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中方言出必行,直接切断了美国的三条赚钱渠道,特朗普不敢再狂了,只能反复强调1句话
Sou Hu Cai Jing·2025-08-01 04:52

Group 1 - The core point of the article highlights the significant decline in U.S. energy exports to China, with crude oil exports dropping from $780 million last June to zero this year, and a 96% decrease in total energy exports in the first half of the year compared to the previous year [1][3][5] - China's tariffs on U.S. energy products, including a 15% tariff on coal and LNG, and a 10% tariff on crude oil, have severely impacted U.S. exports, leading to a situation where U.S. exporters are no longer shipping goods due to negative profit margins [3][5] - The article notes that China has diversified its energy imports, significantly increasing crude oil imports from Russia by 18% and achieving record LNG imports from Qatar, while also reducing coal consumption domestically through renewable energy installations [3][5][7] Group 2 - The U.S. defense industry is at risk due to China's control over over 70% of global rare earth separation capacity, which could impact the production of critical military and technology components [3][5] - The potential loss of U.S. energy exports to China could result in significant job losses, with estimates suggesting over 20,000 direct job losses in Texas and Louisiana alone, and potentially affecting over 100,000 jobs across related sectors [5][7] - The article indicates that the U.S. administration is under pressure to negotiate with China, with a need to demonstrate goodwill by potentially rolling back tariffs to previous levels to facilitate discussions [5][7]