A bipartisan group of US senators on Monday urged President Donald Trump to hold fast to trade remedies proposed by his administration to rebuild US shipbuilding and not offer concessions when he meets with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Democratic Senators Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin and Mark Kelly of Arizona as well as Republicans Tim Scott of South Carolina and Todd Young of Indiana told Trump in a letter sent on Monday that China's decades-long effort to, "decimate American shipbuilding," demanded the use of US trade measures to their fullest extent.
When they met in South Korea in October, Trump and Xi agreed to pause tit-for-tat fees on each other's ships for a year, staving off an estimated $3.2 billion annually in fees for large Chinese-built vessels sailing to US ports. The US fees will resume on November 10, unless a further pause is agreed.
The US first announced its port fees in April 2025 to help loosen China's grip on the global maritime industry after a US probe concluded that China's domination of the maritime, logistics and shipbuilding sectors was driven by unfair practices.
Trump will meet Xi in China May 14-15 for a summit that will be dominated by the Iran war, which has further strained US-Chinese ties. China remains the biggest buyer of Iranian oil despite pressure from the Trump administration.
"The United States is at an inflection point and cannot cede additional ground to the People’s Republic of China," the senators wrote in the letter, first reported by Reuters. "We urge you to stand strong during these negotiations as we work together to enact trade remedies and advance the SHIPS for America Act to level the playing field."
No comment was immediately available from the White House.
The legislation, introduced in both the US Senate and House of Representatives last year, would provide tax credits for investments in domestic shipyards and production, and authorise $2.5 billion in funding over a decade for domestic shipbuilding projects, among other measures.
China's share of the $150 billion global shipbuilding industry soared to over 50 per cent in 2023 from around five per cent in 2000, largely aided by government subsidies, while once dominant US shipbuilders have seen their share dwindle below one per cent. South Korea and Japan are the next biggest shipbuilders.
The threat of US fees briefly led to a 25 per cent drop in Chinese shipyard orders last spring, although orders rebounded later in the year after the fees were postponed, the senators wrote.
"The sudden decrease in Chinese shipping orders shows that when your Administration acts on this issue, the global maritime industry pays attention," the senators wrote, calling the port fees, "an urgent, critical step needed to grow the US industrial base, expand the economy and protect national security."
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by David Gregorio)