Recent Blog Posts
-
Groupon Keeps 'Em Guessing
Feb 09 20128:27 am EDT -
When Business Takes a Same-Sex Marriage Vow
Feb 07 20127:16 pm EDT -
Klout Looks to Take Influence Local
Feb 07 20124:07 pm EDT -
Netflix Faces a Fresh Rival
Feb 06 20122:41 pm EDT -
LivingSocial Losses Shouldn’t Shock
Feb 02 20123:28 pm EDT -
Big Primping at Gilt City
Feb 02 201211:42 am EDT -
How About a Raise?
Jan 31 201211:09 am EDT -
Show Us Your (Wild, Bold, Extreme) Cards
Jan 30 20122:54 pm EDT -
Is Groupon a Daily Deal Bully?
Jan 30 201211:51 am EDT -
Welcome to the Wonderful World of Big Data
Jan 26 20121:33 pm EDT
Tapping China’s Green Revolution
U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke is hoping to get a piece of China's green revolution for U.S. business.
Locke, in Hangzhou, China, told reporters before a joint trade meeting that he’s hoping China’s ambitious plans to create a greener economy would open that country to U.S. cleantech firms. But that could also be a tough sell, he acknowledged, as China builds its own cleantech industry, especially a solar-panel manufacturing industry that has been so productive it has become a threat to manufacturers in other countries.
“Our objective is to allow American companies to compete," Locke said, according to a Reuters report.
But even as Locke tries to ensure an open Chinese market for U.S. cleantech firms, there are reminders that trade between the countries is also a point of friction. The Commerce Department on Tuesday set preliminary duties on Chinese concrete steel wire strand and steel grating to offset the Chinese government’s subsidies for those materials.
The duties range from 7.53 percent to 12.06 percent for the wire strand and 7.44 percent on steel grating.
Last month, the U.S. imposed a 35 percent tariff on tires from China, and Chinese officials reacted angrily, threatening to impose tariffs of their own on U.S. auto parts and chicken.
So all is not sweetness and light as Locke visits China for the annual meeting of the U.S.-China Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade. But U.S. officials say they have hope the two nations can cooperate when it comes to alternative energy.
China, the world’s biggest greenhouse-gas polluter, has been taking rapid steps to become one of its cleantech leaders.
Comments
If you are commenting using a Facebook account, your profile information may be displayed with your comment depending on your privacy settings. By leaving the 'Post to Facebook' box selected, your comment will be published to your Facebook profile in addition to the space below.




