Chinese Mainland Suspends Special Port Fees on U.S. Ships for One Year 🚢
The Chinese mainland will suspend special port fees on U.S. ships for one year, matching the U.S. pause on Section 301 probes, following trade talks in Kuala Lumpur.
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The Chinese mainland will suspend special port fees on U.S. ships for one year, matching the U.S. pause on Section 301 probes, following trade talks in Kuala Lumpur.
The United States and the Chinese mainland will suspend reciprocal port fees for a year starting Nov. 10, easing trade tensions and helping to stabilize global shipping costs.
U.S. port fees on ships from the Chinese mainland are pushing up freight rates and stoking inflationary worries.
10-article plan to levy special port fees on U.S. ships from Oct 14, aiming to safeguard fair play amid US charges on Chinese vessels.
China’s Ministry of Commerce calls its new special port fees on U.S.-linked vessels a lawful counter to Washington’s Section 301 measures.
China will charge special port fees on U.S. ships from Oct 14, retaliating against U.S. measures with phased fee increases.
New port fees aimed at protecting America’s shipbuilding industry may disrupt global trade and hit US consumers hard — no overnight fix in sight.
China warns that the U.S. proposal to levy port fees on Chinese ships could disrupt global supply chains and harm the U.S. economy and employment.