Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byVeronica Lewis Modified over 9 years ago
1
Transportation Border Working Group Towards a More Secure and Efficient Border: Facilitation and Security in North American Trade and Transportation Washington, DC April 30, 2004
2
NAFTA Trade U.S.-Canada Trade 1993 = $211 billion 2003 = $393 billion U.S.-Mexico Trade 1993 = $81 billion 2003 = $235 billion Role of Trucks in NAFTA U.S.-Mexico Trade = 81% trade value U.S.-Canada Trade = 69% trade value Sources: International Trade Administration, U.S. Dept. of Commerce and Bureau of Transportation Statistics
3
Source: Bureau of Transportation Statistics Includes exports & imports for all surface modes, value NAFTA Surface Trade MX CA Total Billions 126% 52% 73%
4
Source: Bureau of Transportation Statistics Includes exports & imports for all surface modes, value Mexican Surface Trade Truck Rail Other Billions 118% 157% 28%
5
Source: Bureau of Transportation Statistics Includes exports & imports for all surface modes, value Canadian Surface Trade Truck Rail Other Billions 40% 38% 304%
6
Congestion and Infrastructure Truck crossings: Over 14 million N. border, 8 million S. border Congestion at borders Hard on drivers and equipment Environmental impact Increase cost of goods on consumers Infrastructure Development TEA-21: $700 million for border infrastructure New Reauthorization: Border vs. Corridors Borders: $1billion House, $1.13 Senate Corridors: $ 3.3 billion House, $1 billion Senate Physical infrastructure & technology needs
7
Aftermath of 9/11 Legislative initiatives: USA PATRIOT Act (2001) Aviation and Transportation Security Act (2001) Enhanced Border Security Act (2002) Maritime Transportation Security Act (2002) Bioterrorism Act Safe Explosives Act (2001) Homeland Security Act (2002) Regulatory Initiatives
8
Enforcement & Facilitation Customs U.S.: ACE/ITDS, CTPAT/FAST Canada: PIP/FAST Mexico: FAST Immigration Entry/Exit Control System (U.S.VISIT) Transportation Security Agency Functional, Cross Modal Planning Container Security (International) Rules Worker Credentialing
9
Free and Secure Trade (FAST) FAST = Facilitate trade + secure supply chain FAST – N. Border (12/02) C-TPAT/PIP cargo (importer) Highway carrier agreement FAST driver registration ($50) FAST – S. Border (9/03) C-TPAT cargo (importer & manufacturer) Highway carrier agreement (even if N. border approved) FAST driver registration Seals requirements
10
Automated Commercial Environment/ International Trade Data System Critical process for Motor Carriers: Increment 1, Release 2 will result in creation of electronic truck manifest (Spring ‘04) Finalize truck manifest for motor carriers by March/April for the Customs/eCP by mid-May ITDS now part of eCustoms Partnership Part of ITDS: Census, FDA, INS, Customs 20-30 other agencies expected to sign on
11
Trade Act of 2002 Section 343(a) Final Rule implementing Trade Act of 2002: Inbound 30 minutes (FAST) 1 hour (non-FAST) No communication back to MC PAPS and FAST(NCAP) Release mechanisms Implement at POE 90 days after FR notice LTL/Expedited FAST carriers expedite secondary Outbound: Automated Export System’s (AES) Shipper Export Declaration (SED) USPPI to submit data Carrier ID (SCAC), Carrier name, Destination carrier identifier Timeframe: 1 hour prior to departure
12
Background Checks Patriot Act: CDL-HME Safe Explosives Act of 2002 Effective Jan. 24 th, 2003 prohibits certain persons from possessing explosives: includes aliens, i.e. Canadian and Mexican drivers TSA & DOT: Retain exclusive jurisdiction of Hazmats (Patriot Act). Transportation Worker ID Card (TWIC) Need for harmonization of checks
13
U.S. VISIT Entry/Exit Immigration Control System Air/Seaports Dec. 2003; Land Ports Dec. 2004 ATA Focus Must take known entities, FAST/CTPAT into consideration Aggressively implement Border Accords with Canada and Mexico Provide greater resources at POEs for human, technology and infrastructure needs Border Infrastructure costs DMIA out, CWG back in
14
Conclusion Trucking essential to NAFTA Trade Uniformity and Interoperability Must balance enforcement and trade facilitation Closer cooperation among: Government agencies and trade community: information and possible intelligence sharing U.S. government agencies: better database interconnectivity and information/data exchange North American government agencies: Canada, Mexico & U.S. develop better information/data exchange mechanisms for tracking entry/exit of cargo and people
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.