Business

U.S. delays announcing more punishing duties on Bombardier CSeries jet

The U.S. Department of Commerce says it is delaying its announcement on preliminary anti-dumping duties against Bombardier Inc. until Friday. The company is expected to face additional export duties on its CSeries commercial jet.

U.S. government said last week it intends to impose nearly 220% preliminary countervailing duty

A Bombardier CSeries CS300 performs its demonstration flight during the Paris Air Show north of Paris in this June 2015 photo. The U.S. is expected to announce another round of duties against the CSeries jet. (Francois Mori/Canadian Press)

The U.S. Department of Commerce says it is delaying its announcement on preliminary anti-dumping duties against Bombardier Inc. until Friday.

The company is expected to face additional export duties on its CSeries commercial jet.

The decision follows last week's move to impose nearly 220 per cent preliminary countervailing tariffs once deliveries to Delta Air Lines begin next year.

The Montreal-based transportation manufacturer has said it wouldn't be shocked if the U.S. piles on by announcing another "absurd" duty.

Colin Bole, Bombardier's sales chief for commercial aircraft, said the company expects the second duty to be a "significant number" but one that also makes no sense.

Boeing revised its request for anti-dumping duties to 143 per cent from around 80 per cent because of Bombardier's refusal to provide certain information to the Commerce Department.

The U.S. aerospace giant petitioned to the government in April after its smaller rival secured a deal for up to 125 of its CS100s with Delta in 2016.