The European Union wrapped up its sixth round of negotiations with the five Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA) countries on their interim Economic Partnership Agreement, the European Commission said Dec. 6. The parties discussed the following eight issues: technical barriers to trade, rules of origin, sanito-phytosanitary standards (SPSs), agriculture, intellectual property rights, public procurement, trade and sustainable development, and means of implementation. On SPSs, the parties have two outstanding issues, namely "capacity building and technical assistance" and an article titled "the Committee." The ESA and the EU agreed on provisions relating to equal import conditions, harmonization, animal welfare and emergency measures, the commission said. The ESA countries are Comoros, Madagascar, Mauritius, Seychelles and Zimbabwe.
Canada's finance and trade ministers said that an electric vehicle purchase tax credit that excludes Canadian batteries or Canadian-assembled cars abrogates the USMCA, and they asked senators to write the tax credit differently than the House approach. That House tax credit would only be allowed for American-built cars after 2027, and would be more generous for American-built cars from 2023 to 2026.
John Butler, CEO of the World Shipping Council, said ocean carriers are getting mixed messages from the White House, which is encouraging carriers and ports to rev up their leverage on buyers and freight forwarders so that they pick up their cargo promptly, and from Congress. The House of Representatives is expected to vote on an Ocean Shipping Reform Act that would give the Federal Maritime Commission more authority to punish players for unreasonable demurrage charges -- the same fees used as leverage.
India invites applications for import authorization for watermelon seeds for the period of Jan. 1 to March 31, 2022, the Directorate General of Foreign Trade said. For this period, watermelon seed imports are not to exceed 15,000 metric tons, so interested importers must apply for authorization to bring in the seeds. The Exim Facilitation Committee will review the applications, taking into consideration the firm's monthly and annual processing capacity and the applicant's prior imports. Dec. 13 is the last day online applications will be accepted for this period.
The newly formed Coalition for Economic Partnerships in the Americas does not explicitly say that the textile rules of origin in CAFTA-DR need reform, though it calls on the administration "to do what previous administrations ignored: to structure trade to support investment in the United States and our allies in Central America. In order for our economy to thrive, we must eliminate the bureaucratic red tape that hinders production and investment in the region."
The Commerce Department is seeking nominations for a new Industrial Advisory Committee on microelectronics research development, manufacturing and policy, the agency said this week. The committee, to be composed equally of representatives from the semiconductor industry, federal laboratories and academic institutions, will advise the administration on how best to maintain U.S. leadership in microelectronics manufacturing and support the semiconductor sector. The agency will accept committee nominations on an ongoing basis “and will be considered as and when vacancies arise.”
Maria Pagan, the nominee to lead the U.S. mission at the World Trade Organization, told Senate Finance Committee members that reforming the appellate body is a top priority because "Appellate Body overreaching has shielded China’s non-market practices and hurt the interest of U.S. workers and businesses." She said that appellate body rulings "undermined our ability to protect U.S. workers and businesses from those non-market practices."
The United Kingdom's High Court of Justice dismissed a challenge from Egyptian national and sanctioned individual Hany Youssef over whether the Sanctions and Anti-Money Laundering Act complies with Articles 6 and 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, according to a Nov. 26 judgment. Articles 6 and 8 guarantee the right of access to a court and protect the right to private and family life, respectively. Youssef was sanctioned by the United Nations Al-Qaida and Taliban Financial Sanctions Committee in 2005. Following the passage of SAMLA in 2018, the Egyptian national sought to have his UN sanctions listing removed via the U.K. government, eventually arguing that the U.K. judicial system's inability to order the U.K. government to quash a UN sanctions listing is in violation of the ECHR.
Indiana Republican Sen. Todd Young, who co-led the Endless Frontier bill with Majority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, said he hopes to learn more soon about when conferees might be named to negotiate a compromise between the House and the Senate approaches to a China package. "I'm supposed to huddle up with Sen. Schumer today. I need to approach him. I have not had an opportunity to personally chat with him about the state of things," Young said in a brief hallway interview Nov. 30.
The House Science Committee has been ready to go to conference on science and tech legislation since passing its bills in June, but members are waiting for Democratic leadership to take action on the U.S. Innovation and Competition Act (S. 1260), the committee ranking member Frank Lucas, R-Okla., said in a recent interview.