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US, China roll out tit-for-tat port fees, threatening more turmoil at sea

Written by: Lisa Baertlein, Liz Lee and Joe Cash

BEIJING/LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – The United States and China on Tuesday began charging additional port fees to ocean carriers carrying everything from holiday toys to crude oil, making the high seas a key front in the trade war between the world’s two largest economies.

Last week, a return to an all-out trade war appeared imminent after China announced a major expansion of rare earth export controls and President Donald Trump threatened to raise tariffs on Chinese goods to triple digits.

But after the weekend, both sides sought to reassure traders and investors by emphasizing cooperation between their negotiating teams and the possibility that they could find a way forward.

China said it had started collecting special duties on US-owned, operated, built or flagged ships, but announced that Chinese-built ships would be exempt from the duty.

In details published by state broadcaster CCTV, China outlined specific provisions for exemptions that include empty ships entering Chinese shipyards for repairs.

Similar to the US plan, the new fees imposed by China will be collected at the first port of entry on a single trip or for the first five trips within a year.

“This tit-for-tat symmetry locks both economies in a maritime duty spiral that risks disrupting global cargo flows,” Athens-based Xclusiv Shipbrokers said in a research note. he said.

Earlier this year, the Trump administration announced plans to charge Chinese-linked ships to loosen the country’s grip on the global shipping industry and support U.S. shipbuilding.

An investigation conducted during the former Biden administration concluded that China used unfair policies and practices to dominate the global shipping, logistics and shipbuilding industries, paving the way for these penalties.

China responded last week by saying it would impose its own port fees on US-bound ships from the day the US fees go into effect.

“We are in an intense phase of the disruption where everyone is quietly trying to find workarounds, with varying degrees of success,” said Ed Finley-Richardson, an independent dry bulk transportation analyst. He said he had heard reports that U.S. shipowners with non-Chinese ships were trying to sell their cargo to other countries while en route so the ships could be diverted. Reuters could not immediately confirm this.

Analysts expect Chinese-owned container carrier COSCO to be hit hardest by U.S. fees, with that segment bearing nearly half of the $3.2 billion in costs expected from those fees in 2026.

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