Germany urges EU to file
WTO complaint against U.S. in steel row
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[March 31, 2017]
By Michael Nienaber
BERLIN
(Reuters) - Germany urged the European Union on Friday to consider
filing a complaint with the World Trade Organization (WTO) against the
United States over its plan to impose duties on imports of steel plate
from five EU member states.
U.S. President Donald Trump is expected to sign executive orders on
Friday aimed at identifying abuses causing huge U.S. trade deficits. He
is also preparing to meet Chinese President Xi next week in Florida,
with contentious trade issues likely to be high on the agenda.
Global steel prices have slumped as Chinese producers, who account for
about half of the worldwide steel supply, have flooded the export
markets, leading to protests and anti-dumping complaints by the United
States, the European Union and others.
On Thursday, the U.S. Department of Commerce issued a final finding that
European and Asian producers dumped certain carbon and alloy steel
cut-to-length plate in the U.S. market, allowing it to impose duties
ranging from 3.62 percent to 148 percent.
Among the affected companies are firms in Germany, Austria, Belgium,
France and Italy.
Gabriel said the U.S. government seemed prepared to give U.S. firms an
"unfair competitive advantage" over European producers even though this
violated international trade law.
"We Europeans cannot accept this. The EU must now examine whether it
also files a complaint at the WTO. I strongly support this," Gabriel
said. The European Commission, the EU's executive arm, is in charge of
trade matters in the 28-member bloc.
"The WTO rules are the backbone of the international trade order. To
deliberately violate them is a dangerous step," he said. "It is the
first time that the U.S. in such a case resorts to distorting practices
that do not comply with the WTO rules."
In Brussels, a spokesman for the European Commission said it regretted
the U.S. move to impose anti-dumping measures, adding that the duties
were "artificially inflated".
"Our comments and notably those concerning the use by the U.S. of
methodologies which artificially inflate the preliminary dumping margins
have not been given expected consideration," the spokesman said.
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German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel attends a meeting with
Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow, Russia, March 9, 2017.
REUTERS/Pavel Golovkin/Pool
The
final duties were in many cases higher than the preliminary duties set in
November. "We will look now into the detail of the decision taken by the U.S.
and consider the appropriate steps," he said.
THREAT
Gabriel said Germany had to stand up to the U.S. and fight "accounting tricks"
that put Germany's internationally competitive steel industry at a disadvantage.
"If the U.S. got through with unfair competition, other industries would also be
subject to the same threat," Gabriel warned.
Economy Minister Brigitte Zypries said Germany would, along with the European
Commission, continue to campaign for Washington to stick to WTO rules.
"The signals the U.S. is sending in the steel sector really worry us," Zypries
said, adding that she would raise the issue when she visits the United States in
May.
Cut-to-length steel is used in a wide range of applications, including buildings
and bridgework; agricultural, construction and mining equipment; machine parts
and tooling; ships, rail cars, tankers and barges; and large-diameter pipes.
The U.S. Department of Commerce's finding is the result of a petition from Nucor
Corp <NUE.N> and U.S. subsidiaries of ArcelorMittal SA <ISPA.AS> and SSAB AB <SSABa.ST>.
For Austrian producers and exporters, dumping duties on the Voestalpine group <VOES.VI>
and all others were set at 53.72 percent. Among French manufacturers and
exporters, duty rates were set at 148.02 percent for Industeel France and 8.62
percent for Dillinger France and all others.
In Germany, duties were set at 5.38 percent for AG der Dillinger Hüttenwerke,
22.90 percent for the Salzgitter group and 21.03 percent for all other
exporters and producers.
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