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The ministry said it would conduct an anti-subsidy and anti-dumping investigation of European wine but gave no details of how Beijing believed exports were being subsidized. Dumping means selling a product abroad at a lower price than at home but some governments also take action if the price is deemed to be below production cost or unfair in some other way. Chinese imports of European wine rose by 60 percent a year by volume in 2009-12, according to a statement on the commerce ministry's website. It said 2012 imports totaled 25.7 million liters worth $1 billion. China accounted for 8.6 percent of European Union wine exports last year, according to EU figures. France was the biggest exporter to China, selling wine worth 546 million euros. The trade in solar panels is many times larger than that of wine. European imports of Chinese-made solar panels totaled 21 billion euros in 2011. EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht said Chinese dumping was threatening 20,000 jobs in Europe. Last year, the United States imposed anti-dumping tariffs of up to 250 percent on Chinese solar panels following similar complaints. ___ Online: Chinese Ministry of Commerce:
http://www.mofcom.gov.cn
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