IANS | 14 Apr, 2024
South Korea and the United States have agreed to hold bilateral talks
on supply chain and commercial issues and a trilateral industry
ministers' meeting with Japan in the first half of the year, a senior
Seoul official said.
Industry Minister Ahn Duk-geun announced the
agreement, wrapping up his dayslong trip in Washington, during which he
met U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, lawmakers and experts for
talks on trade, energy and industrial issues.
The plan for the
meetings comes as Seoul, Washington and Tokyo have been strengthening
bilateral and trilateral cooperation under a U.S. push to cement a
"lattice-like" network of allies to confront regional and global
challenges, reports Yonhap news agency.
"Through a meeting with
the commerce secretary, we discussed ways to produce wide-ranging
outcomes from the South Korea-U.S. Supply Chain and Commercial Dialogue
(SCCD), and discussed ways to cooperate through the South
Korea-U.S.-Japan industry ministers' meeting," Ahn said in a meeting
with Korean reporters.
He was referring to the trilateral
ministerial meeting that South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, U.S.
President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida agreed to
create at their landmark summit at Camp David in Maryland in August.
SCCD
is a regular ministerial forum designed to discuss promotion of
resilient supply chains of key products, including semiconductors,
batteries, and critical minerals.
During bilateral energy
ministers' talks this week, Ahn proposed holding the Ministerial Energy
Policy Dialogue -- a comprehensive platform designed to discuss a wide
range of bilateral energy issues -- within this year.
"The two
sides formed a shared understanding over the need to revitalise
communication channels between the two (energy) ministers," Ahn said.
The
minister also said that he called for U.S. government officials and
lawmakers to ensure that South Korean enterprises can get subsidies and
tax incentives without any discrimination, and smoothly secure visas for
their workers needed for the establishment of U.S. facilities.