washingtonpost.com 
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2020/04/03/white-house-scrambles-scoop-up-medical-supplies-angering-canada-germany/>
  


White House scrambles to scoop up medical supplies worldwide, angering Canada, 
Germany


Jeanne Whalen

7-9 minutes

  _____  

The Trump administration’s global scramble to secure more protective masks for 
U.S. health-care workers has sparked tensions with allies including Canada and 
Germany, which fear they could face shortages as they battle their own 
coronavirus 
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2020/02/28/what-you-need-know-about-coronavirus/?tid=lk_inline_manual_2&itid=lk_inline_manual_2>
  outbreaks.

The White House late Thursday ordered Minnesota mask manufacturer 3M to 
prioritize U.S. orders over foreign demand, using its authority under the 
Defense Production Act, or DPA, to try to ease critical shortages of N95 masks 
at U.S. hospitals.

The Trump administration has asked 3M to stop exporting the masks to Canada and 
Latin America, and to import more from 3M’s factories in China, the company 
said 
<https://news.3m.com/press-release/company-english/3m-response-defense-production-act-order>
  Friday.

At the same time, officials in Berlin expressed outrage over what they said was 
the diversion to the United States of 200,000 masks that were en route from 
China, while officials in Brazil and France complained that the United States 
was outbidding them in the global marketplace for critical medical supplies.

At a Friday evening briefing, Trump said he was invoking the DPA again to stop 
the export of “critical medical items by unscrupulous actors,” whom he did not 
identify.

The developments underscored the huge pressure the Trump administration faces 
as coronavirus infections in the United States continue to skyrocket and state 
officials and health-care workers continue to complain of shortages 
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/inside-americas-mask-crunch-a-slow-government-reaction-and-an-industry-wary-of-liability/2020/04/02/b3155e2a-6f85-11ea-aa80-c2470c6b2034_story.html?tid=lk_inline_manual_10&itid=lk_inline_manual_10>
  of medical supplies, at a time when most of the rest of the world also is 
battling the contagion.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his government has been 
“forcefully” reminding American counterparts that trade “goes both ways across 
the border.”

Thousands of nurses in Windsor, Ontario, he noted, travel to Detroit each day 
to work in hospitals there. Several of them have since tested positive for 
covid-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, which has infected more 
than 12,000 people in Michigan.

“These are things that Americans rely on,” Trudeau said, “and it would be a 
mistake to create blockages or reduce the amount of back-and-forth trade of 
essential goods and services, including medical goods, across our border.”

President Trump announced late Thursday he was invoking the Defense Production 
Act in relation to 3M, suggesting it was for punitive reasons. “We hit 3M hard 
today after seeing what they were doing with their Masks,” he tweeted. “. . . 
Big surprise to many in government as to what they were doing - will have a big 
price to pay!”

On Friday, Trump added he was “not happy with 3M,” without elaborating.

In an executive order, the White House said it would use the act to acquire 
“the number of N-95 respirators that the [FEMA] administrator determines to be 
appropriate.”

3M Chief Executive Michael Roman said the company would comply with the order.

"The narrative we aren’t doing everything we can as a company is just not 
true,” he said in an interview with CNBC 
<https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/03/coronavirus-update-3m-ceo-defends-mask-production-after-trump-invokes-dpa.html>
 , noting that 3M has doubled its global production of N95 masks since 
coronavirus hit the headlines in January.

He also cautioned that administration requests to stop mask exports from the 
United States, and to divert production from other countries, could have 
serious trade and humanitarian implications.

3M is an important supplier to Canada and Latin America, and “the sole provider 
in many cases of the respiratory protection for health-care workers in 
countries around the world,” he said, adding that exports to Canada and Latin 
America represent a “small proportion” of the company’s U.S. production.

“Ceasing all export of respirators produced in the United States would likely 
cause other countries to retaliate and do the same, as some have already done,” 
3M said in a statement.

The company said it had “secured approval from China” this week to export 10 
million masks to the United States, from 3M’s factories in China. That followed 
a Trump administration request that 3M increase imports from its overseas 
factories, the company said.

Presidential trade adviser Peter Navarro said this week that the administration 
has “had some issues making sure that all of the production that 3M does around 
the world — enough of it is coming back here to the right places.”

In February, Navarro complained in an interview with Fox Business 
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4nM0gDDKYDQ>  that China had moved to 
“nationalize, effectively, 3M, our company . . . to prevent them from sending 
us any stuff.”

In response, 3M said it has a “regionalized” manufacturing structure. “For 
example, the majority of our products made in China are sold in China,” a 
spokeswoman said.

German officials on Friday were stinging in their criticism of the Trump 
administration after a consignment of face masks that they said was ordered and 
paid for by the Berlin police was diverted en route from China.

Andreas Geisel, Berlin’s interior minister, said the delivery made it as far as 
Bangkok before being “confiscated.” In a statement, he said he couldn’t provide 
further details of what happened at the airport but “we are currently assuming 
that this is related to the U.S. government’s ban on mask exports.”

“We consider this an act of modern piracy,” he said, calling on the United 
States to “comply with international rules.” “This is not how you deal with 
transatlantic partners. Even in times of global crisis, wild west methods 
shouldn’t rule.”

The statement did not name the company involved, saying only that it was a U.S. 
firm, but German press reports said the consignment was ordered from 3M.

Berlin mayor Michael Müller, who like Geisel is a member of the left-wing 
Social Democrats, called the action “inhumane and unacceptable.”

The German federal government did not immediately respond to a request to 
comment on Friday. The U.S. State Department declined to comment on the 
complaints from various countries.

“This is quite a scandal,” said Karl Lauterbach, a German parliamentarian and 
health scientist. “We were relying on the delivery. . . . It’s an international 
crisis and it’s important that we can rely on each other.”

In Brazil, the health minister this week said some of the country’s purchases 
from China fell through after the United States started transporting planeloads 
of equipment from China.

“The United States has ordered 23 huge airplanes to China to bring back the 
materials that they’d acquired,” Brazilian health minister Luiz Henrique 
Mandetta told reporters. “Our purchases — which we expected would bolster 
supplies — many fell through.”

He said it’s likely that Brazil had been outbid for the supplies, and that the 
Chinese reneged on the agreements.

Brazil announced Thursday that after distributing the last of its medical 
supplies, the health ministry’s reserves have now been completely depleted.

“In another week, we won’t have any more masks,” said Alexandre Telles, the 
president of Rio de Janeiro’s doctors’ union. “Everyone is very scared by the 
lack of protective equipment.”

In France, a number of regional officials told the Libération 
<https://www.liberation.fr/france/2020/04/01/une-commande-francaise-de-masques-detournee-vers-les-etats-unis-sur-un-tarmac-chinois_1783805>
  newspaper that they had ordered masks from Chinese suppliers, only to be 
outbid by American officials at the last minute.

“I had found a stock of masks available, but the Americans outbid,” said 
Valérie Pécresse, the president of the Paris region’s governmental council.

The United States emphatically denied the allegations. “The United States 
government has not purchased any masks intended for delivery from China to 
France,” the U.S. Embassy in Paris wrote in a statement. “Reports to the 
contrary are completely false.”

Amanda Coletta in Toronto, James McAuley in Paris and Luisa Beck in Berlin 
contributed to this report.

 

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