US to Hike Tariffs on Chinese Green Tech Materials
‘The tariff increases announced today will further blunt the harmful policies and practices’ by the Chinese regime, said the U.S. Trade Representative.
U.S. officials have criticized China for predatory trade practices, pointing to a history of Beijing directing Chinese industries to price competitors out of the market in strategic fields.
Tai said these materials are related to renewable energy technologies, a cornerstone of the Biden administration agenda, and the tariff increases are meant to strengthen their supply chains.
Section 301 saw renewed use under the Trump administration, which applied a series of tariffs and sanctions in attempts to hold the Chinese regime accountable for breaking trade agreements. The Biden administration continued and expanded on those actions, maintaining and increasing the tariffs upon renewal. The cleantech tariffs announced on Dec. 11 were implemented by the Biden administration and are up for a four-year renewal.
The investigations began in 2017 during the first Trump administration and have continued. In the 2024 report, the USTR concluded that China’s unfair practices have continued and, in some cases, worsened. The report recommends Congress assess different approaches to shifting supply chains away from China, where U.S. entities are exposed to Beijing’s technology transfer laws.
Tai has increased tariffs on other Chinese imports, including electric vehicles, syringes and needles, medical globes, semiconductors, solar cells, facemasks, and steel and aluminum products.
The report also points to Chinese state-sponsored cyberespionage as a key risk to American companies’ intellectual property and recommends that intelligence agencies educate the private sector on increasing cyber defenses.