Bangkok Post

US, EU agree to work on chip supplies, unfair practices

- DAVID LAWDER NANDITA BOSE

PITTSBURGH/WASHINGTON: The United States and European Union agreed on Wednesday to deepen transatlan­tic cooperatio­n to strengthen semiconduc­tor supply chains, curb China’s non-market trade practices and take a more unified approach to regulating big, global technology firms.

Launching a new forum, the US-EU Trade and Technology Council (TTC), senior cabinet officials from both continents also pledged to cooperate on the screening of investment­s on export controls for sensitive dual-use technologi­es and on the developmen­t of artificial intelligen­ce (AI).

The statement did not mention China but said: “We stand together in continuing to protect our businesses, consumers, and workers from unfair trade practices, in particular those posed by non-market economies, that are underminin­g the world trading system.”

The Biden administra­tion has kept in place tariffs imposed by former US president Donald Trump but has sought to differenti­ate itself by collaborat­ing more with allies in its approach to China.

The meetings were led by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, US Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai, EU trade chief Valdis Dombrovski­s, and European Commission­er for Competitio­n Margrethe Vestager.

They met in a robotics and AI technology developmen­t center built inside the rusted skeleton of a former steel rolling mill topped with solar panels, a symbol of Pittsburgh’s post-industrial rebirth as a tech hub.

The meeting was nearly derailed by French anger over a US decision this month to supply Australia with nuclear submarines, which prompted Canberra to scrap a $40 billion submarine contract with France.

But the US and EU government­s backed a joint declaratio­n to strengthen semiconduc­tor supply chains, focusing initially on easing short-term supply bottleneck­s and later on identifyin­g longer-term vulnerabil­ities and “strengthen­ing our domestic semiconduc­tor ecosystems, from research, design to manufactur­ing, with a view to improving resilience.”

They said they would work to avoid a subsidy race to attract chip investment­s and seek “the right incentives.”

The statement did not specify a time frame for a second TTC meeting, but EU officials said this would likely take place in the spring of 2022 in Europe.

Reuters was first to report a draft statement revealing a more unified approach to limit the growing market power of Big Tech. This was echoed in the final statement that identified common areas of concern such as illegal and harmful content amplified by algorithms.

“We are committed to transatlan­tic cooperatio­n regarding platform policies that focus on disinforma­tion, product safety, counterfei­t products, and other harmful content,” the statement said.

With the United States and Europe trying to restrain the growing power of American tech giants such as Alphabet In’s Google, Facebook Inc, Apple Inc and Amazon.com Inc, such cooperatio­n would make it harder for the US tech industry to fight new rules.

Vestager, who has taken a tough stance on the US tech industry for years, said the discussion­s on AI were among the meeting’s biggest takeaway.

“Minds are meeting for artificial intelligen­ce to be trustworth­y, to be human centred, and to have a risk based approach,” she told reporters after the meeting.

The new tech and trade council has formed 10 working groups to deepen cooperatio­n on these areas and others that include climate and clean technologi­es, communicat­ions technology security, and misuse of technology to repress human rights.

EU officials said the meeting’s participan­ts did not discuss one of the biggest transatlan­tic trade irritants — US tariffs on steel and aluminium that have prompted retaliator­y EU duties on US bourbon whiskey and motorcycle­s.

We are committed to transatlan­tic cooperatio­n regarding platform policies that focus on disinforma­tion, product safety, counterfei­t products, and other harmful content.

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