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Businesses warn on ‘devastating’ threat of Canadian railway strike

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Businesses warn on ‘devastating’ threat of Canadian railway strike

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Business groups have warned of “devastating” consequences for the North American economy as 9,300 workers threaten a strike against Canada’s two largest freight railways as soon as Thursday.

Canadian National and Canadian Pacific Kansas City said they plan to lock out railway workers and shut down their operations in the country if they cannot reach an agreement on pay and work schedules with the Teamsters Canada union before their labour contracts expire later this week.

The two railways stretch across Canada, into the US and in the case of Canadian Pacific, into Mexico. A strike would disrupt the operations of several critical industries across the continent, including agriculture, construction, meat processing and car manufacturing, and leave tens of thousands of commuters without transportation to Canada’s largest cities.

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It would be the first time in Canadian history that both rail operators had a labour stoppage at the same time.

The US Chamber of Commerce and Canadian Chamber of Commerce issued a joint statement on Tuesday calling on Ottawa to “immediately intervene” to avert a disruption.

“A stoppage of rail service will be devastating to Canadian businesses and families and impose significant impacts on the US economy,” the business groups said.

Their comments were the latest in an escalating series of warnings as contract talks go down to the wire. Pete Buttigieg, US transportation secretary, said earlier this week that the Biden administration was monitoring the labour negotiations, engaging with the Canadian government and tracking flows of goods to the US.

Jim Vena, chief executive of US railroad Union Pacific, wrote to Canadian labour minister Steven MacKinnon asking him to intercede in the dispute, according to a copy of the letter seen by the Financial Times, saying a prolonged shutdown would have “significant cascading effects”.

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A coalition of US food and agriculture groups wrote to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau urging action, as trucks are uneconomical for long-haul crop shipments. “Agriculture ships more than 25,000 cars per week and this figure will go to zero during a strike or lockout,” they wrote.

Keith Creel, chief executive at Canadian Pacific Kansas City, said on Monday that the railroad was “firmly committed” to reaching an agreement and had offered to enter binding interest arbitration with the union.

On Sunday, Canadian National said “no meaningful progress has occurred, and the parties remain very far apart”.

The dispute is the first big challenge for MacKinnon, who took over the labour portfolio in July after his predecessor left the post for personal reasons. MacKinnon is meeting both rail operators this week, his office said on Monday. Last week, he declined to impose binding arbitration at Canadian National’s request, telling the parties to bargain in good faith.

The strike threat had already begun to have an impact on supply chains across the continent, Union Pacific’s Vena wrote. Some ocean shipments bound for Canadian ports have rerouted to the US and trains have stopped carrying hazardous cargo, including fertiliser. It could take the railways three to five days to catch up from each day they were shut down, he estimated.

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The concerns this week echoed those in 2022 when freight rail workers threatened to strike across the US. A shutdown was narrowly averted as federal officials mediated a deal days before the labour contracts expired.

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Video: Biden’s Speech at the Democratic Convention

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Video: Biden’s Speech at the Democratic Convention

President Biden’s speech to the Democratic National Convention on Monday night signaled the final chapter in his presidency. Astead Herndon, national politics reporter and host of “The Run-Up” at The New York Times, explains the moment that stood out to him in the address.

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Before Mass Shooting, Army Supervisors Ignored Advice

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Before Mass Shooting, Army Supervisors Ignored Advice


A commission that investigated the deadliest mass shooting in Maine’s history released its final findings Tuesday, saying police and the Army missed opportunities “that, if taken, might have changed the course of these tragic events.” Army reservist Robert Card killed 18 people at a bar and a bowling alley in Lewiston before taking his own life on Oct. 25 last year. In the months before the shooting, friends and other reservists had warned that he was showing paranoid and delusional behavior, the AP reports. Less than six weeks before the shooting, a longtime friend warned their Army supervisor: “I believe he’s going to snap and do a mass shooting.”

  • Commission chair Daniel Wathen, former chief justice of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, said Tuesday that “Robert Card is totally responsible for his own conduct, solely responsible,” the Boston Herald reports. “We will never know if he might still have committed a mass shooting even if someone had managed to remove his firearms before Oct. 25,” Wathen said. “But the Commission unanimously found that there were several opportunities that, if taken, might have changed the course of these tragic events.

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EU to hit Teslas imported from China with 19% tariffs

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EU to hit Teslas imported from China with 19% tariffs

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Brussels plans to hit Tesla cars imported into the EU from China with tariffs of 19 per cent, a lower rate than those for Chinese electric-vehicle makers.

The European Commission said on Tuesday that Teslas manufactured in China could be subject to an additional levy of 9 per cent on top of existing duties of 10 per cent applied to all foreign-made cars.

The announcement comes after Tesla requested an individual investigation into its operations in China in the hope of avoiding the higher rates that Brussels has applied to Chinese manufacturers of up to 47 per cent.

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Elon Musk’s car company had also complained to European capitals about the probe, an EU diplomat said.

Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

EU officials claim that the US company’s Chinese operations have benefited from subsidised rates for land, income tax reductions and other support from Beijing, including beneficial rates when buying batteries.

The levies are part of a more aggressive approach by the EU against heavily subsidised imports from China, particularly in technologies critical for the transition to green energy, including solar panels and wind turbines.

They are the result of an investigation announced by commission president Ursula von der Leyen into Chinese electric vehicle imports last September.

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Brussels said that the probe was based on “growing evidence-based concerns about the recent and rapid rise in low-priced exports of electric vehicles coming from China to the EU”.

China’s commerce ministry on Tuesday said the investigation was an act of “unfair competition”.

The EU “abused the method of sampling to treat different types of Chinese companies differently and distorted the results of the investigation,” said a spokesperson for the ministry. “China firmly opposes and is highly concerned about [the final ruling].” 

Beijing had provided “tens of thousands” of pages of documents to defend itself in EU’s anti-subsidies investigation and both sides had held more than 10 rounds of negotiations since the end of June, the spokesperson added. 

The Chinese Chamber of Commerce to the EU said it was in “firm opposition” to the tariffs and that there was not “sufficient evidence” to show that the European EV industry would be affected by Chinese imports.

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“The competitiveness of electric vehicles made in China is not driven by subsidies but by factors such as industrial scale, comprehensive supply chain advantages and intense market competition,” it added.

China has retaliated to the EU probe by filing a complaint at the World Trade Organization and opening its own anti-dumping probes against French cognac and EU pork imports.

After an initial assessment, the commission announced in June that Chinese vehicle manufacturers including BYD and Geely could be subject to higher than expected tariffs of up to 48 per cent on cars imported into the bloc.

On Tuesday, it marginally lowered these rates after the Chinese companies provided more information. The maximum additional levy was reduced by about 1 per cent.

At present, the duties are being paid in the form of bank guarantees ahead of member states’ approval of the measures by an October 30 deadline. If EU countries vote in favour, the duties will be applied for five years.

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An EU official said there was a “risk” of Chinese manufacturers stockpiling cars ahead of the tariffs coming into force but added, “it takes time to transport them from China”.

Another said there were “intensive” discussions with Chinese counterparts to find “an alternative solution”.

“We are open to China making proposals that would solve the problem in the same manner as a duty, but it is very much up to them,” the official said.

Europe’s electric vehicle industry has been struggling in recent months as consumer sentiment cools. The withdrawal of subsidies for EV purchases in Germany, for example, has also resulted in “substantial year-on-year losses” for manufacturers, according to Schmidt Automotive Research.

SAR found in a separate report published last week that Chinese manufacturers had increased exports to the EU ahead of the final duties being applied.

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Additional reporting by Gloria Li

Video: Joe Biden’s EV crusade has a long way to go | FT Energy Source
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