U.S.
Senators Tammy Baldwin (D.-Wis.) and Bob Casey (D.-Pa.) are throwing their
weight behind a coalition of U.S. labor organizations led by the United
Steelworkers union (USW) that has filed a Section 301 petition, calling on the
United States Trade Representative (USTR)
to initiate an investigation of Chinese commercial shipbuilding. The
petition is for “for relief under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, as
amended” and calls for remedies that include levying a port fee on
Chinese-built ships calling U.S. ports. President Joe Biden, promised 13 March
‘24 that “USTR will take a hard look at the petition.”
The 137-page petition
provides a detailed breakdown of the non-market practices used the Peoples
Republic of China to build up its shipyards and dominate world shipbuilding as part of a wider plan to dominate world
trade.
“The PRC
is using commercial shipbuilding to dominate the full spectrum of global trade,
choking out all competitors,” said USW International President David McCall. “If we do not act quickly, we will soon
be dependent on China not only for the products their vessels bring into our
ports but also for the ships themselves.”
The
petition calls for action by the USTR that “should include the assessment of a port fee on Chinese-built ships that
dock at a U.S. port, the creation of a Shipbuilding Revitalization Fund to
help the domestic industry and its workers compete, and other measures to
stimulate demand for, and the capacity to construct, commercial vessels built
in the United States.” “In order to address the burdens and restrictions on
U.S. commerce that have resulted from China’s practices,” says the petition,
“the fee should also be sufficient to eliminate some of the unfair advantage
that Chinese-built ships enjoy in international maritime trade, and also
sufficient to provide a robust funding stream for the U.S. Commercial
Shipbuilding Revitalization Fund … “
“The
fees collected from Chinese-built ships should be directed towards funding a
U.S. Commercial Shipbuilding Revitalization Fund. The funds should be used to
funnel resources into the Construction Differential Subsidy … “How likely is the petition to succeed? Senators
Baldwin and Casey have written U.S. Trade Representative Ambassador Katherine Tai urging that she “expeditiously initiate a full Section
301 investigation and consider the relief measures
identified in the petition to address the injury that the PRC’s policies and
actions have had on our commercial shipbuilding, transportation, and logistics
sector.“ “We have seen the PRC create dependencies and vulnerabilities in
multiple sectors, like steel, aluminum, solar, batteries, and critical
minerals, harming American workers and businesses and creating real risks for
our supply chains,” said Ambassador. Katherine Tai on receiving the petition. “USTR and the Biden-Harris Administration
are fighting every day to put working families first, rebuild American
manufacturing, and strengthen our supply chains.