Biden administration moving to escalate energy trade dispute with Mexico
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[September 06, 2023]
By Jarrett Renshaw and David Lawder
(Reuters) - President Joe Biden's administration has asked U.S. energy
companies to prepare affidavits documenting how Mexico’s protectionist
policies disrupted their investments as Washington prepares to escalate
a trade dispute with its neighbor, according to three people familiar
with the discussions.
The request for affidavits from major U.S. oil and renewable energy
companies represents the latest and clearest signal that the Office of
the United States Trade Representative (USTR) plans to seek an
independent dispute settlement panel under the United States Mexico
Canada Agreement trade pact, or USMCA.
Mexico President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's steps to roll back
reforms aimed at opening Mexico's power and oil markets to foreign
competitors ultimately sparked the trade dispute.
U.S. energy and power companies, such as Chevron and Marathon Petroleum,
which sought to expand in Mexico, have complained that they have been
denied simple permits and applications in decisions that favored state
oil company Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex) and national power utility
Comision Federal de Electricidad (CFE).
The United States is likely to seek a dispute panel before the end of
the year if talks on the issue continue to stall, and the affidavits
represent evidence that would be included in the panel request, the
sources said. If that panel rules against Mexico and it fails to take
corrective action, Washington could ultimately impose billions of
dollars in retaliatory tariffs on Mexican goods.
The people asked not to be named because they are not authorized to
speak publicly on the matter.
The steps add to a significant worsening of trade relations between
Washington and Mexico City, even as their economic integration grows. In
August, USTR requested a USMCA dispute settlement panel to intervene in
a disagreement over Mexico's curbs on genetically modified corn imports.
Mexico now buys about $5 billion worth of U.S. GM corn annually, mostly
for livestock feed.
Like the energy policies, Washington argues that banning GMO corn for
human and animal consumption violates Mexico's obligations under the
trade pact.
Obrador is seen as a major obstacle to resolving both disputes since he
sees energy and corn as important to Mexico’s national identity.
A USTR spokesperson declined to comment.
Mexico’s Economy Ministry, in response to a Reuters request for comment,
said it had no information regarding the matter.
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U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai,
Mexican Economy Minister Tatiana Clouthier and Canadian Minister of
Small Business, Export Promotion and International Trade Mary Ng
attend an event to commemorate the first anniversary of the
entry-into-force of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement in
Mexico City, Mexico July 7, 2021. REUTERS/Edgard Garrido/File Photo
The White House has hoped to avoid escalating energy trade tensions
with Mexico as it sought help on immigration and drug trafficking,
but talks that began last year have made little progress. Raising
the stakes in the dispute carries significant risk for Biden, who
will face Republican criticism over his handling of immigration and
drug trafficking as he seeks reelection in 2024.
Mexico overtook Canada and China to become the largest U.S. goods
trading partner in the first half of 2023, reaching total trade of
$396.6 billion for the period as Mexico's automotive production
grows and other U.S. companies shift supply chains from China closer
to home.
In 2022, Mexico had a $130.5 billion goods trade surplus with the
United States. It is on track to more than double from the $69
billion surplus in 2017, when former President Donald Trump launched
a renegotiation of NAFTA after threatening to quit the pact,
claiming it was draining U.S. manufacturing jobs.
DISPUTE PANEL
By seeking a dispute settlement panel, USTR would be essentially
giving up negotiations, turning instead to a form of litigation
created in the 2020 revamp of the former North American Free Trade
Agreement.
Under USMCA's dispute settlement rules, a five-person panel, chosen
from a roster of pre-approved experts, must be convened within 30
days, with a chair jointly chosen and the U.S. side choosing two
Mexican panelists and Mexico choosing two American panelists. The
panel will review testimony and written submissions and its initial
report is due 150 days after the panel is convened.
Last year, one such panel ruled in Washington's favor in a dispute
over Canadian dairy quotas, and against the U.S. on automotive rules
of origin, siding with Mexico and Canada.
(Reporting By Jarrett Renshaw and David Lawder; additional reporting
by Stephen Eisenhammer from Mexico; Editing by Tomasz Janowski)
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