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Date: April 15, 2024
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By Mobility Portal
United States

A senator from Ohio asks Biden to ban Chinese electric vehicles in the U.S.

The chair of the Senate Banking Committee urged President Joe Biden to block Chinese-made vehicles from the United States auto market. Brown's comments are the strongest yet by any U.S. lawmaker on the issue.
Senator Sherrod Brown from Ohio asks Biden to ban Chinese electric vehicles in the U.S.

The chair of the Senate Banking Committee urged President Joe Biden to block Chinese-made vehicles from the United States auto market.

“I implore you to take bold, aggressive action and to permanently ban EVs produced by Chinese companies or whatever subsidiaries they establish to conceal their origins,” Senator Sherrod Brown, a Democrat, wrote to Biden calling for “expeditious” action.

Chinese electric vehicles are an existential threat to the American auto industry,” he added.

The White House did not immediately comment on Thursday.

Brown’s comments are the strongest yet by any U.S. lawmaker on the issue.

Last month, Brown and Senators Gary Peters and Debbie Stabenow of Michigan – all from auto-producing states – called on Biden to drastically hike import tariffs on Chinese EVs to address national security risks.

Concerns have also been raised by lawmakers and advocates that Asian automakers could assemble low-cost vehicles in Mexico to allow them to qualify for U.S. EV tax credits.

Auto industry officials told Reuters in February that Biden is considering hiking tariffs on Chinese EVs and the letter is the latest in growing pressure on the White House to take further steps to prevent Asian vehicle imports.

In March, the Commerce Department opened an investigation into whether Chinese vehicle imports pose national security risks and could impose restrictions due to concerns that “connected” car technology could put the data of Americans at risk.

“We are going as fast we can to identify the risks and take any actions we think are national security concerns,” Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told Reuters last month.

“If China is subsidizing the vehicles in a way that puts American workers at a disadvantage we have to do something about that.”

Two Republican senators have also proposed legislation seeking to hike tariffs on Chinese-made vehicles, though relatively few Chinese units are imported into the United States.

The Chinese embassy in Washington did not immediately comment on Thursday but has previously rejected calls to hike tariffs, saying China’s automobile exports “reflect the high-quality development and strong innovation of the manufacturing industry.”

A bipartisan group of lawmakers in November urged U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai to boost tariffs on Chinese vehicles.

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