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BEIJING, Sept. 28 -- Chinese textile exporters are
likely to face safeguard measures on additional products if the current round of
Sino-US textile talks fails to reach agreement.
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| Chinese workers work in a factory in
Huaibei, East China's Anhui Province in this picture taken on September
15, 2005. [newsphoto] | The United States is due
to make a decision on whether to set caps on imports of sweaters, robes, wool
trousers and knit fabrics on October 1.
In addition, US industry associations last week filed
new petitions to their government for curbs on cheesecloth, men's and boys' wool
suits, polyester filament fabric and some man-made fibre coat imports from
China.
However, the US Government earlier twice postponed
decisions on safeguard measures on several categories to leave more room for
bilateral consultation.
Although Minister of Commerce Bo Xilai said when
China reached a new textile agreement with the European Union earlier this month
that the Sino-US textile trade disagreement would soon be resolved, neither side
seems optimistic about the outcome of talks which began Monday (local time) in
Washington.
China would stick to its principles in the
negotiation, Cao Xinyu, vice-chairman of the China Chamber of Commerce for
Import and Export of Textiles, said in Beijing before the talks. The US industry
described the attitude as "intransigence."
China and the United States were slated to end the
talks last night.
Negotiations were jointly headed by Lu Jianhua,
foreign trade director with the Ministry of Commerce, and David Spooner,
Washington's chief textile negotiator.
The previous four rounds of Sino-US consultations
failed to break the deadlock, leaving "some substantial differences" unsettled.
In another development, online bidding for next
year's quotas set by the European Union started yesterday; the process is set to
last till Friday.
Cao said enterprises were carefully analyzing prices
and prospects as they bid for 18 per cent of next year's quotas.
(Source: China Daily)
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