Latest News

EU tariffs on China not a 'penalty', says German economy minister

Proposed European Union tariffs on Chinese products are not a penalty, Germany's. Economy Minister Robert Habeck told Chinese authorities in Beijing. on Saturday.

Habeck's see to China is the first by a senior European. authorities because Brussels proposed hefty tasks on imports of. Chinese-made electric automobiles (EVs) to fight what the EU. thinks about excessive aids.

China warned on Friday ahead of his arrival that escalating. frictions with the EU over EVs might trigger a trade war.

It is important to comprehend that these are not punitive. tariffs, Habeck said in the first plenary session of a climate. and change dialogue.

Nations such as the U.S., Brazil and Turkey had utilized. punitive tariffs, however not the EU, the economy minister said. Europe does things in a different way.

Habeck said that for 9 months, the European Commission. had taken a look at in great information whether Chinese business had. benefited unfairly from subsidies.

Any countervailing responsibility step that arises from the EU. review is not a punishment, he said, including that such procedures. were meant to compensate for the benefits given to Chinese. companies by Beijing.

Typical, equal standards for market access should be. achieved, Habeck stated.

Fulfilling Zheng Shanjie, chairman of China's National. Advancement and Reform Commission, Habeck stated the proposed EU. tariffs were intended to level the playing field with China.

Zheng responded: We will do everything to safeguard Chinese. business.

Proposed EU import duties on Chinese-made EVs would harm. both sides, Zheng included. He told Habeck he hoped Germany would. show management within the EU and do the proper thing.

He also rejected the allegations of unreasonable subsidies, saying. the advancement of China's brand-new energy industry was the outcome of. detailed advantages in technology, market and industry. chains, fostered in intense competitors.

The market development is the outcome of competition, rather. than aids, let alone unfair competitors, Zheng stated throughout. the meeting.

The EU provisional tasks are set to use by July 4, with. the investigation set to continue till Nov. 2, when definitive. responsibilities, generally for 5 years, might be imposed.

Habeck informed Chinese officials the conclusions of the EU. report ought to be talked about.

It is necessary now to seize the day that the report. supplies seriously and to talk or negotiate, Habeck stated.

After his meeting with Zheng, Habeck talked with Chinese. Commerce Minister Wang Wentao, who stated he would discuss the. tariffs with EU Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis on Saturday. night through videoconference.

ENVIRONMENT DISCUSSION

Although the trade tensions were a key subject to be. talked about, the goal of the meeting was to deepen cooperation. in between both industrialised countries for the green shift.

This was the very first plenary session of the climate and. improvement dialogue after Germany and China signed a. memorandum of understanding in June of in 2015 for cooperation. on climate modification and the green transition.

The nations acknowledged they had a special duty. to prevent global warming of 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7. Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial temperatures, a level regarded. by researchers as vital to preventing the most severe. consequences.

China set up practically 350 gigawatts (GW) of brand-new eco-friendly. capacity in 2023, over half the international total, and if the. world's second-biggest economy maintains this pace it will. likely surpass its 2030 target this year, a report published in. June by the International Energy Company (IEA) showed.

While Habeck applauded the expansion of renewable resource in. China, he kept in mind that it is necessary not to look just at the. growth of renewables, but also the overall CO2 emissions.

Coal still accounted for almost 60% of China's electrical energy. supply in 2023. China has a coal-based energy mix, Zheng stated.

China, India and Indonesia, are accountable for almost 75%. of the international overall coal burned, as federal governments tend to. prioritise energy security, schedule and cost over the. amount of carbon emissions.

Zheng said China was building coal-fired power plants as a. security step.

I still think that the enormous expansion of coal power. can be done differently if one thinks about the ramification of. renewables in the system, Habeck replied.

(source: Reuters)