Chinese Mainland Suspends Special Port Fees for U.S. Ships 🚢
The Chinese mainland suspends special port fees on U.S. ships for a year, mirroring the U.S. pause on Section 301 probes and easing trade ties.
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The Chinese mainland suspends special port fees on U.S. ships for a year, mirroring the U.S. pause on Section 301 probes and easing trade ties.
The United States and the Chinese mainland will suspend reciprocal port fees from Nov 10 for one year to ease trade tensions and protect global supply chains.
New U.S. port fees on container vessels made in the Chinese mainland are driving up freight costs, risking pricier online orders and adding inflation heat.
The Chinese mainland’s Ministry of Transport details new special port fees on U.S. ships from Oct 14, boosting fair maritime trade.
China defends new port service fees on U.S.-linked vessels as a lawful countermeasure to Washington’s Section 301 maritime levy.
China will impose special port fees on U.S. ships from Oct 14, starting at 400 yuan/tonne, escalating annually in response to U.S. tariffs.
The U.S. will impose mild new fees on shipping vessels made in or operated by China docking at U.S. ports from September.
Proposed U.S. port fees on Chinese-linked ships could backfire, disrupting global shipping and adding hefty costs.