US imports of auto parts face scrutiny under law on Chinese forced labor
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[August 17, 2023] By
Nichola Groom
(Reuters) - Electric-vehicle batteries and other car parts are the
latest products under scrutiny as part of Washington's effort to stamp
out U.S. links to forced labor in Chinese supply chains, according to a
document seen by Reuters, agency statistics and sources.
Until now, enforcement of a year-old U.S. law that bans the import of
goods made in Xinjiang, China, has focused mainly on solar panels,
tomatoes and cotton apparel. But now, components that may include
lithium-ion batteries, tires and major automobile raw materials aluminum
and steel are increasingly subject to detentions at the border.
Increased inspection of products destined for auto assembly plants by
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) could signal difficult times
ahead for automakers who will need solid proof that their supply chains
are free of links to a region where the U.S. believes Chinese
authorities have established labor camps for Uyghurs and other Muslim
minority groups.
Beijing denies any abuses.
More than a year of enforcement of the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention
Act (UFLPA) has already stymied development of solar energy projects as
detained panel shipments languish in U.S. warehouses. Installations of
large solar energy facilities for utilities dropped 31% last year due to
constrained panel supplies, according to the U.S. Solar Energy
Industries Association trade group, which has said conditions have
improved somewhat this year.
Both solar energy and battery-powered electric vehicles are critical
industries in the Biden administration’s push to wean the U.S. from
dependence on fossil fuels and to combat climate change.
When shipments are detained, CBP provides the importer with a list of
examples of products from previous reviews and the kind of documentation
required to prove they are not made with forced labor, CBP told Reuters.
That document, a recent version of which was obtained by Reuters through
a public records request, was updated between April and June of this
year to include batteries, tires, aluminum and steel, a CBP spokesperson
said. When the law was beginning to be enforced last year, the agency
was primarily focused on the three commodities identified as high
priorities in the UFLPA statute: cotton, tomatoes and polysilicon, the
raw material used in solar panels.
"The timing of these changes does not reflect any specific changes in
strategy or operations," a CBP spokesperson said in a statement, adding
that the list of eight product types was "not exhaustive."
The agency did not specifically respond to questions about increased
scrutiny of automotive imports. It said its focus "is where there are
high risks in U.S. supply chains."
In a report to Congress last month on UFLPA enforcement, CBP listed
lithium-ion batteries, tires, "and other automobile components" among
the "potential risk areas" it was monitoring.
The expanded focus is reflected in CBP data, which shows 31 automotive
and aerospace shipments have been detained under UFLPA since February of
this year. Detentions of base metal shipments, which would include
aluminum and steel, have also soared from about $1 million per month at
the end of 2022 to more than $15 million a month.
CBP said it was not able to disclose additional information related to
enforcement activities.
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A staff member wearing a face mask walks
past United States and Chinese flags set up before a meeting between
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng
at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing, China, Saturday, July
8, 2023. Mark Schiefelbein/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
AUTOMAKER EXPOSURE
Though the automotive detentions are small compared with the more
than $1 billion of solar panel imports that have stalled at the
border, they have put the industry on alert, according to attorneys
and supply-chain experts.
"It's a very complex supply chain and obviously a detention would be
incredibly disruptive to an auto company," said Dan Solomon, an
attorney with Miller & Chevalier who advises manufacturers on
potential forced-labor risks.
In May, Solomon spoke about UFLPA compliance at a private event for
automotive executives in Detroit.
"Without a doubt the manufacturers are focused on it," he said.
The stepped-up focus on automakers follows a study by Britain's
Sheffield Hallam University published in December that said nearly
every major automaker has exposure to products made with forced
labor in Xinjiang.
The report prompted a probe by U.S. Senate Finance Committee Chair
Ron Wyden, which his spokesperson said is ongoing.
"It is appropriate for CBP to scrutinize imports in this space,"
Wyden said in a statement.
'REAL PERIL'
Of the 13 automakers and suppliers contacted by Reuters, four -
Mercedes-Benz USA, Volkswagen, Denso and ZF Friedrichshafen AG -
said they had not had products detained under UFLPA.
"Under the UFLPA, we've further increased our due diligence with
global media screening, risk analysis and supplier and buyer
training on sustainability and human rights," a Volkswagen
spokesperson said in an email.
Ford, Bosch, General Motors, Honda, Toyota, Stellantis and Magna
said in written statements that they were committed to ensuring
their supply chains were free of forced labor but did not respond to
questions about detainments under UFLPA.
Neither Tesla nor Continental AG responded to requests for comment.
The chief executive of Exiger, a provider of supply-chain management
software, said the solar detentions are an indication of where auto
component enforcement may be headed.
"If you're a car manufacturer and you have not started mapping your
supply chains for the critical minerals and the parts of the
sub-assemblies that are going through China and where they are
getting their goods from, you are running a real peril as we go into
the back half of the year," Exiger CEO Brandon Daniels said in an
interview.
(Reporting by Nichola Groom in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by
David Shepardson in Washington, Jan Schwartz in Hamburg and Daniel
Leussink in Tokyo; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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