Musk's tunnel-boring firm seeks U.S. tariff exemption for Chinese parts

Reuters  |  WASHINGTON 

By David Shepardson

In a July 31 letter posted last week on a government website, the asked the U.S. to exempt parts like cutterheads, screw conveyors and related Boring seeks "limited parts from in the near-term for use in a small number of tunnel boring machines." The letter added those parts are "readily available only from "

Privately held Boring added that it is "working to develop and manufacture our own tunnel boring machines" and wants to "restore the now-dormant American tunnel boring machine industry."

The company said for planned tunnels, including a project between and Baltimore, it will "use machines that are majority-composed of U.S. content."

The tariffs could cause "severe economic harm" to the company and U.S. interests and could result in a delay of one to two years in the construction of a proposed Washington-to-tunnel that it plans to eventually extend to

Exempting the parts will not harm U.S. industry, the company said, and noted that tunnelling is not one of 10 sectors identified in China's "Made in 2025" plan. The company said its business model is "predicated upon substantially reducing the cost of tunnelling."

Musk, who is also of , in June proposed building a $1 billion underground transit system in The plan would send people from Chicago's downtown Loop district to at 150 miles (241 km) per hour.

The has been promoting its plans for tunnels that would allow between cities. The company initially plans to ferry passengers between Washington and on autonomous electric vehicles carrying 8 to 16 passengers at 125-150 miles per hour, but would not use tracks or

On Wednesday, the company proposed to build a 3.6-mile tunnel between in and the city's subway system.

The and Boring did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Boring said in an earlier letter it was converting from diesel-powered to electric-powered and had innovated in "concrete mixing, segment production, excavation and hauling practices."

Other companies including have sought exemptions from new U.S. tariffs imposed on Chinese imports.

(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by David Gregorio)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, August 18 2018. 01:49 IST