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US moves closer to prohibitive tariffs on Russian palladium

By Thomson Reuters May 21, 2026 | 11:14 AM

MOSCOW, May 21 (Reuters) – The United States has moved closer to slapping prohibitive tariffs on imports of Russian palladium after the Department of Commerce made a ​final determination on a countervailing duty of 109.1%.

In ‌April 2026, it also issued a final ruling setting an anti-dumping duty on Russian palladium at 132.83%.

The duties will take effect if a parallel investigation conducted by the independent International Trade Commission determines that the ‌U.S. ​industry has suffered harm.

These decisions support ⁠a petition by Johannesburg-based Sibanye-Stillwater, ⁠which last summer, together with the United Steelworkers union, asked Washington to consider imposing duties on imports of Russian palladium to ensure the long-term sustainability of U.S. supply.

Russia’s ​Nornickel, the world’s largest palladium producer with about a 40% market share, declined to comment on Thursday.

The U.S. anti-dumping ⁠investigation into Russian palladium has ⁠increased market volatility, although it is not expected ​to affect fundamental market conditions in the long term, the company ​said previously.

“As palladium and platinum markets remain largely ‌balanced, and palladium is a critical metal for automotive catalyst manufacturing, we do not expect a long-term increase in prices, as the global market is well able to rapidly reallocate ⁠material flows,” Nornickel said in a market review.

Nornickel expects its palladium production to fall to 2.415–2.465 million ounces (75.1–76.7 tons) in 2026 from ⁠2.725 million ounces (84.8 ‌tons) in 2025, which could mark the ⁠lowest level in 20 years.

Russian palladium imports ​in the ‌U.S. rose to 27.6 tons in 2024, ​from 23.8 ⁠tons in 2023 and 20.4 tons in 2022.

Palladium, used to reduce emissions in gasoline vehicles, has so far avoided U.S. sanctions.

Spot palladium prices have fallen about 16% since the start of the year to around $1,370 per ounce.

(Reporting by Anastasia Lyrchikova; Editing ​by Alison Williams)