Ford Motor Co. is unlikely to be the last to say forget it to a vehicle that doesn’t make financial sense for the US market anymore thanks to Donald Trump’s trade wars. The second-largest US carmaker has pulled the plug on plans to import a new small crossover from China called the Focus Active. Trump was the culprit behind the decision: His administration started imposing an additional 25 percent tariff on vehicles imported from the country he’s portrayed as America’s biggest trading foe in July. The move will make little difference for Ford’s sales or profits, as the company was expecting to sell fewer than 50,000 Focus Actives in the US a year. But the crossover’s demise looms larger as a potential first of several autos to be aborted as a result of duties that render them unaffordable for consumers or unprofitable for manufacturers. A major risk looming for the industry lies in the investigation that the US Commerce Department started in May of whether imported cars and components pose a threat to national security. The administration is said to have been considering tariffs of as much as 25 percent and could do so by invoking the same Section 232 trade law used to justify steel and aluminum levies earlier this year. ‘Not Good Enough’ Concern that those levies would come to pass eased in July, when the European Union’s Jean-Claude Juncker reached an agreement with Trump that both sides would refrain from new tariffs as long they are negotiating a trade accord. But Trump’s remarks in an Oval Office interview with Bloomberg News this week cast doubt on the longevity of that deal. After the EU’s trade chief said Thursday that the bloc was willing to drop its car tariffs to zero if the US does the same, Trump dismissed the offer as “not good enough.” “The Trump Administration seems very intent on imposing the 232 tariffs,” said Kristin Dziczek, vice president of industry, labor and economics at the Center for Automotive Research. “That would mean that a lot of models would be withdrawn from the US market.” The trade danger doesn’t stop there. Trump has also threatened to hit Canada with auto tariffs if the country fails to join his trade deal with Mexico to replace Nafta. Talks with the US’s northern neighbor stalled just hours before a Friday deadline, and negotiations will resume Wednesday. Hanging in the balance amid all of Trump’s battles are the economics of some of the most popular vehicles in the US Both Toyota Motor Corp. and General Motors Co. source some of their best-selling sport utility vehicle models — the RAV4 and Chevrolet Equinox — from Canadian plants. BMW AG and Daimler AG import tens of thousands of 3 Series sedans, GLC crossovers and other models from Germany every year. Small Sellers While big tariffs would be hugely disruptive for those models, the ones with greater risk of getting dropped altogether from the market are marginal sellers. GM President Dan Ammann said on Aug. 3 that the only way the low-volume, China-built Buick Envision SUV will be available in the US market is if it gets an exemption from the levies. Published in Daily Times, September 3rd 2018.