China
and the European Union have expressed "goodwill" for negotiating a
settlement of their dispute over China's solar panel exports, Commerce
Minister Gao Hucheng said on Friday.Gao said the two sides have a
consensus that a settlement will have to be reasonable and acceptable to
each other.The European Commission accuses China of dumping solar
panels on the EU at below production cost. On June 4, it announced the
imposition of 11.8 percent punitive tariffs on imports from China for
two months starting from June 6, despite 18 of the 27 EU member states,
including Germany, opposing the move."Both China and the EU have
willingness and sincerity to appropriately deal with the solar panel
case through negotiations, and we are also striving for this," Gao
said.He was speaking during a joint press briefing with EU Trade
Commissioner Karel De Gucht after the annual bilateral China-EU trade
and investment meeting in Beijing."We expect the two sides to take a
pragmatic and flexible approach in the following rounds of talks,
enhancing coordination and cooperation in a bid to reach an agreement
that is mutually beneficial, reasonable and mutually acceptable,ntn bearing"
Gao said.Some European countries, led by Germany, are opposed to the
commission's imposition of duties, with Sweden, Denmark and the
Netherlands last week urging De Gucht to find a diplomatic solution with
China to avoid a tit-for-tat trade war.But De Gucht went ahead with
tariffs at 11.8 percent, although he softened his earlier plan to levy
punitive tariffs averaging 47 percent, leaving a window for the two
sides to reach a solution through negotiations by early August.
The
negotiations with China are expected to include setting a minimum price
at which Chinese solar panel manufacturers can sell in the EU."During
past days, both China and the EU have been holding communication,
contact and consultation at all levels ... the bilateral talks are
positive and constructive," Gao said.China expects to end the
negotiations and agree on a deal over the price by August 6, Gao
added.De Gucht said the Chinese and European negotiators started their
discussions last week."All the European negotiators came to Beijing on
Thursday, and were in meetings on Friday on the issue with a very clear
view to coming to an amicable solution. So we continue to work on that,"
he said.China and the EU have the sincerity to find solutions as
quickly as possible, but there has been no breakthrough so far in the
talks and such disputes are rarely resolved overnight, De Gucht said."As
I have stated time and time again during the course of the
investigation, the EU has only one wish - to find a negotiated
settlement on the basis of 'undertakings' that can remove the injury
caused by the dumping on our market. Nothing more, nothing less," De
Gucht said.If no settlement is reached during the negotiations, the
average punitive tariff would rise to 47.Slap Bracelet6
percent from 11.8 percent, which means China's solar producers would be
blocked outside the European market. In December, that rate would be
put in force for five years.Yao Ling, a researcher on China-EU relations
at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation,
a think tank, said: "The EU showed its intention to communicate with
China when the bloc announced a dramatically reduced initial rate in
early June, but more sincerity is needed during the talks otherwise both
sides will be hurt by high tariffs."There is a possibility that the two
sides will agree on the price by August, but the EU would have to make
more compromises in the talks."
Tu
Xinquan, deputy director of the China Institute for WTO Studies at the
University of International Business and Economics in Beijing, is upbeat
on a reasonable agreement on the price being reached by both sides in a
few months."But the negotiations, and also the bargaining, will be very
tough," Tu said.The European Commission launched an investigation into
solar imports from China in response to a complaint from SolarWorld, one
of Germany's largest solar energy companies.skf bearing The
investigation found that China sold solar goods at a price below the
cost of production.Before this announcement, China had been seeking
consultations with the EU, with Premier Li Keqiang telling European
Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso that the solar dispute touched
on China's major economic interests.Li also repeatedly said during his
recent overseas trip, his first since he took office in March,Clawfoot tub accessories that the EU's investigation cannot benefit the region itself, when it hurts China and its exports in the sector.Antique faucetsThe
solar case is the largest trade investigation the European Commission
has undertaken. In 2011, the EU's imports of solar goods from China were
valued at 21 billion euros ($27.8 billion).Experts are worried the
solar panel investigation and tariffs will lead to escalating trade
disputes between the two sides, developing into a trade war."If the
solar dispute cannot be solved well, disaster will follow and more
industries will be implicated," Yao said.After the tariffs were applied,
China announced an investigation into accusations that the EU is
illegally subsidizing and undercutting prices for its exported wines,
though denying the probe was linked to the EU move.The EU later
responded by complaining to the World Trade Organization about China
charging anti-dumping duties on imports of stainless steel tubes, six
months after Japan filed a similar case.Yao Weiqun, associate president
of the Shanghai WTO Affairs Consultation Center, said: "We are against a
trade war, but China has to fight back and take retaliatory measures
when needed."
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