EU puts spoke in wheel of cheap Chinese e-bike imports

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[May 03, 2018]  By Philip Blenkinsop

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Chinese electric bicycles will have to be registered in the EU in a move by the bloc to curb cheap imports which European manufacturers say are flooding the market.

Electric bikes made by French company Moustache displayed during the Cycle Show 2013 in Paris September 13, 2013. The show, which runs from September 13 to September 16, presents 457 brands with racing bikes, urban and electric bicycles, equipment and accessories for cycling fans. REUTERS/Charles Platiau/File Photo

The European Commission had sufficient evidence to show that Chinese manufacturers were dumping e-bikes in Europe and were receiving subsidies, the European Union's official journal said.

In the latest in a series of EU studies into and measures against Chinese exports ranging from solar panels to steel, the Commission has launched anti-dumping and anti-subsidy investigations into e-bikes.

Taiwan's Giant <9921.TW>, one of the world's largest bicycle makers with factories in China as well as the Netherlands, had denied that imports rose substantially, the EU journal said.

The registration system for e-bikes would allow eventual duties to be backdated to early in May, it added.

The European Bicycle Manufacturers Association (EBMA), whose complaints prompted the investigations, says Chinese companies are selling pedal-assist e-bikes in the EU at prices which are sometimes below the cost of production, aided by subsidies.

EBMA had called for registration, arguing that a surge of low-priced imports could result in a stockpile ahead of the main 2018 selling season, undermining the effect of potential duties.

The Commission has until July 20 to determine whether to impose provisional anti-dumping duties. If imposed, they would also apply to the period during which imports are registered. The EU official journal said that this would start on Friday.

Exports from Chinese producers, which include Battle-Fushida, Aima and Tianjin Golden Wheel, rose by 82 percent from November 2017 to February 2018, compared with the same period a year earlier, the journal said. Prices were 8 percent lower.

EBMA said it welcomed what it said was vital first step to protect the EU industry, coming in time to prevent a surge of e-bike imports through the main summer sales months.

(Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop; Editing by Alexander Smith)

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