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Viewing cable 09BEIJING2064, Secretary Locke Discusses Bilateral Trade
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Reference ID | Created | Released | Classification | Origin |
---|---|---|---|---|
09BEIJING2064 | 2009-07-20 10:45 | 2011-08-23 00:00 | UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY | Embassy Beijing |
VZCZCXRO1481
OO RUEHCN RUEHGH RUEHVC
DE RUEHBJ #2064/01 2011045
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 201045Z JUL 09
FM AMEMBASSY BEIJING
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 5288
RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHDC IMMEDIATE
INFO RHEHNSC/NSC WASHDC
RUEHOO/CHINA POSTS COLLECTIVE
RUEHRC/DEPT OF AGRICULTURE WASHDC
RHMFIUU/DEPT OF ENERGY WASHINGTON DC
RUEAEPA/HQ EPA WASHDC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA 2515
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 06 BEIJING 002064
SENSITIVE
SIPDIS
STATE PASS USTR FOR DMARANTIS, TSTRATFORD, AWINTER,
JGRIER
STATE FOR EEB/TPP WCRAFT, EMAGDANZ, HHELM, EAP/CM
SFLATT, EEB/ESC DHENGEL
COMMERCE FOR ITA MONEILL (1000), MAC IKASOFF (4400),
IA (5120), FCS (3130)
TREASURY FOR OASIA/RDOHNER
NSC FOR JLOI
GENEVA PASS USTR
E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ECON ENRG ETRD EAGR EIND EINT BEXP CH
SUBJECT: Secretary Locke Discusses Bilateral Trade
and Clean Energy with Minister of Commerce Chen
Deming
(U) This cable is Sensitive But Unclassified (SBU).
Please handle accordingly.
Summary:
¶1. (SBU) Secretary Locke and delegation and D/USTR
Demetrios Marantis met July 15 with Minister Chen
Deming and senior MOFCOM officials for a 90 minute
discussion of bilateral trade and commercial issues
including clean energy coooperation, global warming,
trade remedies, Buy America/Buy China policies, and
China?s accession to the Global Procurement
Agreement. Regarding China?s specific trade
concerns, Chen categorized the outcome of the
ongoing USITC Section 421 safeguards case concerning
U.S. imports of Chinese tires as China's "biggest
concern," noting he had written to Ambassador Kirk
recently to urge U.S. restraint. Chen also pointed
out that China was concerned by the large value of
anti-dumping/countervailing duty (AD/CVD) and
safeguards actions taken during the 111th Congress,
which numbered 20 cases by China's count. Chen
expressed appreciation for Locke's role in his April
visit to the U.S.
Summary continued:
¶2. (SBU) Chen also provided a detailed briefing on
China's economy, noting that China's sustained
prosperity ultimately depends upon a solid U.S.
recovery. For the first half of 2009, China's GDP
growth rate was 7.1% and retail sales were up 15.1
percent versus the prior year. During the same period,
however, exports dropped 21 percent year-on-year and
foreign direct investment was down 20-21 percent.
China's stimulus is helping the domestic economy to
compensate for declining trade, and U.S.-China trade
has declined less than China's overall trade with
the world. Official assessments suggest China's
upturn is however "slight...unstable, and fragile" due
to a sharp drop-off in external demand. Chen
indicated that he expects China to maintain its
current proactive fiscal policy and moderately easy
monetary policy. End Summary.
Joint Commerce-Energy Visit Promotes Cooperation on
Clean Energy
¶3. (SBU) Minister Chen noted this was Secretary
Locke's first visit to China as a Cabinet member.
He thanked Locke for the invitation to visit the U.S.
in April and praised the Administration's high tempo
of U.S. - China bilateral visits and cooperation.
Secretary Locke noted that his joint visit with
Secretary Chu is intended to promote bilateral
cooperation on energy efficiency, alternative energy,
and climate change, an area which could generate
millions of jobs. China and the U.S. should lead
the worlds developing and developed nations on
these urgent issues, he stated. Locke highlighted
his July 16 stop in Shanghai to break ground for the
U.S. Pavilion at the Shanghai World Expo. Locke
also stated that he plans to attend the proposed
late-October U.S.-China Joint Commission on Commerce
and Trade (JCCT) session in Hangzhou, China and lead
a clean energy trade mission to China this Fall
(Note: DOC's notional plan at present is for two
separate visits in September and October. End Note.)
U.S. Commercial Issues: Civilian nuclear power,
BEIJING 00002064 002 OF 006
Inner Mongolia energy project, China East Star
¶4. (SBU) The Secretary requested China's favorable
consideration of proposals pending by GE and
Westinghouse for civilian-nuclear technology
projects in China as well as a GE coal gasification
plant project in Inner Mongolia. Referring to his
prior meeting with Minister Li of the Ministry of
Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), Locke
praised Li's delayed implementation of an MIIT rule
requiring mandatory installation of Green Dam
internet filtering software on computers sold in
China. Locke also emphasized the U.S. seeks release
of planes leased by GE Commercial Aircraft Services
to China East Star airlines, as local Chinese
airport authorities are refusing to adhere to
international law and refusing to comply with a
Chinese bankruptcy court ruling which orders the
planes to be released.
Chen on State of China's Economy: "Better," But
Upturn "Fragile"
¶5. (SBU) Chen expressed pleasure at Locke's
speaking with "candor and in a straightforward way"
and then provided a detailed briefing on the state of
China's economy. For the first half of 2009,
China's GDP growth rate was 7.1 percent and retail sales
were up 15.1 percent versus the prior year, he reported.
During the same period, exports dropped 21 percent year-on-
year and foreign direct investment declined 20-21 percent.
China stimulus was helping the domestic economy
compensate for declining trade, and U.S.-China trade
had slowed less than overall trade. China's trade
surplus was down, indicating a greater role for
imports. However, official assessments suggest the
upturn is "slight...unstable, and fragile" due to the
sharp drop-off in external demand. Accordingly,
China will maintain its current proactive fiscal
policy and moderately easy monetary policy -- but
without a U.S. recovery, the future is uncertain.
China cannot be successful if it is the only economy
in the world that is growing, Chen concluded.
China Proposes Hosting 20th JCCT October 29 in
Hangzhou
¶6. (SBU) Chen remarked that China has proposed that
the 2009 Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade
(JCCT) be held October 29 in Hangzhou, with a
preliminary dinner on the evening of October 28, as
previously proposed by China at a July 14 meeting
between JCCT leads MOFCOM Vice Minister Ma Xiuhong
and DOC Under Secretary O'Neill and D/USTR Marantis.
Chen praised Locke's hard work in honoring a pledge
he made in April to work with Secretary Clinton to
ensure a U.S presence at the Shanghai Expo.
China's Position on Climate Change: As Stated At G5
¶7. (SBU) China attaches great importance to clean
energy and emission reduction, Chen continued, and
National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC)
Chairman Zhang Ping had already briefed Secretary
Locke on China's position on global warming. The
position is the same one China expressed at the
recent G-5. Today's carbon levels are the result of
decades of cumulative pollutants, a view that Chen
claimed was confirmed by an expert study he
commissioned while at NDRC. On climate change
BEIJING 00002064 003 OF 006
issues, China intends to adhere to the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and believes
developed and developing countries should have
"shared but differentiated responsibilities." China
is ready to work toward energy use reduction and
emissions reductions by 2050, but does not wish to
commit to any targets. China opposes carbon tariffs
in international trade, and questions whether these
would be WTO-consistent. The American Clean Energy
and Security Act is helpful for reducing U.S.
emissions, Chen indicated, but China remains
concerned about proposals for a carbon tariff in
international trade. [Note: Chen claimed
"colleagues say that President Obama does not agree
with imposition of carbon tariffs as protectionist."]
China's Response to U.S. Commercial Issues
¶8. (SBU) Chen acknowledged U.S. requests to consider
including GE's gasification project and GE and
Westinghouse's interest in China's nuclear power
plant projects. There is great potential for China
and the U.S. to work together on clean energy
technology, Chen said, citing advanced work by the
Xi'an Research Institute in Shaanxi province.
China's technologies may differ from those of
companies such as GE, but both sides can work
together, and a GE visit to the Institute benefitted
both sides. On the China East Star case, Chen said
MOFCOM is "paying a lot of attention" but the matter
is complicated by judicial involvement and creditor-
debtor relations. Senior officials at the Civil
Aviation Authority of China (CAAC) are coordinating
with local authorities and MOFCOM "hopes the case is
handled properly."
China Trade Issues: Section 421, AD/CVD, Section
727, OCTG
¶9. (SBU) China's priority concern is the Section
421 tire safeguards case, Chen said. He portrayed
the case as one of many, claiming 20 anti-
dumping/countervailing duty/safeguards actions have
been launched under the 111th Congress and suggesting
"protectionism in the U.S. on the rise". Another
example, he said, is the U.S. Section 727 ban on the
import of poultry from China, a blatantly
discriminatory provision aimed only at China. While
U.S. safeguards may be allowed under China's WTO
accession protocol, Chen continued, they were
drafted to be applied in a certain historical period.
Chen recalled that the prior Administration faced
six safeguards cases, but took no actions on any.
He recalled a recent letter he sent to Ambassador
Kirk expressing concern about the Section 421 tires
case as precedent-setting, and asked Ambassador
Marantis to emphasize the point to USTR Kirk upon
his return to Washington. Chen maintained that the
recent U.S. anti-dumping case on Oil Country Tubular
Goods (OCTG) was a huge one in value terms. At the
same time, MOFCOM was under tremendous pressure from
Chinese interests to take AD/CVD action against
rising U.S. agricultural exports to China -- "We are
constantly being asked 'Why are you not filing any
cases against U.S. companies'" In light of global
economic crisis, China and the U.S. had agreed at
the G20 Summits in Washington and London to be very
cautious in using trade remedies. While some of the
pending AD/CVD/Safeguards cases could wait until the
JCCT to be discussed further, Section 421 requires a
BEIJING 00002064 004 OF 006
decision before October.
China Open to U.S. Investment, Particularly in
Energy Sector
¶10. (SBU) China is ready to cooperate and open to
U.S. investments in the energy sector, Chen
reiterated, and U.S. investors are welcome to take
part in China's plans for building a large eco-park.
Promise exists for cooperation in other areas such
as use of agricultural products for electricity and
alternative fuel sources as well.
Green Dam: Chen Recommended Delay Due to Technical
Shortcomings
¶11. (SBU) Regarding MIIT's proposal for mandatory
installation of Green Dam internet filtering
software, Chen stated that he had advised MIIT's
Minister Li to delay implementation of the software
installation requirement not only because of the
concerns expressed by the U.S., but also because of
"technical shortcomings".
Locke: U.S. Concerned over "Buy China"
¶12. (SBU) Picking up on Chen's comment regarding
U.S. protectionism, Locke countered that the U.S.
opposed protectionism in all forms. Locke observed
that both China and the U.S. needed to open more
markets, not close them, in order to promote a
global recovery. Furthermore, protectionism is a
concern wherever it occurs, and China's Buy China
policy in procurement practices has been noted by
all countries. Locke said use of AD/CVD trade
remedies is part of a mature trading relationship
and the DOC must rather act a quasi-judicial agency
to investigate cases. He pledged that the agency
will carry out its role fairly and in accordance
with the law. Locke added that a recent analysis by
his staff found that the total number of AD/CVD
cases year to date was actually less than in 2007 or
¶2008.
Chen: Market Economy Status (MES) Limits Trade and
Investment
¶13. (SBU) Chen singled out U.S. insistence on
treating China as a non-market economy as another
reason for problematic AD/CVD cases. He urged the
U.S. to use third countries as a way to provide
comparative data in such cases. He contended that
the MES issue slows the expansion in two-way
bilateral trade as well as Chinese investment into
the U.S. Chen felt that a successful outcome to the
U.S.-China Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT)
negotiations ongoing this week should help both
countries.
Chen: MOFCOM Statement Covers U.S. Concerns Over Buy
China
¶14. (SBU) Regarding Locke's concerns on "Buy China"
policies, Chen agreed that misunderstandings had
arisen as to how products made by foreign invested
enterprises in China would be treated when it comes
to government procurement. To correct any
misperceptions, MOFCOM (and NDRC as well, Chen
thought) had issued a statement following his EU
visit to clarify that "Made in China" includes
BEIJING 00002064 005 OF 006
companies legally incorporated in China with foreign
investment. [Note: Embassy notes that the MOFCOM
statement referenced by Chen, while helpful, may not
have legal force as it is a press release rather
than an official policy.]
China's Accession to WTO GPA, Activity by Foreign
Firms
¶15. (SBU) China is not legally obliged to allow
foreign participation in its government procurement
contracts, as it is not yet a member of the GPA,
Chen continued. However, foreign companies do
participate in such contracts. He then mentioned
that he had heard that some U.S. states and
localities waive GPA requirements, despite the U.S.
status as a GPA member. While China hopes to move
ahead on its GPA accession soon, in practice this
depends upon many GPA member countries and not just
the U.S.
¶16. (SBU) "Our hope is that the U.S. government and GPA
members adopt a flexible and realistic attitude"
when it comes to China's GPA offer, Chen said. He
urged existing GPA parties not apply too high a bar
for China, a developing country. Chen claimed
foreign companies had won contracts to supply
products under China's program to distribute
electrical appliances to the countryside. In
addition, he said, GE, Siemens, and ABB are all
competing for contracts under China's high-speed
rail projects. For their part, Chinese companies
are highly competitive in engineering services and
are ready partners for U.S. infrastructure projects
-- having receiving many inquiries already from
interested U.S. construction firms.
Locke: MES analysis underway, Commerce Actions on
Buy America
¶17. (SBU) Locke closed the meeting by noting that
progress is ongoing on China's consideration for
market economy status, and both countries are
exchanging information. He clarified that U.S. "Buy
America" provisions in the stimulus bill only apply
to stimulus funded projects, and not to normal
procurement by U.S. states, or the federal or local
governments. And despite the Buy America provisions
in the stimulus, the Departments of Commerce and
Agriculture had waives Buy America requirements for
approximately $5 billion for a high speed internet
program and $2 billion for USDA funded procurement,
demonstrating their commitment to do whatever
possible to fight protectionism.
¶18. (SBU) Participants:
U.S.
----
Mr. Gary Locke, Secretary of Commerce, DOC
Mr. Robert Goldberg, Charge d' Affaires, U.S.
Embassy Beijing
Mr. Chris Lu, Assistant to the President and
Cabinet Secretary
Mr. Demetrios Marantis, Deputy United States Trade
Representative, USTR
Ms. Michelle O'Neill, Acting Undersecretary for
International Trade, DOC
Mr. Tim Stratford, Assistant U.S. Trade
Representative for China, USTR
BEIJING 00002064 006 OF 006
Mr. Ira Kasoff, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Asia,
DOC
Ms. Ellen Moran, Chief of Staff, DOC
Mr. Chris Adams, Minister Counselor for Trade
Affairs, U.S. Embassy Beijing
Mr. William Brekke, Commercial Councillor, U.S.
Embassy Beijing
Ms. Teresa Howes, Director, Market Access and
Compliance, DOC, U.S. Embassy-Beijing
Mr. Jeffery Young, First Secretary, Economic Section,
U.S. Embassy-Beijing
Ms. Lisa Rigoli, Trade Policy Officer, Market Access
& Compliance, DOC, U.S. Embassy-Beijing
Interpreter
PRC
---
Mr. Chen Deming, Minister of Commerce (MOFCOM)
Ms. Ma Xiuhong, Vice Minister, MOFCOM
Mr. Li Zhiquin, DG, Foreign Investment
Administration Department, MOFCOM
Mr. Zhang Ji, DG, Mechanical, Electronic and Hi-Tech
Industry Department, MOFCOM
Mr. Zhang Kening, DG/Commercial Counselor,
International Trade and Economic Affairs Department,
MOFCOM
Mr. Shen Danya, Ex-Vice President, Chinese Academy
of International Trade and Economic Cooperation,
MOFCOM
Mr. Li Chengang, DDG, Treaty and Law Department,
MOFCOM
Mr. Liang Shuhe, DDG, Foreign Trade Department,
MOFCOM
Mr. Liu Danyang, DDG, Bureau of Fair Trade for
Imports and Exports, MOFCOM
Ms. Wang Hongbo, DDG, Department of North American
and Oceanian Affairs, MOFCOM
Mr. Wang Xu, Director of US Division, Department of
North American and Oceanic affairs, MOFCOM
Mr. Liu Danyang, DDG of Bureau of Fair Trade, MOFCOM
Interpreter
¶19. (U) Secretary Locke's delegation did not have
the opportunity to clear this message before
departing.
GOLDBERG