Britain remains convinced that a comprehensive free trade
agreement with the United States makes good sense for both
countries, Hands told Reuters, although the Biden administration
has put all free trade talks on ice for now.
Britain has signed trade agreements with Japan, Australia and
New Zealand since leaving the European Union, and hoped to join
the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific
Partnership, he added.
"Yet our largest bilateral trade partner of all, the United
States, we do not have a comprehensive free trade agreement
with," he said, noting that the two countries share similar
standards on worker rights, the environment and climate change.
Even so, Hands said, there has been progress on bilateral trade
issues, including resolution of a longstanding dispute over
aircraft subsidies and suspension of U.S. tariffs on steel and
aluminum.
A growing number of U.S. states, including Texas, are interested
in joining North Carolina, Indiana and now South Carolina in
signing memorandums of understanding on trade, which are not
legally binding, he said.
Hands said he met with California Lieutenant Governor Eleni
Kounalakis this week and they agreed to launch talks on expanded
trade ties next year, with a focus on hydrogen, renewable energy
and financial technology, among other sectors. California is the
most populous U.S. state and would rank as the world's sixth
largest economy if it were a country.
He said he also met on Friday with Utah state officials and was
confident of reaching a "good agreement" after resolving some
"smaller outstanding issues."
U.S. states were keen to attract British investment, while
expanding export opportunities was a key priority for UK firms,
he said, citing aerospace and technology as other promising
sectors for expanded trade ties.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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