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APEC Leaders Commit To Green Trade Liberalization

Apec Green

First Posted: 11/14/11 01:24 PM ET Updated: 11/14/11 01:28 PM ET

By Doug Palmer

HONOLULU (Reuters) - Asia Pacific leaders, including the United States and China, committed on Sunday to slash tariffs on environmental goods and services in a bid to boost trade in products that cut fossil fuel use and reduce pollution.

The green trade initiative represented an achievement for U.S. President Barack Obama at the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Hawaii, overcoming reservations from China -- a major manufacturer of solar power products.

A document issued by the leaders estimated that tens of trillions of dollars of investment would be required in the coming years to meet the region's clean energy, clean air, sanitation and other environmental goals.

"We agreed to reduce tariffs on environmental goods and make it easier to export clean energy technologies that create jobs," Obama said at the end of the APEC summit.

The pledge is a victory for Obama, whose administration pushed over the past year for a strong APEC "green growth" commitment. APEC economies account for about 60 percent of current trade in environmental goods and services.

Obama has touted solar, wind and other renewable energy technologies as a way to create jobs and boost economic growth. He suffered a setback in his administration's decision to give solar panel maker Solyndra a $535 million loan guarantee that became an embarrassment after the company went bankrupt.

CHINA SIGNS UP

"The commitment on environmental goods and services is huge. It's a tremendous deliverable for APEC," said Jake Colvin, a vice president at the National Foreign Trade Council, whose members include major U.S. manufacturers.

Chinese President Hu Jintao signed onto the plan to cut tariffs to 5 percent on an undesignated list of environmental goods by the end of 2015, even though earlier this week Chinese officials criticized the cuts as too ambitious.

China also had warned that the U.S. decision to launch a probe that could lead to anti-dumping duties on Chinese-made solar cells and modules could strain energy cooperation.

Hu told business leaders on Saturday that the region should pursue green growth "on the basis of (each APEC members') resource endowment, stage of development and capacity."

The plan reflects the Chinese concern by instructing negotiators to decide over the next year on the precise list of goods that will be subject to tariffs cut.

U.S. officials have identified solar panels, wind and hydraulic turbines, air pollution filters and sewage treatment pumps as goods they would like included.

Together, the 21 economies of APEC -- which also include Japan, Russia, Canada, South Korea and Mexico -- account for more than half of world trade.

The United States and China are the world's two biggest sources of greenhouse gases blamed for global warming.

Another commitment calls on APEC countries to strive to cut their aggregate energy intensity -- a measure of a country's energy use and efficiency -- by 45 percent by 2035.

Pang Sen, a deputy director general in China's foreign ministry, stressed that was an aspirational goal and that the APEC commitments are "voluntary and nonbinding."

APEC members also pledged by the end of 2012 to eliminate domestic content requirements that distort environmental goods and services trade. That is a victory for U.S. companies such as General Electric that been stymied in China and Asia Pacific by public works projects rules that lock them out.

A U.S. Commerce Department report last year said the global market for environmental technologies was $782.4 billion in 2008, with the United States by far the largest single market at $299.5 billion.

(Additional reporting by Michael Martina; Editing by Will Dunham)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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By Doug Palmer HONOLULU (Reuters) - Asia Pacific leaders, including the United States and China, committed on Sunday to slash tariffs on environmental goods and services in a bid to boost trade...
By Doug Palmer HONOLULU (Reuters) - Asia Pacific leaders, including the United States and China, committed on Sunday to slash tariffs on environmental goods and services in a bid to boost trade...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kaj74
Just because you say it, doesn't make it true!
11:22 AM on 11/15/2011
Great, Obama was able to negotiate an agreement that would save us money in the importation of goods that create green, reusable technology etc….
But to put this in context, had we been investing in our own green, reusable technology, we wouldn’t need to be paying China for its components in the first place, let along need to negotiate the tariff.
This may be a win for Obama, but it only goes to demonstrate how much “we” have allowed ourselves to be jipped of.
04:12 AM on 11/15/2011
Is "hot air" green too???
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fireofenergy
Promote freedom AND science
12:57 AM on 11/15/2011
Put tariffs on just about everything BUT solar panels!
I would rather have tens of thousands of square miles of install jobs than just a few high dollar solar panel making jobs here.
You see, cheap panels, no matter from what robotic factory they come from, will still CREATE local install jobs. Therefore no tariffs because tariffs HINDER that.
However, let's use flat screen TV's as "the other" thing to compare to...
No matter where they come from, there will be NO need for additional work (because they don't need to be installed on roofs or in the deserts)... Thus put the tariffs on flat screens because the "hinder" is already done in the first place by its not being made here.
This is how global trade should work for the betterment of "going green".
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Malcolm Hensley
Last of the Reagan Republicans
10:41 PM on 11/14/2011
""China also had warned that the U.S. decision to launch a probe that could lead to anti-dumping duties on Chinese-made solar cells and modules could strain energy cooperation.""

This is just to funny! Too SAD!! APEC is going to save our economy and the planet! This only works as many on my NIMBY Environmentalist friends believe Chinese CO2 is not harmful to the planet! China has captured much of the world's solar cell business by turning to coal energy to generate electricity at about $0.02/kwh to power their electric arch furnaces! China last year consumed 49% of all the coal consumed on the planet!

If there was any doubt that President Obama was a Rockefeller Republican aka a Clinton Democrat that doubt is gone!

Definition: A Clinton Democrat is the Kinder Gentler Republican aka a Rockefeller Republican!

What this nation needs is some Roosevelt Democrats - you know people that know Unrestricted Free Trade on an instinctual level is just a bad idea!

Any doubts about Free Trade? The score is $500 billion to $0.00!

Before Unrestricted Free Trade it was almost even!
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fireofenergy
Promote freedom AND science
01:04 AM on 11/15/2011
No matter where the CO2 is used (to make panels) it will save ten to twenty times that (since the EROEI for panels is that). I doubt energy used for shipping would even be 10% of the energy used for PV manufacture.
http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy04osti/35489.pdf
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Malcolm Hensley
Last of the Reagan Republicans
01:15 AM on 11/15/2011
I understand your point but consider!

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/nov/17/network

Used to etch silica based solar cells - longed lived 500+ years 17,000 times stronger than CO2! You will have to re-do your math!

In any case the volume of CO2 being produced by the fast developing nations put us over the edge!
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lulex
09:59 PM on 11/14/2011
This sounds good to me. Let's get green energy going!
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
08:53 PM on 11/14/2011
Good. Tariffs on everything but solar panels.

Actually we do need tariffs proportional to lack of workers rights and humanitarian treatment of the citizens.