How the US Plans to Counter China’s Shipping Dominance with New Fees
Publish Time: 2025-04-18 Origin: Site
US Strikes Back: New Fees Target China’s Shipping and Shipbuilding
Key Measures Announced
Following a year-long Section 301 investigation, the USTR unveiled a two-phase plan to counter China’s maritime dominance:
Phase 1 (October 2025):
$50/net ton fee for China-owned/operated vessels (gradually increasing over 3 years).
Container/car carriers: Fees based on net tonnage or container count (whichever is higher).
Exemptions: Ships in US security programs, empty dry bulk carriers bound for US exports.
Phase 2 (April 2028):
LNG carrier restrictions: Gradual 22-year phase-in to boost US-built LNG vessels (critical as the US is the world’s top LNG exporter).
Controversial Rationale
Proponents: Argue China’s shipping dominance threatens US economic security.
Critics: Call it a “backdoor tariff” that will:
Raise consumer prices
Disrupt trade flows
Burden US ports
Industry Reality:
China’s 20-year lead in shipbuilding—backed by subsidies and tech—won’t be undone by fees alone.
Why This Matters Globally:
Trade Ripple Effect: 80% of global goods move by sea; fee hikes could inflate costs across supply chains.
Strategic Shift: US aims to reduce foreign reliance in commercial shipbuilding and LNG transport.
Public comments on port crane tariffs are open until May 8, 2025.