United States, Japan Recommit To Addressing Non-Market Policies And Practices
The United States and Japan recently outlined a plan to ensure a “free and open Indo-Pacific region” in response to Russia’s war in Ukraine and concerns about China’s influence in the world.
Broadly, the two countries “reiterated the importance of commitments to promote broad-based economic prosperity for our middle classes” and “committed to advancing policies that support a multilateral trading system based on free and fair trade and that counter economic coercion and non-market policies and practices, emphasizing the importance of offering workers, businesses, and countries around the world a level playing field.”
More specifically, the statement committed the two countries to:
- Effectively confronting non-market policies and practices;
- Moving toward energy transition and decarbonization and recognizing the roles of renewable energy, nuclear power, ammonia, clean hydrogen-based solutions, carbon capture utilization and storage, as well as carbon recycling in achieving long-term energy security and net zero greenhouse gas emissions no later than 2050;
- Strengthening investment in the energy sector and ensuring secure energy resources in the near term, including through liquefied natural gas;
- Reducing methane emissions;
- Promoting information sharing on cybersecurity threats;
- Enhancing U.S.-Japan cooperation to create more effective and agile export controls on critical and emerging technologies;
- Fostering supply chain resilience in strategic sectors, including, in particular, semiconductors, batteries, and critical minerals; and
- Building a diverse and robust supply chain of critical minerals, including rare earths.
Click here to read the full statement.