EU weighs what to offer Trump on trade
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[October 05, 2018]
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - European
Union ministers debated on Friday what to offer the United States to
ease trade tensions and avoid a return to a tit-for-tat tariff conflict
that could hit EU cars.
U.S. President Donald Trump agreed in July to hold back on a threatened
25-percent import tariff on EU cars while the United States and Europe
discussed removing trade barriers, including duties on industrial goods.
Austria, which holds the six-month rotating presidency of the European
Union, put forward a paper ahead of Friday's meeting suggesting EU
countries could agree the focus of transatlantic talks could be
regulatory cooperation.
This could include agreements that each side recognize as sufficient the
other's safety standards in cars, pharmaceuticals and medical devices.
For example, a seat belt meeting EU standards could be sold in the
United States, and vice versa.
German Economy Minister Peter Altmaier said the meeting in Innsbruck,
Austria, was taking place against a "very, very difficult" international
environment".
He told reporters that the European Union needed to push ahead with
talks to find an agreement with the United States.
"Time is getting tight. We must hurry up," he said. "We are working for
an agreement that covers as many industrial goods as possible. That is
our clear position."
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U.S. President Donald Trump exits Air Force One at Joint Base
Andrews after traveling to Minnesota in Maryland, U.S., October 4,
2018. REUTERS/Leah Millis
French minister of state Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne suggested any transatlantic
agreement would be limited, emphasizing that agricultural products, among the
United States' major exports, would not be included.
Lemoyne said the European Union could conclude comprehensive trade agreements
only with parties that have signed up to the Paris climate accord, which Trump
has abandoned.
"There needs to be consistency between our climate, our environmental
commitments and our trade commitments," the French minister said. "We are in a
process of dialogue... to look at certain segments in certain industries. So
this is something much more restricted than the classic trade agreements."
(Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop; Editing by Peter Graff)
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