels on US goods and other factors.
Watson estimates the United States imported about $230 million of malt last year, much of it ending up with craft brewers.
“Most of the barley in the US is contracted for by large brewers or for export to Mexico,” he said.
Craft brewers therefore end up using malt containing some portion of imports, he added.
Tariffs are paid by US importers of foreign goods, and breweries expect duties would filter to them over time.
Butcher told AFP it has become “impossible for us to plan out our business, our production, if we don’t know what the price of our supplies are going to be.”
– ‘Sit and watch’ –
Brendan Chaney, Port City’s logistics manager, noted that tariffs can be an economic tool when used in a targeted manner.
But he cautioned that blanket levies create an atmosphere of fear “akin to five years ago, when Covid happened” and threw supply chains into disarray.
Butcher and Cox warned that smaller businesses like theirs have limited capacity for storage — and less cashflow — making it harder to stockpile inventory to cushion the blow from tariffs.
“We can only hold so much in our small space, and a minimum order on aluminum cans is a full truckload,” Cox of Atlas Brew Works said.
The pricing of cans is also subject to flux, Cox noted. Breweries are billed for the final product after production, which can be weeks after orders are placed.
“We’re having to just sit and watch, and hope that things get better before it’s time for us to order (more),” he said.
Experts break down potential tariff impacts
By Dr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL JOURNAL
March 16, 2025

New US tariffs against China come in force prompting Beijing to vow counter-measures. - © AFP STR
Tariffs are taking center stage as President Donald Trump proposes additional tariffs on goods imported from Canada, China, and Mexico. Two Virginia Tech professors explain tariffs to Digital Journal, and proceed to break down arguments for and against them, and discuss how they may impact consumers, markets, and other nations.
Dimitris Tsarouhas is a visiting associate professor and expert on international affairs. Jason Grant is a professor and agricultural economist specializing in trade. The two experts have provided a guide to what the tariff imposition means and the economic implications. These thoughts are considered from the U.S. perspective,as explained to Digital Journal.
What are tariffs?
Grant: Tariffs are a tax or surcharge on imports coming into a country. In most countries, tariffs are collected at the ports of entry either as a percentage of the import value of the goods entering the importing country or as a per unit surcharge collected on the volume or number of products imported — dollars or cents per unit imported.
Why are tariffs a big push for the Trump administration?
Tsarouhas: There are two reasons. First, the president likes them. He thinks tariffs have the potential to restore America’s industrial prowess, and he is therefore keen to use them to achieve a set of policy objectives, which may not be linked to industrial or trade policy. Two, the president has campaigned on imposing tariffs, and he wants to stick to his pre-election promises to the American people.
How can tariffs be beneficial?
Tsarouhas: Tariffs can shield domestic production in the U.S. from foreign competition and allow for higher demand for U.S. products at the expense of imported goods, boosting employment in key economic sectors. This can then reduce the country’s large trade deficit and assist U.S. efforts to introduce fairer trade practices by discouraging dumping.
Q:How can tariffs be harmful?
Grant: So much depends on a variety of factors and questions: current policy objectives, at what levels the new tariffs will be set; do they apply to all countries or just some; how foreign countries react; how governments use or distribute tax revenues; are tariffs long term or short term.
Can tariffs impact U.S. consumers and the economy?
Tsarouhas: Tariffs are likely to hurt the U.S. consumer by making certain items more expensive. They can also discourage innovation and competition, stifling the U.S. economy. Given America’s weight in global economic affairs, tariffs can also be a signal to international markets and turn positive economic sentiment into bad if other states retaliate and a trade war ensues.
How could higher tariffs make a difference for farmers when it comes to market demand?
Grant: A key question around any new tariff announcement is how foreign countries will react. The U.S. is a highly competitive and major agricultural exporting country that depends on foreign market demand for the sale of its farm output.
How could higher tariffs impact the U.S. and its relationship with other countries going forward?
Tsarouhas: Tariffs can concentrate minds and make all sides, the U.S. and other states, more focused on solving problems above and beyond trade. The U.S.-Mexico agreement seems to indicate that this positive spillover effect may be taking place already.
On the other hand, tariffs could undermine U.S. capacity to advance its policy agenda through persuasion and raise suspicions among partners and allies as to the reliability of the U.S. and the legitimacy of its global reach. Tariffs are also likely to undermine global economic prospects, hurting the U.S. and other countries around the world.
By Dr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL JOURNAL
March 16, 2025

New US tariffs against China come in force prompting Beijing to vow counter-measures. - © AFP STR
Tariffs are taking center stage as President Donald Trump proposes additional tariffs on goods imported from Canada, China, and Mexico. Two Virginia Tech professors explain tariffs to Digital Journal, and proceed to break down arguments for and against them, and discuss how they may impact consumers, markets, and other nations.
Dimitris Tsarouhas is a visiting associate professor and expert on international affairs. Jason Grant is a professor and agricultural economist specializing in trade. The two experts have provided a guide to what the tariff imposition means and the economic implications. These thoughts are considered from the U.S. perspective,as explained to Digital Journal.
What are tariffs?
Grant: Tariffs are a tax or surcharge on imports coming into a country. In most countries, tariffs are collected at the ports of entry either as a percentage of the import value of the goods entering the importing country or as a per unit surcharge collected on the volume or number of products imported — dollars or cents per unit imported.
Why are tariffs a big push for the Trump administration?
Tsarouhas: There are two reasons. First, the president likes them. He thinks tariffs have the potential to restore America’s industrial prowess, and he is therefore keen to use them to achieve a set of policy objectives, which may not be linked to industrial or trade policy. Two, the president has campaigned on imposing tariffs, and he wants to stick to his pre-election promises to the American people.
How can tariffs be beneficial?
Tsarouhas: Tariffs can shield domestic production in the U.S. from foreign competition and allow for higher demand for U.S. products at the expense of imported goods, boosting employment in key economic sectors. This can then reduce the country’s large trade deficit and assist U.S. efforts to introduce fairer trade practices by discouraging dumping.
Q:How can tariffs be harmful?
Grant: So much depends on a variety of factors and questions: current policy objectives, at what levels the new tariffs will be set; do they apply to all countries or just some; how foreign countries react; how governments use or distribute tax revenues; are tariffs long term or short term.
Can tariffs impact U.S. consumers and the economy?
Tsarouhas: Tariffs are likely to hurt the U.S. consumer by making certain items more expensive. They can also discourage innovation and competition, stifling the U.S. economy. Given America’s weight in global economic affairs, tariffs can also be a signal to international markets and turn positive economic sentiment into bad if other states retaliate and a trade war ensues.
How could higher tariffs make a difference for farmers when it comes to market demand?
Grant: A key question around any new tariff announcement is how foreign countries will react. The U.S. is a highly competitive and major agricultural exporting country that depends on foreign market demand for the sale of its farm output.
How could higher tariffs impact the U.S. and its relationship with other countries going forward?
Tsarouhas: Tariffs can concentrate minds and make all sides, the U.S. and other states, more focused on solving problems above and beyond trade. The U.S.-Mexico agreement seems to indicate that this positive spillover effect may be taking place already.
On the other hand, tariffs could undermine U.S. capacity to advance its policy agenda through persuasion and raise suspicions among partners and allies as to the reliability of the U.S. and the legitimacy of its global reach. Tariffs are also likely to undermine global economic prospects, hurting the U.S. and other countries around the world.
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