Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi


Home| Indices| News| Gallery| Voting Rank| Access Rank| Guestbook
China| Taiwan| Hongkong| Singapore| U.S.| Canada|| Actors| Directors| Pageant| Models| Popsinger| TV Anchors


Search Chinastar

Name (English)
Name (Pinyin)
Site Guide
  • Chinastar Home
  • Guestbook
  • Rankings
     
  • Celebrities
  • China
  • Taiwan
  • Hongkong
  • Singapore
  • U.S.
     
  • Actor
  • Director
  • Popsinger
  • Model
  • Beauty
  • TV Personnel
  • Politician
  • Writer
     

  •   Muzi.com : Chinastar : Hu, Jintao : News2009-11-25


    Home Profile Biography News Photos Links Guestbook BBS Voting


    US, China open high-level trade talks
    2009-10-28

    Category
    Climate Change
    World Trade Organization
    Time
    Year
    Nations
    Denmark
    U.S.
    City
    Copenhagen
    States
    California
    Category
    Regions
    People
    Tom Vilsack
    Wang Qishan
    Gary Locke
    Barack Obama
    Hu Jintao
    Event
    China-U.S. Trade Ties
    Category
    2007

    HANGZHOU, China (AFP) - Ministers from the United States and China opened key trade talks Wednesday, with Washington looking to make progress on several disputes ahead of a visit by US President Barack Obama.

    US Commerce Secretary Gary Locke, Trade Representative Ron Kirk and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack launched two days of talks with a team led by Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan in eastern Hangzhou, US officials said.

    The talks come less than three weeks before Obama's first presidential visit to China, and amid rising trade tensions between the two over US tariffs on Chinese tyre imports and a Beijing probe into US car products and chicken meat.

    "I know the Chinese have some issues -- and we also have some issues," Locke told reporters at a pre-meeting briefing.

    "We're hoping we will be able to make some considerable progress over the next day and a half in terms of some of these issues."

    Locke also said climate change and clean energy would be high on the agenda for the annual meeting of the US-China Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade (JCCT), which last convened in Yorba Linda, California, in September 2008.

    "As the world's two biggest emitters of carbon emissions, we also have a responsibility to act," Locke said.

    Washington and Beijing will be key players at the global climate change talks in Copenhagen in December, which will aim to hammer out a successor treaty to the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.

    Locke said clean energy projects were "essential to keep our economies growing while preventing the catastrophic effects of climate change," but noted trade barriers had kept US firms out of new business opportunities in China.

    Locke said the value of the yuan would not be discussed during the talks, due to wrap up on Thursday. The US Treasury said earlier that the Chinese currency was "undervalued", chiding Beijing for a "lack of flexibility".

    Obama ignited the first major trade dispute of his presidency last month when he imposed punitive duties on Chinese-made tyres.

    Beijing retaliated by lodging a complaint at the World Trade Organization (WTO) and launching an investigation into possible unfair trade practices involving imports of US car products and chicken meat.

    Beijing has charged that Washington's move violated WTO rules, but Obama has denied that it amounts to protectionism.

    And last week, the United States launched a probe on whether to slap almost 100 percent tariffs on steel pipes imported from China.

    Locke said there was a fine line between stimulating domestic industries and protectionism -- especially in the current difficult global economic climate.

    "If countries engage in protectionism, it invites retaliation. Once we have retaliation, countries end up in a trade war. And in a trade war, no one wins," Locke said.

    The US trade deficit with China is the widest Washington has with any country, totalling 143.7 billion dollars in the first eight months of 2009, according to US data -- down 15.1 percent from the same period last year.

    Obama is due to visit China on November 15-18. He will go to Shanghai and Beijing, where he will hold a third set of talks with Chinese President Hu Jintao.

  • Obama confronts an Asia reshaped by China's rise (2009-11-09)
  • Hu says China seeks peaceful use of airspace (2009-11-09)
  • US, China open high-level trade talks (2009-10-28)
  • Envoy: No China-US climate pact from Obama visit (2009-10-28)
  • Dalai Lama receives rights award (2009-10-06)

  • Personal Tools (MyMuzi | membership)

    view eStar

    view club
    Communities
    Vote for Hu, Jintao

    Forum (BBS)
    Guestbook (Posts)


     
    Hu interviewed by Japanese journalists
    2008-05-04

    Cross-strait High Power Meeting
    2008-04-12

    Hu and Sarkozy
    2007-11-25

    Hu and Jiang at CCP Congress
    2007-10-21

    Hu and Jiang at CCP Congress
    2007-10-21

    Zhou Xiaochuan speaks in Beijing
    2007-10-18

    China CCP Congress
    2007-10-14

    Hu Meets Bush at APEC Summit
    2007-09-06

    Hu Jintao (office - Chinese President 2003)
    2007-03-05

    Hu Jintao:Governing
    2005-04-29

    Hu Jintao
    2005-03-13

    Popular Gallery
    2007 CCP 17th Congress:Party Congress:Jiang Zemin
    No.117

    2007 CCP 17th Congress:Party Congress:Hu Jintao
    No.172

    2007 CCP 17th Congress:Party Congress:Zhou Xiaochuan
    No.223

    2007 APEC Summit:Hu Jintao:Diplomacy
    No.226

    2007 CCP 17th Congress:Party Congress:Beijing
    No.313

    Hu Jintao:Diplomacy
    No.545

    Hu Jintao:Diplomacy:Beijing
    No.1039

    2008 Hu Jintao's Japan Visit:Hu Jintao:Interviewing:Beijing
    No.5664

    Hu Jintao (office - Chinese President 2003)
    No.7686

    Hu Jintao:Governing
    No.7721

    Hu Jintao
    No.8454


    Muzi.com

    Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
    All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.