After a ban on imported fish from an area of the Upper Gulf of California in Mexico failed to stop illegal fishing that threatens a nearly extinct porpoise, the Natural Resources Defense Council, the Center for Biological Diversity, the Animal Welfare Institute and the Environmental Investigation Agency are asking the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative to ask the tri-national Commission on Environmental Cooperation to establish a formal factual record of Mexico's failure to enforce its ban on gillnets in that region. Once the record is established, the groups are asking USTR to initiate a dispute against Mexico over the issue.
Representatives from manufacturing interests operating in Mexico said the COVID-19 pandemic has presented an opportunity to argue for locating more production in North America, for both reliability and speed, but there are still obstacles to making the argument for nearshoring as an answer to vulnerable supply chains. The president of the National Council of the Maquiladora and Export Manufacturing Industry and the director of global trade compliance for Illinois-headquartered manufacturer Regal Beloit spoke at the Wilson Center's "Building a Competitive U.S.-Mexico Border" conference, which was held Aug. 10 and 11.
After a request from Auxin Solar and Suniva that the solar cell, module and panel safeguard be extended, the International Trade Commission launched an investigation into whether the 18% tariff "continues to be necessary to prevent or remedy serious injury and whether there is evidence that the domestic industry is making a positive adjustment to import competition." The tariff is scheduled to sunset on Feb. 7, 2022.
More than a third of Republican senators are telling President Joe Biden that the European Union's plan to apply tariffs to aluminum, cement, fertilizers, iron and steel from countries that are not pricing carbon as the EU does is protectionism in disguise. They noted that U.S. steel is already more carbon efficient than the product is in the EU.
Autoparts maker Tridonex, a subsidiary of Cardone Industries, agreed to offer back pay to more than 150 employees who used to work at its Matamoros plant and to remain neutral as the workers at that plant vote on whether to reject the protection union and choose an independent union. A protection union is a union that is in league with the company, rather than an independent voice for workers.
Much work remains to be done to create a concrete proposal on levying tariffs on imports from countries that are not as aggressive as the U.S. is about battling climate change, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said in a brief Capitol hallway interview Aug. 10. Such a tariff is planned as a pay-for in the upcoming spending bill for education and daycare, income support, health care, housing and environmental priorities. "People have asked, 'What is this really all about?'” he said. "We have defined this as making sure that, as our workers and our manufacturers push very hard to modernize our infrastructure, make it greener and cleaner, that other countries don't undercut our workers and manufacturers. That is the philosophical foundation."
More than 30 trade groups, led by the U.S.-China Business Council, are asking the Biden administration to retroactively restore product exclusions that expired last year, open a new exclusion application process "and continue negotiations with China to remove both nations’ counterproductive tariffs as soon as possible." In an Aug. 5 letter, the groups said China followed through on phase one promises to open to financial services providers and eliminate market access barriers for beef and some fruits and grains. They acknowledged that China is not on track to meet its purchase commitments, and said that China needs to be prodded to fully implement some other structural commitments, "particularly in the areas of biotechnology, patent linkage, services (including financial services), and protection of intellectual property rights."
U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai told Washington state farmers Aug. 5 that she wants to make sure agricultural exporters "can bring your products to new markets and new customers," and that she is holding trading partners accountable for their commitments, such as improved dairy access in Canada and opening Mexico to American fresh potato exports. Tai was visiting the district of Rep. Suzan DelBene, a Democratic leader for free trade and a House Ways and Means Committee member. This followed a similar visit last month to Rep. Ron Kind's district in Wisconsin, where she had the same message to farmers. Kind, too, is a prominent Democrat supporting free trade and a Ways and Means member. In June, Tai visited Flint, Michigan, home to Rep. Dan Kildee, a Ways and Means Democrat who always talks about how trade devastated manufacturing workers in Flint. She heard from workers who told her how trade had affected them.
While grain-oriented electrical steel is subject to Section 232 tariffs, the domestic GOES producer says that electrical steel laminations and cores produced in Mexico and Canada continue to imperil the jobs at their mills. Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., represent the workers at those mills, and they, along with Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., have proposed an amendment to the bipartisan infrastructure bill that would instruct the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative to negotiate with Canada and Mexico in order to get them to agree to measures curtailing their exports if they are so numerous that they damage the business of Cleveland-Cliffs.
An annual survey of U.S. firms with operations in China that are members of the U.S.-China Business Council found that about 80% of firms said that U.S.-China tensions affected their businesses. Of that group, about half said it caused lost sales in China; about a quarter said they lost sales due to Chinese retaliatory tariffs.