Related News
EU imposes provisional duties on China ceramic imports
THE European Commission imposed provisional duties on ceramic tableware and kitchenware imported from China yesterday despite opposition from most EU member states.
Fourteen of the European Union's 27 members voted against the planned measures at a meeting of trade specialists in October, a highly unusual move that left the commission having to rethink its plans.
The commission can impose provisional duties while a probe continues. Under EU rules, it only consults member states, but is not bound by their vote.
However, it does need to follow the majority opinion of member states for definitive duties, which would need to be set for these products by May 15. These would normally be set for five years.
The EU's executive body went ahead with provisional duties ranging from 17.6 to 58.8 percent on Chinese manufacturers, according to the official journal of the EU.
Ceramic tableware and kitchenware imports from China totalled 728 million euros (US$926.6 million) in 2011, according to the commission, making it among the larger cases under consideration.
The commission is investigating 44 dumping and subsidy cases, 21 of them involving China. The EU is China's biggest trading partner while for the EU, China is second only to the US.
The commission launched its largest case to date in September into the alleged dumping of 21 billion euros of solar panels and components by Chinese producers. It added an inquiry into alleged subsidies last week.
The commission also set provisional duties yesterday of 15.9 to 67.8 percent on iron tubes and pipe fittings from China and Thailand. EU imports from the two nations in 2011 were 59 million euros.
Although historically, European china was a cheaply priced alternative to the genuine Asian product, the commission said that in the modern era imports were crowding out domestic sales.
European importers say the duties would harm consumers and traders and argue that European producers cannot meet local demand, meaning imports would be sought from other countries, such as Bangladesh and Vietnam.
Chinese producers hope EU members that voted against the measures will continue their opposition.
Some members, such as from Scandinavia, tend to vote against duties as a matter of free-trade principle. Others said they were unconvinced by the commission's arguments and data in this case.
Fourteen of the European Union's 27 members voted against the planned measures at a meeting of trade specialists in October, a highly unusual move that left the commission having to rethink its plans.
The commission can impose provisional duties while a probe continues. Under EU rules, it only consults member states, but is not bound by their vote.
However, it does need to follow the majority opinion of member states for definitive duties, which would need to be set for these products by May 15. These would normally be set for five years.
The EU's executive body went ahead with provisional duties ranging from 17.6 to 58.8 percent on Chinese manufacturers, according to the official journal of the EU.
Ceramic tableware and kitchenware imports from China totalled 728 million euros (US$926.6 million) in 2011, according to the commission, making it among the larger cases under consideration.
The commission is investigating 44 dumping and subsidy cases, 21 of them involving China. The EU is China's biggest trading partner while for the EU, China is second only to the US.
The commission launched its largest case to date in September into the alleged dumping of 21 billion euros of solar panels and components by Chinese producers. It added an inquiry into alleged subsidies last week.
The commission also set provisional duties yesterday of 15.9 to 67.8 percent on iron tubes and pipe fittings from China and Thailand. EU imports from the two nations in 2011 were 59 million euros.
Although historically, European china was a cheaply priced alternative to the genuine Asian product, the commission said that in the modern era imports were crowding out domestic sales.
European importers say the duties would harm consumers and traders and argue that European producers cannot meet local demand, meaning imports would be sought from other countries, such as Bangladesh and Vietnam.
Chinese producers hope EU members that voted against the measures will continue their opposition.
Some members, such as from Scandinavia, tend to vote against duties as a matter of free-trade principle. Others said they were unconvinced by the commission's arguments and data in this case.
- About Us
- |
- Terms of Use
- |
-
RSS
- |
- Privacy Policy
- |
- Contact Us
- |
- Shanghai Call Center: 962288
- |
- Tip-off hotline: 52920043
- 沪ICP证:沪ICP备05050403号-1
- |
- 互联网新闻信息服务许可证:31120180004
- |
- 网络视听许可证:0909346
- |
- 广播电视节目制作许可证:沪字第354号
- |
- 增值电信业务经营许可证:沪B2-20120012
Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.