(ANSI: Washington) -- The U.S. Department of Commerce’s International Trade Administration (ITA) has reopened a public comment period seeking input on regulatory cooperation activities between the United States and the European Union. The comment period is now open through Aug. 8, 2011.
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The goal is to reduce or eliminate unnecessary divergences in regulatory measures that may impede trade in goods in the transatlantic marketplace, and to identify existing or emerging sectors that may benefit from transatlantic regulatory cooperation. The European Union is the United State’s largest trading partner, accounting for 19 percent of U.S. merchandise exports in 2010.
Comments received will serve as a basis for discussion with the European Union on regulatory cooperation activities that would support the National Export Initiative (NEI) and the U.S.-EU High-Level Regulatory Cooperation Forum. Under the NEI, President Obama has set the goal of doubling U.S. exports in five years, an increase that would support the creation of 2 million U.S. jobs.
According to the original May 3, 2011, Federal Register notice, transatlantic trade may be impeded because countries apply different standards or technical requirements to address common environmental, health, safety, or other concerns with respect to certain products or product categories. Stakeholders are requested to assist the DoC in identifying opportunities for U.S.-EU cooperation to reduce or eliminate these divergences in regulatory measures impeding transatlantic trade.
Comments may be submitted via www.regulations.gov under docket ITA-2011-0006. All comments and recommendations submitted in response to this notice will be made available to the public.
For further details, view the May 3 or June 23 Federal Register notices.
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