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What happens next as China-made EVs investigated by EU?



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By Philip Blenkinsop

BRUSSELS, Oct 4 (Reuters) -The European Commission said on Friday it would adopt tariffs on China-made electric vehicles (EVs) by the end of October after a split vote by EU members.

The Commission set tariff rates ranging from from 7.8% for Tesla to 35.3% for SAIC and other producers deemed not to have cooperated with the EU's anti-subsidy investigation. These will be come on top of the EU's standard 10% car import duty.


EU VOTE

The European Union's 27 members voted on the Commission's proposal for final or "definitive" duties, with 10 in favour, five against and 12 abstentions.

The proposal could have been blocked by a qualified majority of 15 EU members, representing 65% of the EU population vote against. It is a very high hurdle.

The Commission could have chosen to submit an amended proposal at a later stage to secure greater backing, but decided not to do so, saying it had secured the necessary support.

Definitive tariffs for five years are expected to be in force from Oct. 31.

The Commission has decided that provisional duties dating back to July will not be collected. Companies had been able to cover these with a bank guarantee.


CONTINUED TALKS WITH BEIJING

The European Commission has said it is willing to continue negotiating an alternative to tariffs with China even after tariffs are imposed.

The EU executive said last month it could re-examine a price undertaking - involving minimum import prices and typically volume caps - having previously rejected those Chinese companies have offered.

One option under negotiation is a matrix of minimum import prices calculated using criteria such as the range, battery performance and length of the electric vehicle, along with whether it is two- or four-wheel drive, a source familiar with the matter said.

The Commission has said any alternative must be in line with World Trade Organization (WTO) rules, adequate to remove the injury due to subsidies and enforceable.


CHINESE RETALIATION

In moves seen as retaliation, China has launched anti-dumping investigations into EU exports of pork and brandy and an anti-subsidy probe into EU dairy products, but it has yet to impose any measures.

The EU launched a challenge at the WTO last week into the dairy probe.

China's Commerce Ministry has also met with automakers and industry associations to discuss raising import duties on large-engined gasoline vehicles, which would hit German producers hardest.

Germany's exports of vehicles with engines of 2.5 litres or larger to China were worth $1.2 billion last year, Chinese customs data shows.

WHAT HAPPENS AFTER THE INVESTIGATION?

Any company not in the sample group of BYD 002594.SZ, Geely GEELY.UL and SAIC 600104.SS that wishes to have its own individual duty can ask for an "accelerated review" just after the imposition of definitive measures. Such a review should last a maximum of nine months.

The Commission can also carry out an "interim review" after a year has elapsed if the measures are no longer necessary or if they are not sufficient to counteract subsidies.

The Commission often looks into whether producers are evading duties via exports of parts for assembly elsewhere. For the EU, such circumvention exists if 60% or more of the value of parts are imported from the country subject to duties and if the value added in the assembly is no more than 25%.

Companies can dispute the measures at the European Court of Justice. China has already launched a challenge at the WTO. Both legal paths can take well over a year.

The Commission has said it is confident its investigation and measures are compatible with WTO rules.


FACTBOX-Breakdown of duties facing China-based EV makers nL1N3LE0LF

EU hits Chinese EVs with tariffs, drawing rebuke from Beijing https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/eu-impose-multi-billion-euro-tariffs-chinese-evs-ft-reports-2024-06-12/


Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop;
Writing by Josephne Mason;
Editing by Barbara Lewis and Emelia Sithole-Matarise

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