TRADE WARS
China exempts more US goods from tariffs after trade deal
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 19, 2019

China announced Thursday a list of US chemicals that will be exempted from import tariffs, just under a week after Beijing and Washington agreed a trade agreement that a dialled down tensions between the two.

The world's biggest economies have exchanged blows for more than a year, on Friday announced a mini-agreement to reduce some levies in a bruising trade war that has dragged on global growth.

Beijing released a list Thursday of products that will no longer be subject to the tariffs, including certain types of industrial glue and adhesives, industrial polymers and types of paraffin, which can be found in cosmetics and food.

The exemptions will come into force from December 26 until December 25 next year, according to a statement from the Customs Tariff Commission of the State Council.

Last week's "phase one" deal saw US President Donald Trump cancel a planned new wave of tariffs on Chinese products, and China in turn saying it would suspend additional measures on US goods.

However, nothing has yet been signed.

In September, China said it would exempt 16 categories of US products from tariffs including seafood items and anti-cancer drugs.

China announced earlier this month that it will offer a tariff waiver to "some" imports of major products US soybean and pork.

Beijing has increased tariffs on US pork three times since the trade war started.


Related Links
Global Trade News

TRADE WARS
US-China trade deal gets tepid reception
Washington (AFP) Dec 14, 2019
US officials announced a truce in the trade war with China with much fanfare, but economists and trade experts call it largely a victory for Beijing. After a dispute that raged for close to two years, with several fumbled efforts at a resolution, the US agreed to cancel planned tariffs and rollback others immediately, without a similar commitment from China to lift tariffs it imposed on the US. "Pardon me if I don't pop champagne, but aside from a cessation of continued escalation, there is not ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

TRADE WARS
Eastern EU states opposed to 2050 zero-emissions goal

Brazil's Bolsonaro dismisses COP25 'game'

Bayer targets climate-neutral business by 2030

EU leader urges MEPs to back green growth plan

TRADE WARS
Detours may make batteries better

NYSERDA announces battery storage project for town of Ulster, replacing previously planned fossil fuel plant

BMW strikes five-year lithium deal for electric car batteries

How light a foldable and long-lasting battery can be?

TRADE WARS
Saving bats from wind turbine death

DTEK reaches 1 GW of renewable energy generation capacity in Ukraine

Global winds reverse decades of slowing and pick up speed

Superconducting wind turbine chalks up first test success

TRADE WARS
Nivea parent Beiersdorf switches to green power

Freestanding microwire-array enables flexible solar window

Walton EMC and Silicon Ranch Commission 100MW solar farm for Facebook's Newton Data Center

Largest solar-covered parking garage in St Louse opens

TRADE WARS
Lessons learned from an extraordinary case of soil decontamination

Green-finance deal survives EU split on nuclear

Researchers perfect nanoscience tool for studies of nuclear waste storage

Framatome signs a cooperation agreement with Japan on the development of fast neutron reactors

TRADE WARS
Saudis resist 'throwaway' culture of food waste

Indonesia hits European Union with WTO lawsuit over palm oil

Put a brake on bioenergy by 2050 to avoid negative climate impacts

Scientists devise catalyst that uses light to turn carbon dioxide to fuel

TRADE WARS
Cyprus signs landmark LNG deal

France, Germany, Italy urge end to Libya fighting

US Congress Russia pipeline sanctions

US slaps sanctions on two S.Sudan ministers over peace delay

TRADE WARS
UN talks struggle to stave off climate chaos

UN talks out of sync with global climate demands

Young people take to the streets for climate: Who are they?

Early climate change models were pretty accurate, study finds