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Updated: June 06, 2025 22:50
In a significant escalation of the US-China trade conflict, the United States has put a stop to licenses for nuclear equipment suppliers, preventing them from exporting components to China’s power plants. This move, which affects deals worth hundreds of millions of dollars, marks a shift from mere tariff disputes to direct disruptions in the supply chain between the two largest economies in the world.
Key Highlights
License Suspensions: The US Department of Commerce has suspended export licenses for nuclear equipment and components intended for Chinese power plants. Major suppliers like Westinghouse and Emerson are caught in the crossfire, although they haven’t made any public statements.
Broader Export Controls: These suspensions are part of a wider crackdown, with new licensing requirements also being placed on US exports of jet engines (notably GE Aerospace engines for China’s COMAC aircraft) and ethane shipments to China.
Trade War Escalation: This action comes on the heels of a rapid decline in US-China relations following a brief tariff truce in May. The US has accused China of not honoring agreements related to rare earth supplies, while China has hit back, criticizing the US for “misusing export control measures,” particularly concerning AI chips.
Chinese Countermeasures: In response, China has begun restricting exports of crucial rare earth elements, which could jeopardize global supply chains for electronics, electric vehicles, and defense industries.
Economic Impact: The export suspensions could disrupt hundreds of millions of dollars in business and further strain industries that depend on cross-Pacific supply chains, including US automakers and petrochemical producers.
National Security Concerns: The US Commerce Department has pointed to ongoing reviews of exports deemed “strategically important” to China, raising concerns about the potential military applications of nuclear and petrochemical technologies.
Uncertain Resolution: It’s still unclear whether recent discussions between President Donald Trump and President Xi Jinping will have any impact on these restrictions or if further negotiations will help ease the rising tensions.
“The U.S. in recent days suspended licenses for nuclear equipment suppliers to sell to China’s power plants… as the two countries engage in a damaging trade war.” — Reuters
Source: Reuters