
Publication
Fashion and luxury newsletter
Focus on the fashion and luxury industry: Key developments regarding antitrust, unfair commercial practices and privacy laws in Italy.
Global | Publication | March 2025
On 16 January 2025, the USTR published a notice of determination that China’s targeting of the maritime, logistics and shipbuilding sectors for dominance is actionable under Section 301 of the US Trade Act of 1974. Section 301 grants the USTR the authority to investigate and remediate, including through the imposition of tariffs or other import restrictions, foreign trade practices that it determines (1) are unreasonable or discriminatory, and (2) burdens or restricts US commerce.
Subsequently, on 21 February 2025, the USTR published its proposed actions on the basis that the USTR has “found China’s acts, policies, and practices to be unreasonable and to burden or restrict US commerce”.
In summary, the USTR’s proposed actions include its plan to impose (1) significant port fees on Chinese maritime transport operators and operators with current fleets of Chinese-built vessels (including operators with orders for such vessels), and (2) requirements for the increased use of US vessels to carry US goods in coastwise and international transport from US ports. If adopted, the proposed actions will have far reaching consequences, both politically and economically.
The deadline for submission of comments is 24 March 2025.
NRF’s fuller summary of USTR’s proposed actions can be found here, and a link to USTR’s consultation can be found here.
Publication
Focus on the fashion and luxury industry: Key developments regarding antitrust, unfair commercial practices and privacy laws in Italy.
Publication
The shift in delivering renewable energy projects away from engaging a single contractor who takes full responsibility for the engineering, procurement, and construction aspects of a project (EPC contract model) to instead developers contracting directly with multiple specialised contractors for separate packages of work (split contract model) raises interesting issues concerning satisfying the principal contractor requirements under work health and safety (WHS) legislation.
Subscribe and stay up to date with the latest legal news, information and events . . .
© Norton Rose Fulbright LLP 2025