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[News] EU Reportedly Delays Decision on Imposing Tariffs on Chinese Electric Cars


2024-05-31 Emerging Technologies editor

The European Commission initiated an investigation into Chinese electric cars in October last year, targeting BYD, SAIC Group and Geely, with plans to impose provisional tariffs on new electric cars imported from China. According to previous media reports, the plans were originally scheduled to be announced by June 5th. However, as per Reuters citing sources in a latest report, the new date for announcing the imposition of temporary tariffs has been set for June 10th, after the European Parliament election.

The sources cited in the report also mentioned that the delay was due to last-minute technical issues with the documents. As of now, the European Commission has not provided comments on this matter.

Yet, the same report further noted that the European Commission has formally warned the three Chinese electric car companies under anti-subsidy investigation that the data they provided for the investigation was insufficient.

According to trade data from 2023, for every additional 10% tariff imposed by the European Union on top of the existing 10%, Chinese electric car exporters would lose approximately $1 billion.

Reuters reported that past subsidy investigations launched by the European Union on other products imported from China resulted in additional tariffs ranging from approximately 9% to 26% for related companies, while the tariffs on the Chinese electric car companies may possbly fall between this range.

The report also indicated that China may be preparing alternative plans for future negotiations. If enough EU members oppose the temporary tariffs after four months, there might be challenges to the EU’s temporary tariffs, possibly leading to their cancellation.

According to an earlier analysis by Trendforce, with China’s subsidies gradually phasing out and the increasing market penetration of NEVs in the country, the growth rate of China’s NEV market is starting to slow. This, coupled with the growing demand for electric vehicles in overseas markets, is prompting numerous Chinese automotive brands to expand internationally. But they may have to counter various challenges, as countervailing duty investigation being one of them.

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(Photo credit: Pixabay)

Please note that this article cites information from European Commission and Reuters .

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