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During the 2009 visit, the two sides announced energy ventures including a U.S.-China Clean Energy Research Center to work on electric cars, more efficient buildings and cleaner coal technology. They promised to promote cooperation in private sector research. Those plans are moving ahead but officials are still reviewing possible projects and research work has yet to start. Meanwhile, Beijing faced growing complaints that it was squeezing European and U.S. makers of wind turbines out of its fast-growing market while subsidizing exports of solar and wind gear in violation of its free-trade commitments. Such subsidies are "particularly harmful," U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk said when the WTO case was filed in December. If the WTO ultimately rules in Washington's favor, the Obama administration would be authorized to impose penalty tariffs on Chinese products equal to the lost sales that U.S. energy companies are experiencing. Beijing reacted angrily, criticizing the WTO case as a politically motivated attack on efforts to develop clean energy technology. An official of the Chinese Cabinet's National Energy Administration accused Washington of providing its own improper subsidies to U.S. companies. "At every high-level meeting, they promise more cooperation on clean energy. But they are really moving toward more conflict on energy," Scissors said. "In the U.S., you hear constant political complaints about how China is stealing clean energy jobs." Boosting sales of computer, telecoms and clean power technology is a core element of Obama's pledge to double U.S. exports and create 2 million jobs with in five years. But that conflicts with Beijing's "indigenous innovation" strategy, which aims to build up China's technology suppliers by favoring them in government procurement. Beijing has promised to let foreign companies apply to have China-based operations treated as domestic suppliers. But even if they are, production in China would create far fewer U.S. jobs than exporting the same goods from American factories. In a speech last week, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner suggested Beijing might be given greater access to U.S. technology if it does more to address American complaints about its currency controls and intellectual property theft. Again, that clashes with China's strategy of pressing companies to hand over know-how as a condition of buying wind power, high-speed rail and other goods. Some complain Chinese partners use that to create competing products and in some cases might be selling shared technology abroad in violation of licensing agreements. "There are more and more policies of protectionism that aren't in the headlines but are in the details of the local and national regulatory systems," said McGregor. "It appears there is a debate behind closed doors on how much further to take `reform and opening' versus building state capitalism and `national champion' state-owned enterprises."
[Associated
Press;
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