| 
						EU targets Chinese subsidies for electric bikes
		 Send a link to a friend 
		
		 [December 21, 2017] 
		 By Philip Blenkinsop 
 BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European 
		Commission launched an investigation on Thursday into whether Chinese 
		exporters of electronic bicycles (e-bikes) benefited from excessive 
		state subsidies, increasing trade tensions between Brussels and Beijing.
 
 The anti-subsidy case supplements an existing inquiry into alleged 
		dumping by Chinese producers of e-bikes in Europe and is the latest in a 
		string of European Union investigations into and measures on Chinese 
		exports ranging from solar panels to steel.
 
 The European Bicycle Manufacturing Association (EBMA) lodged a complaint 
		in November, saying that subsidies came in a wide range of forms, 
		including preferential loans from state-owned banks, grants, export 
		credits, tax breaks and the provision of land and raw materials at 
		excessively low prices.
 
 The association says that more than 430,000 Chinese e-bikes were sold in 
		the EU in 2016, up 40 percent on the previous year, and forecasts the 
		figure will rise to 800,0000 in 2017.
 
 "Today we are speaking about e-bikes. Tomorrow we will see the same with 
		electric cars," EBMA Secretary General Moreno Fioravanti said.
 
 China's commerce ministry could not be reached for immediate comment.
 
 Europeans buy some 20 million bicycles per year, of which about 10 
		percent are now e-bikes, with the potential to rise to a quarter within 
		five years.
 
		
		 
		
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
		European companies pioneered the pedal-assist technology that e-bikes 
		use and invested 1 billion euros ($1.2 billion) last year, the EBMA 
		said, but they risk losing out to Chinese rivals whose share of the EU 
		market has risen to about 33 percent with prices sometimes half those of 
		European makers.
 Fioravanti said Chinese exporters sold at low prices, not because of 
		labour, which made up 3-4 percent of the cost of an e-bike, but because 
		"they have 20, 30 or 40 percent of their balance sheet basically 
		subsidised by the Chinese government".
 
		
		 
		Chinese producers, including Battle-Fushida, Aima and Tianjin Golden 
		Wheel, sold e-bikes worth some 307 million euros in the EU in the year 
		to September 30.
 The EBMA wants the Commission to impose duties on Chinese e-bikes and 
		also to register imports immediately so that any duties eventually set 
		could also apply to e-bikes that enter the EU market in the coming 
		months.
 
 Last week, the EU, United States and Japan vowed to work together to 
		fight market-distorting trade practices and policies that have fueled 
		excess production capacity, naming several features of China's economic 
		system.
 
 (Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop; additional reporting by Ryan Woo in 
		Beijing; editing by Jason Neely)
 
				 
			[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |