EU Braces for Trade Tensions as Trump Escalates Tariffs and Challenges Global Economic Diplomacy in Second Term
16 January 2026

EU Braces for Trade Tensions as Trump Escalates Tariffs and Challenges Global Economic Diplomacy in Second Term

European Union Tariff News and Tracker

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Welcome to European Union Tariff News and Tracker. As President Trump tightens his grip on global trade in his second term, the European Union faces mounting pressure from U.S. tariffs and provocative moves, testing Brussels' strategy of careful diplomacy over confrontation.

France24 reports that Europe is struggling to set red lines against a hostile Washington, highlighted by Trump's recent security strategy targeting the EU directly and his shocking declaration to seize Greenland from Denmark, a NATO and EU member, possibly by force. European nations rushed a military initiative to Greenland in response, but leaders like Denmark's Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen warn that with three-quarters of Trump's term ahead, tougher challenges loom. EU diplomats admit telling Trump "you can't do that" doesn't work, so they're prioritizing appeasement amid reliance on U.S. support for Ukraine.

On the tariff front, last year's U.S.-EU trade clashes forced Europe into what many call an unequal deal, per France24. Trump's sweeping April plan has driven average U.S. import duties to levels unseen since the 1920s, according to LBBW Research, drawing Brexit-like warnings of lagged economic damage—slower growth at 1.5% for the U.S. in 2026 and stalled investment due to policy uncertainty.

Trump's deal-making continues elsewhere, slashing Taiwan's tariffs from 20% to 15% in a $250 billion pact, as covered by the Altoona Mirror and Flexport's January 15 update, while new 25% duties hit advanced semiconductors like NVIDIA's H200. No specific EU tariff rates emerged this week, but Flexport notes Trump's threats of 25% tariffs on Iran-trading partners could ripple to Europe.

Amid this, the EU advances its own trade pivot: a landmark free-trade zone with Mercosur, set for signing Saturday, eliminates tariffs on nearly all goods, boosting German cars in South America while capping meat imports, the LA Times details. Experts call it "cows for cars," with $52 billion in farmer subsidies sealing the deal despite protests.

Listeners, as Trump turns screws, will the EU deploy its anti-coercion instrument or suspend U.S. trade pacts? Stay tuned for updates.

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