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Trump signss executive order to revitalize US Shipbuilding

On Wednesday, U.S. president Donald Trump signed an Executive Order aimed at revitalizing U.S. Shipbuilding and reducing China’s grip on global shipping.

For years, Republican and Democratic U.S. legislators have warned of China's increasing dominance in the seas as well as the diminishing U.S. navy readiness.

The order instructs the U.S. trade representative to proceed with a plan, which includes charging U.S. docking fees for any ship in a fleet of vessels that are Chinese-built or Chinese flagged. Allies will also be encouraged to follow suit.

The Department of Homeland Security is also required to enforce the collection of Harbor maintenance fees and other charges and to prevent cargo transporters from circumventing these fees by sending goods to ports in Mexico or Canada, then sending them into the United States through land borders.

According to the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Chinese shipbuilders produce more than half of all cargo ships produced worldwide each year. This is up from 5% in 1999.

This gain was at the expense shipbuilders from Japan and South Korea. The U.S. industry's output peaked in 1970 and is now a tiny fraction of what it was.

Due to high costs, and a complicated regulatory structure that has allowed rivals such as China to grow quickly, the U.S. Shipbuilding Industry has struggled. Reporting by Jonathan Saul, in London; Gram Slattery, and Andrea Shalal, in Washington; editing by Chizu Nomiyama & Sandra Maler

(source: Reuters)