A colossal half-year regulatory transition defined the week, as the European Union renewed its steel safeguard regime, activating thousands of measures on 1 July. Beyond the systemic quota reset, regulators also introduced targeted new anti-dumping duties and non-tariff controls on transformers and chemicals.
The week in EU trade policy was dominated by a massive, scheduled regulatory transition marking the start of the second half-year. The renewal of the EU’s extensive steel safeguard quota regime on 1 July was the centrepiece, driving the activation or loading of tens of thousands of measures and concentrating activity in the iron and steel sectors. This systemic update was accompanied by the introduction of significant new trade defence measures, including anti-dumping duties on Chinese calcium silicon and Turkish steel, as well as new non-tariff controls on transformers and chemicals.
The week in brief
After a quiet start, the week was defined by one of the largest single regulatory events of the year: the half-year transition on 1 July. This scheduled reset drove an immense volume of activity, with over 13,800 records processed and nearly 17,000 measures taking effect. The overwhelming theme was the administrative renewal of time-bound measures, most notably the EU’s steel safeguard quotas, which accounted for the bulk of changes in the iron and steel sectors (Chapters 72 and 73). Following the two-day data deluge on 1 and 2 July, regulatory activity returned to a more routine rhythm, with updates shifting focus to fertilisers and technical code maintenance. The overall posture was one of systemic administrative renewal, layered with targeted new restrictions.
What mattered most
The Half-Year Steel Safeguard Renewal: The week’s primary event was the seamless transition into the new period for the EU’s steel safeguard quotas. Measures for the previous period expired on 30 June, and the renewed quotas for the second half of 2026 took effect on 1 July. This systemic update was responsible for thousands of changes across iron and steel product lines, primarily involving the loading and activation of new tariff quota volumes and conditions. The administrative finalisation of this shift continued on 2 July, which saw another 7,600 related records processed.
New Trade Defence and Surveillance Measures: Alongside the broad quota renewal, several significant and targeted trade defence measures came into force. These included new anti-dumping duties on certain Turkish steel products, with rates of 7.3% on hot-rolled flat products and 11.0% on specific coated steel products. A new anti-dumping duty of up to 50.7% was also imposed on calcium silicon (HS 2850006091) from China. Beyond duties, the EU activated new non-tariff barriers, including surveillance requirements for certain chemical copolymers (HS heading 3907), certificate requirements for large liquid dielectric transformers (HS 8504229000), and a new information requirement for cylindrical cells (HS 8506101100).
Regulatory Focus Shifts Post-Transition: Once the massive data loads for the half-year reset were complete, regulatory attention pivoted to other sectors. On 3 July, the focus shifted decisively to fertilisers (Chapter 31), with an update comprising 92 records that pointed to a broad revision of controls for the sector. The week concluded with a technical update on 4 July focused on administrative codes (Chapter 99) and the automotive sector (Chapter 87), signalling a return to more routine, targeted system maintenance.
Threads to watch
Implementation of New Controls: With the systemic renewal of quotas now executed, the focus for trade professionals shifts to compliance with the specific new restrictions that took effect. The new certificate requirements for transformers and surveillance measures for chemicals represent a tightening of non-tariff controls that will require operational adjustments by importers.
Fertiliser Sector Scrutiny: The large, concentrated block of regulatory adjustments for fertilisers on 3 July suggests the sector is an area of increased focus for regulators. This follows the major half-year renewal of steel safeguards and may indicate a shift in regulatory attention to other critical industrial and agricultural inputs.
The Rhythm of Routine Updates: The week demonstrated the dual cadence of EU tariff management: massive, scheduled resets followed by smaller, targeted adjustments. The loading of future-dated measures, including new tariff quotas for bison meat scheduled for 20 July, indicates that the pattern of ongoing, smaller-scale changes will continue as the system absorbs the major half-year transition.
By the numbers





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