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EU extends trade guide on Chinese distortions to new sectors

The European Commission has actually upgraded its report on stateled distortions in the Chinese economy, adding new sectors and potentially opening the door to antidumping grievances from EU chip and cleantech manufacturers.

The update, released on Wednesday and extending to 712 pages, adds information of what the EU executive considers to be distortions in sectors of telecom equipment, semiconductors, the rail market, renewable resource and electric cars.

It maintains the steel, aluminium, chemicals and ceramics sectors of the preliminary report in 2017. There is no comparable EU report for any other nation.

The report is a tool for EU industries to utilize when filing complaints about disposing practices. If Chinese rates and expenses are found to distorted, they can be replaced with those from another country to calculate generally higher discarding tariffs.

This could be taken as an invite to sectors that have not yet brought anti-dumping problems to explore their use, said Laurent Ruessmann, partner at trade law practice Ruessmann Beck & & Co.

. The Commission has actually generally released about 10 anti-dumping examinations annually, many concerning steel items.

It is now aiming to protect EU firms from cheap clean-tech products, with a review of aids gotten by Chinese wind turbine providers and an anti-subsidy investigation into imports of Chinese electric vehicles.

The report, nevertheless, will not play a part in these investigations as it just concerns dumping.

The report covers the function of the Chinese state in preparation to meet financial goals, the significance of state-owned enterprises, preferential access to land, labour, basic materials and energy and state assistance for specific sectors.

In most sectors, consisting of electrical automobiles, it refers to Chinese overcapacity.

China's parliament, the National Individuals's Congress, said in March the government would take actions to curb overcapacity. Beijing argues the recent U.S. and EU focus on dangers from China's excess capability is misguided. Its state media has denounced these issues as part of an effort to restrict China's. rise.

(source: Reuters)