President Joe Biden plans to increase tariffs significantly on Chinese electric vehicles (EV) and other key industries this week, emphasizing the move as a defence of American workers.
The new measures, set to be announced at a White House event, follow nearly two years of review. According to sources familiar with the matter, tariffs on Chinese EVs will quadruple to 102.5% from 27.5%.
Tariffs on other sectors in targeted industries will also increase, with some doubling or tripling, although the full extent of these changes is unclear.
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According to sources familiar with the matter, the Biden administration will not announce any tariff rate reductions, although it’s unclear which specific items were exempted from the tariff increases.
The administration has indicated to the US solar industry that it intends to exclude certain items from tariffs, such as machinery used in manufacturing solar panel components.
This adjustment responds to requests from equipment manufacturers who argue that existing tariffs hinder President Biden’s efforts to reposition clean-energy supply chains away from China.
The Biden administration has been “focused on sectors of longstanding concern,” said Greta Peisch, a partner at law firm Wiley Rein LLP who served until January as the top trade lawyer for the US Trade Representative’s office.
“These are calculated to address particular activities and risks and avoid escalation, to maintain the relationship with China that we have” outside those key goods, she said.