Business World

EU electronic bike makers file complaint against cheap Chinese imports

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European producers of electronic bikes (e-bikes) have filed a complaint with the European Commission against cheap Chinese e-bike imports, saying that they are sold in the bloc at excessivel­y low prices with the help of unfair subsidies. The European Bicycle Manufactur­ers Associatio­n lodged the complaint against e-bikes by Chinese companies that are flooding the market.

BRUSSELS — European producers of electronic bikes (e-bikes) have filed a complaint with the European Commission against cheap Chinese e-bike imports, saying that they are sold in the bloc at excessivel­y low prices with the help of unfair subsidies.

The European Bicycle Manufactur­ers Associatio­n (EBMA) lodged the complaint alleging dumping of e-bikes by Chinese companies which they say are flooding the market at prices sometimes below the cost of production.

The Commission has until late October to determine whether to start an investigat­ion.

The EBMA is also preparing a related complaint alleging illegal subsidies and asking for registrati­on of Chinese e- bike imports, which could allow eventual duties to be backdated.

Such an investigat­ion would be the latest in a string of probes into Chinese exports ranging from solar panels to steel and could raise trade tensions with Beijing, particular­ly with a subsidy inquiry into the support provided by the Chinese state.

Bicycles have already been a flashpoint. The European Union (EU) blamed China last December for scuppering a global environmen­tal trade deal by insisting that bicycles be included as a tariff-free green product. Chinese convention­al bicycles have been subject to EU anti-dumping duties since 1993.

The EBMA says more than 430,000 Chinese e- bikes were sold in European Union in 2016, a 40% increase on the previous year, and forecasts the figure will rise to around 800,000 in 2017.

EBMA secretary- general Moreno Fioravanti said Europeans buy some 20 million bicycles per year, of which about 10% are now e- bikes, with the potential to rise to a quarter within five years.

European companies had pioneered the pedal-assist technology that e-bikes use and had invested about €1 billion ($1.2 billion) last year, he said, but was risking losing its industry to China.

“Today the European bikes are the best in the world and we have to invest every year to renew the range. The Chinese are getting the money from the government and the subsidies have an impact of 30%, 40%, even 50% of the price of the product,” Mr. Fioravanti said.

“You have subsidies, which generate overcapaci­ty, which generate dumping,” he said. —

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