The Star Early Edition

EU-China steely impasse

China’s overcapaci­ty of steel production remains unsettled

- Philip Blenkinsop and Robin Emmott

THE EU AND China failed on Friday to reach agreement on the problem of steel overcapaci­ty and the EU’s stance towards Chinese dumping, despite “narrowing difference­s”.

China, the world’s biggest producer and consumer of steel, vowed last year to reduce its capacity but European steelmaker­s have complained that cheap Chinese exports are still flooding the market.

President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker told a news conference after a meeting of EU officials with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang that they had discussed the issue of steel overcapaci­ty and China’s demand that, 15 years after it joined the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) it should no longer be treated as a special case.

“We were able to narrow the positions, but we are not yet there,” Juncker said.

A person present at the talks said that China had insisted on having a specific reference in a concluding text on the WTO issue. China also declined to include phrases referring to ways to resolve the problem of steel overcapaci­ty.

For a second year running, the EU-China summit failed to agree on a final statement.

The EU and many of China’s other trading partners have debated whether to treat China now as a “market economy”, which would make it more difficult to impose anti-dumping duties.

China has launched a legal challenge against the EU’s existing anti-dumping rules at the WTO, although the bloc is in the process of changing its rules on combating dumping.

Li repeated that WTO rules had to be implemente­d and the EU should accept China’s situation in the WTO had changed.

“This will send a signal to society and the market that we both abide by internatio­nal rules and abide by multilater­alism,” Li said, although the new EU rules might satisfy Beijing.

“The European side indicated they are in the middle of a legislativ­e amendment and it is consistent with WTO rules. It is non-discrimina­tory.” – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Smoke spews from the sprawling complex that is a part of the Jiujiang steel and rolling mills in Qianan in northern China’s Hebei province. Steel overcapaci­ty causes friction with the EU.
PHOTO: AP Smoke spews from the sprawling complex that is a part of the Jiujiang steel and rolling mills in Qianan in northern China’s Hebei province. Steel overcapaci­ty causes friction with the EU.

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