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Draft executive order: US to levy fees to ships that are linked to China and to push other allies to follow suit

According to a draft executive orders dated February 27, seen on Thursday, the United States plans to charge docking fees to any ship in a fleet of vessels that include Chinese-built or Chinese flagged vessels. It will also push its allies to follow suit or face retaliation.

The Trump administration is working on an executive order to revive domestic shipbuilding, and to weaken China's grip over the global shipping industry.

The draft executive orders proposes that fees be charged to any vessel entering a U.S. Port, "regardless of its flag or where it was constructed," if the vessel is part of an entire fleet of vessels that are built or registered in China.

The full executive draft, seen on Thursday, also urges U.S. officials and allies to do the same or risk retaliation.

According to the draft, the U.S. will also impose tariffs against Chinese cargo handling equipment.

The draft order stated that "the national security and economic well-being of the United States are further threatened by the People's Republic of China's unjust trade practices in maritime, logistics and shipbuilding sectors."

The report on Wednesday was published by

Plans to impose

A draft fact sheet for the executive order's 18-point list of charges on Chinese-made vessels provides a good overview.

The U.S. Trade Rep's office

Last month, a proposal was made to increase the number of people who can vote.

After a thorough investigation into China's increasing dominance in the global shipbuilding, logistics and maritime sectors, the U.S. will levy a fee of up to $1.5m on Chinese-built ships entering U.S. port. Reporting by Jonathan Saul, LONDON; Additional reporting by Lisa Baertlein, LOS ANGELES. Editing by Simon Webb & Diane Craft

(source: Reuters)