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China retaliates against US port fees

China's Transport Ministry announced on Friday that it will impose port fees for U.S. owned, operated, flagged, or built vessels starting on Tuesday, as a response to U.S. fees on ships with ties to China. The U.S. president Donald Trump announced that he would increase tariffs on Chinese imports to the U.S. by 100%, and implement export controls on key software as a retaliation to China's export restrictions on rare earth minerals.

Analysts said that there are only a few U.S. built or U.S. flagged vessels doing international trade. But China will ensnare even more vessels by applying levies on companies where 25% or more shares or board positions are held by U.S. investment funds.

Erik Broekhuizen is a manager of marine research and consulting at Poten & Partners, a ship brokerage firm.

"The impact could be significant." "The potential impact is significant."

SOME VEHICLES TO PAY CHINA AND U.S. FEE

Matson, a U.S. shipping company, told its customers that it was subject to new China port fees but had no plans to alter their service schedule.

Lars Jensen of Vespucci Maritime's container shipping consultancy, Vespucci Maritime CEO Lars Jensen said that the U.S. subsidiaries of CMA-CGM, American President Lines, and Zim in Israel, are also likely to be affected.

Jensen said that the fees will be charged in China and America for 100 vessels chartered by container line and owned by Poseidon Seaspan.

Maersk Line Limited APL Zim and Seaspan have not responded to comments on the fees.

Analysts said that although most oil tanker operators were based outside of the United States they could be hit by China's fees for port access because they are listed there.

Scorpio Tankers, for example, has the largest and youngest fleet in the industry and is listed in America. It did not respond immediately to a comment request.

Broekhuizen, in a note to clients, said that the Chinese port fees have "thrown the tanker markets in chaos". He added that many vessels which could be affected were already on their journey to China.

Samantha Hartke, the Americas analyst for Vortexa, stated that the port fees in China will affect 43 super-tankers carrying liquefied gas, or 10%, of the global fleet.

Analysts said that vessels owned or operated in China will be charged a flat rate of $50 per tonnage net per voyage. The most vulnerable is China's COSCO, which includes its OOCL Fleet, with fees estimated at around $2 billion by 2026. COSCO declined to comment immediately.

CHINA CALLS U.S. FEE DISCRIMINATORY U.S. fees for China-linked ships, after an investigation by the U.S. trade representative, are part of U.S. efforts to revitalize domestic shipbuilding, and to blunt China's commercial and naval shipping power.

The Chinese Ministry said: "It's clearly discriminatory, severely harms China's legitimate shipping interests, disrupts global supply chains, and undermines international economic and trading order."

The USTR office has not responded to a comment request.

In the last two decades, China has risen to No. 1 in the world of shipbuilding. Its biggest shipyards are involved with both commercial and military projects. China has risen to the top of the world shipbuilding rankings in just two decades, and its largest shipyards are involved with both commercial as well as military projects.

Joe Kramek is the president and CEO of World Shipping Association. He said that the fees announced by China are similar to those imposed by the U.S. They "add complexity and costs to the global network which keeps goods moving and economies linked and may harm their exporters and producers as well as consumers, at a time where global trade has already been under pressure."

Rates rise over three years

The Chinese Transport Ministry said that the tariff for U.S.-linked ships berthing in Chinese ports from Tuesday will be 400 Yuan ($56.13).

This will rise to 640 Yuan ($89.81), and 880 Yuan ($123.52), from April 17th 2027.

From April 17, 2028 the fee for vessels visiting Chinese ports will be 1,120 Yuan ($157.16).

Since September, tensions between China and America have increased. The two superpowers are struggling to break their 90-day trade tariff truce that began on August 11 and ends around November 9

The U.S. trade war with China has led to a sharp decline in Chinese imports of U.S. agricultural and energy products.

(source: Reuters)