Economy

US opens national security probes into imported drones, polysilicon

The U.S. Commerce Department said on Monday it has opened national security investigations into the import of drones and related components as well as polysilicon, a key component in solar panels and semiconductors.

The “Section 232” investigations, which were opened on July 1 but not publicly disclosed previously, could be used as a basis for even higher tariffs on imported drones and polysilicon and its derivatives.

The Trump administration has already opened numerous national security investigations, including into the import of commercial aircraft, jet engines and parts, medium-duty and heavy-duty trucks and related parts, semiconductors and pharmaceuticals.

China accounts for the vast majority of U.S. commercial drone sales. Washington has increasingly cracked down on Chinese drones over the last few years. DJI, the world’s largest drone manufacturer, sells more than half of all U.S. commercial drones.

In December, then-President Joe Biden signed legislation that could eventually ban DJI and Autel from selling new drone models in the United States.

In January, the Commerce Department under Biden said it was considering rules to restrict or ban Chinese drones in the U.S., citing national security concerns.

President Donald Trump signed an executive order last month aimed at boosting the U.S. drone industry.

The Association for Uncrewed Vehicle Systems International said it supported the drone probe that will review supply chain concentration, domestic production capacity, and the role of foreign subsidies and pricing practices.

“The dependence on adversary-manufactured systems that are dumped in the U.S. below market value due to foreign government subsidies has also stifled the growth of a secure American drone industrial base, undercutting innovation, and forcing U.S. manufacturers to compete on an uneven playing field,” said AUVSI CEO Michael Robbins.

Source : Reuters

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

Recent Posts

Greening at the border: Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism incidence on EU member states and their trading partners

The EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism seeks to address carbon leakage and ensure fair competition…

5 days ago

How emerging markets borrow: New evidence on sovereign bond issuance

Emerging market debt has surged since the pandemic, renewing concerns about rollover risk and fiscal…

5 days ago

The content moderator’s dilemma: How removing toxic speech distorts online discourse

Online platforms face a fundamental tension between removing toxic content and preserving the plurality of…

5 days ago

Information equalisation and competition in selection markets: Evidence from auto insurance

Efforts to reduce information asymmetries across firms are increasingly at the centre of Europe’s digital…

5 days ago

Beyond oil: The macroeconomic impact of commodity supply disturbances

As geopolitical tensions from Ukraine to the Middle East disrupt global supply chains, understanding how…

5 days ago

From free rider to innovator: How China became a global pharmaceutical powerhouse

China has become a serious contender at the frontier of pharmaceutical innovation. A key policy…

5 days ago