EU investigators to inspect China's BYD, Geely and SAIC in EV probe -
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[January 12, 2024]SHANGHAI/BRUSSELS
(Reuters) - European Commission investigators are to inspect Chinese
automakers in the coming weeks as part of a probe into whether to impose
punitive tariffs to protect European electric vehicle (EV) makers, three
people involved in the process said.
The inspectors will visit BYD, Geely and SAIC, two sources said, with
one of them saying the investigators will not visit non-Chinese brands
produced in China, such as Tesla, Renault and BMW.
The probe, launched in October and scheduled to last 13 months, seeks to
determine whether cheaper, Chinese-made EVs benefit unfairly from state
subsidies. Called protectionist by China, the investigation has
escalated tensions between Beijing and the EU.
The European Commission, China's commerce ministry, BYD and SAIC did not
immediately respond to requests for comment. Geely declined to comment
but cited its October statement that the company followed all laws and
supported fair market competition globally.
One source said the investigators have arrived in China, while another
said visits are scheduled for this month and February.
The visits are for verification work - on-site inspections checking
responses the automakers gave to questionnaires - one source said.
European Commission documents for the probe say it is in the "initiation
stage", with verification visits due by April 11.
The sources asked not to be named as details of the visit were
confidential.
Last week, China opened an anti-dumping investigation on brandy imported
from the European Union, a step that appeared targeted at France, which
backs the EV probe. Popular Chinese models exported to Europe include
SAIC's MG and Geely's Volvo.
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Staff members work on an assembly line manufacturing Zeekr X trial
production models, at the Geely's plant in Chengdu, Sichuan
province, China April 13, 2023. REUTERS/Zoey Zhang/File Photo
Chinese-made vehicles' share of the European Union's EV market has
risen to 8% and could reach 15% in 2025, with these EVs typically
selling for 20% less than EU-made models.
In October, China's Great Wall Motor said it was the first automaker
to submit responses to the EU subsidy investigation.
Relations between China and the EU have been strained by factors
including Beijing's closer ties with Moscow after Russia's invasion
of Ukraine. The EU is seeking to reduce its reliance on the world's
second-largest economy, particularly for materials and products
needed for its green transition.
At the same time Chinese EV makers, from market-leader BYD to
smaller rivals Xpeng and Nio, are stepping up efforts to expand
overseas as competition intensifies at home and domestic growth
eases. Many have made sales to Europe a priority.
China is estimated to have overtaken Japan as the world's largest
auto exporter last year, shipping 5.26 million vehicles valued at
about $102 billion, a Chinese auto association said this week.
(Reporting by Zhang Yan in Shanghai, Philip Blenkinsop in Brussels
and Maria Martinez in Berlin; Additional reporting by Laurie Chen in
Beijing; Writing by Brenda Goh; Editing by William Mallard)
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