Global Times

China blasts US, EU claim

Non- market practice charge groundless: official

- By GT staff reporters

China’s Foreign Ministry on Wednesday slammed claims of non- market practice in China’s aviation industry in a US statement following a truce between the US and the EU over a long- running dispute between Airbus and Boeing, saying such accusation­s are groundless.

The US and the EU’s apparent attempt to target China’s developmen­t could also hurt the global aviation industry as a whole in the long term, as China is a huge market for global suppliers, Chinese observers noted.

The US and the EU on Tuesday agreed on a five- year truce to end their trade dispute over aircraft subsidies for Boeing and Airbus that has lasted for 17 years.

“Significan­tly, we also agreed to work together to challenge and counter China’s non- market practices in this sector that give China’s companies an unfair advantage,” US President Joe Biden said in a statement late on Tuesday.

Although the long- running aircraft subsidy dispute has little to do with China, such a statement is widely believed to target Commercial Aircraft Corp of China, the producer of the Chinese home- made C919, an emerging rival for Airbus and Boeing.

“China will not accept the groundless accusation­s of non- market practices,” Zhao Lijian, spokespers­on for China’s Foreign Ministry, said in response to the US’ statement on Wednesday, urging the EU and the US to focus on their own developmen­t and not point fingers at China.

The developmen­t of the US- EU relationsh­ip is their internal business, but they should not make random accusation­s against China, Zhao said, adding that to play up the so- called China challenge and target China is narrow- minded, and not the way of thinking that big powers such as the US and the EU should have.

The aviation sector has never been a purely commercial sector in the US or the EU, and both Airbus and Boeing have used “non- market practices” in the past, Lin Zhijie, an independen­t analyst, told the Global Times.

“The WTO has determined that both the US and the EU have had subsidies for locally produced aircraft. Some of the companies’ deals, such as Boeing’s attempt to acquire Embraer SA and Airbus’ deal with Bombardier, can also be seen as nonmarket practices,” Lin said.

Chinese observers said the aviation industry is happy to see the truce, for it can also bring down air ticket prices, which could help the bleeding travel industry amid the amid COVID- 19 epidemic.

But the truce will have a limited impact on China’s C919, as it is still a late arrival among global peers and it is at the first stage, and it will still take time for the C919 to win global market approval, Qi Qi, a market watcher, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

He warned that such “non- market practice” claims will only hurt global aviation industry suppliers’ interests, including those from the US. China’s aircraft industry is still lagging behind, and it still needs global suppliers’ help in terms of high- end equipment, components and system solutions.

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