China
says EU should take steel dumping claims to WTO
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[February 06, 2016]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's Ministry
of Commerce said that claims it was dumping steel in Europe should be
put to the World Trade Organization (WTO), responding to reports that
the European Commission (EC) was preparing to impose duties on imported
Chinese steel.
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WTO members should fulfill their treaty obligations and stop using
"surrogate countries" to pursue anti-dumping claims, a Ministry of
Commerce spokesman said, according to a statement released on the
ministry's website on Saturday.
The EC is set to impose provisional duties later this month of up to
16 percent on China, and of up to 26 percent on Russia, following
its investigation into alleged dumping by the two countries.
Reuters reported that provisional measures are due to be announced
by Feb. 14 and definitive duties, if imposed at the conclusion of
the investigation, by Aug. 12. Such duties would typically apply for
five years.
The Commission's investigation follows a complaint from Eurofer, the
European steel association, which said Russia and China were dumping
the steel - selling it below market prices at home or below the cost
of production - on the EU market and thereby damaging the local
industry.
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The global steel industry is facing over-capacity, and the Chinese
government is willing to discuss "in good faith" with WTO members
"to create a fair, just and predictable international market
environment," the statement said.
(Reporting By Matthew Miller; Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)
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