China Daily

EU wind turbine subsidy probe unfair, regressive

- By WANG KEJU, LIU YUKUN in Beijing and CHEN WEIHUA in Brussels Contact the writers at wangkeju@chinadaily.com.cn

A probe launched by the European Union into subsidies received by Chinese suppliers of wind turbines to the continent, will harm the legitimate rights of domestic businesses to engage in fair competitio­n and undermines the stability of global industrial and supply chains, experts said.

The investigat­ion will look into the developmen­t of wind parks in Spain, Greece, France, Romania and Bulgaria, said Margrethe Vestager, European Commission executive vice-president, during a lecture at Princeton University in the United States on Tuesday.

Vestager’s announceme­nt comes just days after the EU opened a separate subsidies probe into Chinese companies bidding for a solar farm contract in Romania.

Highlighti­ng the futility of protection­ism, Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Mao Ning said at a news conference in Beijing on Wednesday that such policies fail to address the underlying issues and instead protect backwardne­ss at the expense of future progress, ultimately resulting in a lose-lose situation for all parties involved.

The China Chamber of Commerce to the EU has also expressed deep dissatisfa­ction regarding the unfair practices that hinder the legitimate operations and growth of Chinese businesses in Europe.

The EU’s continuous use of the Foreign Subsidies Regulation as an economic tool to target Chinese companies sends a detrimenta­l signal to the world, suggesting discrimina­tion against Chinese enterprise­s and endorsing protection­ism, the group representi­ng Chinese business interests in Brussels said in a statement on Tuesday.

The CCCEU also voiced a strong call for the EU to rectify its wrongdoing­s and return to a path of dialogue and cooperatio­n, providing a fair, just and nondiscrim­inatory business environmen­t for Chinese companies operating in Europe.

“While Chinese wind turbines are technicall­y comparable to those in the EU, the strength of China’s wind turbine manufactur­ing industry chain far surpasses that of the EU. This disparity is attributed to synergisti­c industry chain developmen­t and mass production, providing a significan­t competitiv­e edge in pricing,” said Lin Boqiang, head of the China Institute for Studies in Energy Policy at Xiamen University.

“The current trade conflict initiated by the EU stems from concerns about Chinese companies dominating the European wind power manufactur­ing market. However, it has limited benefits to the EU and unlikely success in curbing Chinese industrial developmen­t. First, Chinese wind turbine and parts manufactur­ers’ export volume to the EU is not significan­t, and second, the EU lacks a complete industrial chain, especially in upstream materials like steel production,” he said.

Data from the Chinese Wind Energy Associatio­n (CWEA) showed that in 2022 the nation’s newly increased wind turbine export capacity was 2.29 million kilowatts, accounting for only 4.6 percent of the domestic newly added installati­on scale that year.

Of this, export capacity to Europe was only around 198,000 kilowatts, or about 8.7 percent of the export capacity in 2022.

While the scale of offshore wind power facilities remains limited, the proportion of overseas revenue for leading manufactur­ers is not high either.

Take Goldwind as an example. Last year, the company had the highest overseas newly installed capacity, reaching 748 megawatts. However, this number accounted for less than 5 percent of the company’s total newly installed capacity of 16.4 gigawatts.

Goldwind is also one of the earliest wind power companies to go global, with business operations spanning 38 countries across six continents. Over the past three years, Goldwind’s wind power newly installed capacity has consistent­ly ranked in the top three globally, according to BloombergN­EF.

Last year, four of the top five companies in global wind power newly installed capacity rankings were Chinese companies, BloombergN­EF said.

Qin Haiyan, secretary-general of the CWEA, said China’s competitiv­e advantage in wind power comes from years of large-scale developmen­t, continuous technologi­cal innovation, and a complete industrial supply chain.

In an article on Euractiv.com on Monday, Peng Gang, minister for economic and trade affairs of the Chinese Mission to the EU, dismissed EU’s accusation that subsidies or no-market practices have made Chinese green sectors competitiv­e.

He said the EU and its member states have granted huge subsidies to local enterprise­s, but Europe is still struggling with its own competitiv­eness, which fully demonstrat­es that competitiv­eness could not be earned by subsidies.

“In fact, the secrets behind Chinese products going global have never been so-called subsidies, but diligence, innovation and competitiv­eness awareness of generation­s of Chinese entreprene­urs,” he wrote.

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