European Union – Provisional countervailing duties on
new battery electric vehicles from China
Request
for Consultations by CHina
The
following communication, dated 9 August 2024, from the delegation of China to the delegation of the European Union,
is circulated to the Dispute Settlement Body in accordance with Article 4.4 of
the DSU.
_______________
1_
My authorities
have instructed me to request consultations with the European Union (the
"EU" or "Union") pursuant to Articles 1 and 4 of the
Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes
("DSU"), Article XXIII of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
1994 ("GATT 1994"), and Article 30 of the Agreement on Subsidies and
Countervailing Measures ("SCM Agreement").
2_
This request
concerns the anti-subsidy investigation and the provisional countervailing duty
measures imposed by the EU in its investigation titled 'AS-689 - New
battery electric vehicles designed for the transport of persons'. These measures
affect certain new battery electric vehicles ("BEV" or
"BEVs") imported into the EU from the People's Republic of China
("China"). The reasons for this request, including the identification
of the measures at issue and an indication of the legal basis for the request,
are given below.
I._
Background
3_
The BEVs industry
is an important part of China-EU trade and investment relations. Many EU BEV
producers have invested in China and then exported products to the EU. These EU
BEV producers have shared the benefits of the development of China's BEVs
industry. The cooperation between Chinese and EU BEV producers demonstrates the
healthy economic and trade relationship between China and the EU, as well as
the openness and dynamism of the BEVs industry in China.
4_
However, on 4
October 2023, the EU launched an anti-subsidy investigation on BEVs designed
for passengers imported from China. The launching of this investigation is
protectionist in nature. The protectionist motives of the EU become evident
from the various irregularities in the initiation, the conduct of the
Commission, as well as the absence of any concrete evidence regarding alleged
subsidization in China.
5_
China considers
that during the initiation, conduct and decision-making process of the
investigation – particularly in the context of the
provisional measures imposed on 3 July 2024 – the EU acted inconsistently with
the WTO Agreements, in both procedural and substantive aspects. The Commission's
actions and omissions demonstrate a clear bias in the acceptance, use and
assessment of evidence upon which its provisional measure is based.
6_
The transition in
the vehicle industry from traditional passenger cars to BEVs is an inevitable
historical trend, in keeping with the twin goals of industrial upgrading and
achieving carbon emission reduction. This transition also aligns with the
interests of global consumers. The provisional measures imposed by the EU on
Chinese BEVs will obstruct the development of an industry that benefits global stakeholders
and consumers. China submits that the measures adopted by the EU violate its
obligations under several provisions of the covered WTO agreements.
II._
The Measures at Issue
7_
The measures at
issue concern the provisional countervailing duty
measures imposed by the EU as the result of its investigation into BEVs from China. The anti-subsidy
investigation was initiated by the Commission vide
the Notice of initiation of
an anti-subsidy proceeding concerning imports of new battery electric vehicles
designed for the transport of persons originating in the People's Republic of
China (C/2023/160), dated 4 October 2023.
The Commission imposed provisional countervailing duty measures through Commission Implementing Regulation (EU)
2024/1866 of 3 July 2024[1]
imposing a provisional countervailing duty on imports of new battery electric
vehicles designed for the transport of persons originating in the People's
Republic of China.
8_
The measures at issue include the determination
by the Commission to initiate the investigation at issue, the consultations for
the investigation, the conduct
of the investigation, the preliminary affirmative determination on the alleged
subsidization, injury and threat of material injury and causation, and the
imposition of provisional countervailing duty measures. This request also
covers any future action or measures the EU may take in connection with these
measures.
III._
Legal Basis of China's Request
9_
China considers
that the measures at issue, as described above, are inconsistent with the EU's
obligations under, inter alia,
Article VI of the GATT 1994, and Articles 1, 2, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17,
19, 22, and 32 of the SCM Agreement. China is concerned that the measures at
issue are inconsistent with the provisions of the WTO Agreements for reasons
including but not limited to the following:
A._
Procedural Inconsistencies
10_
Articles 11.2,
11.3 and 11.6 of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to
demonstrate that there are special circumstances and sufficient evidence of the
existence of alleged subsidization, injury and causal link, to justify the ex officio initiation of the investigation;
11_
Articles 13.1 and
13.4 of the SCM Agreement, because at the consultations stage the Commission
failed to provide evidence on the existence, amount and nature of the alleged
subsidies, the injury or the threat of material injury, the complete
description of the allegedly subsidized product, and the necessary information
concerning the Union industry. This impaired China's right to effective
consultation;
12_
Article 15.1 of
the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to select a sample of the
Chinese exporting producers which is statistically valid on the basis of
available information, or on the basis of the largest percentage of the volume
of the exports which can be reasonably investigated,[2]
and consequently failed to establish positive evidence for an objective
examination of the volume and price effect of the investigated imports;
13_
Article 12.1 of
the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to give notice to the
Government of China ("GOC") and the interested parties, and failed to
provide them an ample opportunity to present all evidence considered relevant
by them. As illustrative examples of this inconsistency, which are not meant to
be exhaustive, the Commission: (i) unreasonably, and without justification,
required the GOC to forward the questionnaires to Chinese financial
institutions; and (ii) did not notify the GOC of the requirement for providing
information for certain alleged subsidies;
14_
Articles 12.3 and
12.4 of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission improperly refused to provide
opportunities for the GOC and interested parties to see certain relevant
information that was not provided on a confidential basis and was not
confidential by nature. As an illustrative example of this inconsistency, which
is not meant to be exhaustive, the Commission improperly anonymized the Union
producers without a demonstration of good cause;
15_
Article 12.5 of
the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to ensure the accuracy of the
information upon which its determinations are based. As an illustrative example
of this inconsistency, which is not meant to be exhaustive, the Commission
based its findings with regard to alleged subsidization
on incorrect interpretations of the laws and regulations of China, despite and
in disregard of the GOC's multiple explanations;
16_
Articles 12.3,
22.3 and 22.4 of the SCM Agreement, because during the investigation and in the
public notice of the provisional measures, the Commission failed to provide
sufficiently detailed explanations for the preliminary determinations
concerning alleged subsidies, threat of material injury, and causation.
Furthermore, the Commission failed to provide sufficient details on various
factual and legal issues in its determinations. As illustrative examples of
this inconsistency, which are not meant to be exhaustive, the Commission
refused to disclose (i) factual details and analysis in relation to the PCNs
used by the Commission when determining the existence of alleged injury and
threat of material injury, and (ii) the detailed criteria and process for
selecting the sample of Chinese exporting producers.
B._
Inconsistencies in Connection with the Determination
of Alleged Subsidization
17_
In connection
with alleged subsidization through preferential financing:
·_
Article 1.1(a)(1)
of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to demonstrate that
financial institutions that allegedly provided the preferential financing are
governments, public bodies or private bodies entrusted or directed by the
government;
·_
Article
1.1(a)(1)(i) of the SCM Agreement, because, with respect to the alleged subsidy
concerning bank acceptance drafts, the Commission failed to demonstrate the
existence of a financial contribution;
·_
Articles 2.1 and
2.4 of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to demonstrate the
alleged specificity of preferential financing programmes on the basis of
positive evidence, and failed to conduct an objective examination of evidence
provided by GOC and interested parties in the course of the investigation;
·_
Articles 1.1(b)
and 14 of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to demonstrate that
a benefit was conferred and the Commission failed to properly calculate the
amount of alleged benefit. As illustrative examples, which are not meant to be
exhaustive, the Commission (i) rejected the transaction price in China as the benchmark;
(ii) wrongfully treated the bank acceptance draft as short-term financing and
considered the benefit as the difference between the amount that a producer
actually paid and the amount it should pay by applying a short-term financing
interest rate; and (iii) when calculating the amount of alleged benefit conferred by support for capital investment, wrongfully
treated the provision of capital as a loan financing at free interest and
applied the calculation methodology for loans;
18_
In connection
with alleged grants and the fiscal subsidy policy for the promotion and
application of BEVs:
·_
Articles 1.1(b)
of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to demonstrate that benefit
was conferred to the BEV producers;
·_
Articles 17.5, 19.1
and 19.4 of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission imposed countervailing
duty measures on an alleged subsidy that has been terminated;
·_
Article 14 of the
SCM Agreement, because the Commission improperly calculated the amount of the
alleged benefit;
19_
In connection
with the alleged governmental provision of goods and services for less than
adequate remuneration ("LTAR"):
·_
Article
1.1(a)(1)(iii) of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to
demonstrate the existence of a financial contribution, supposedly provided in
the form of inputs;
·_
Article 1.1(a)(1)
of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to demonstrate that the
inputs were provided by any government, public body or private body entrusted
or directed by the government;
·_
Article 1.1(b) of
the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to demonstrate the existence
of an alleged benefit;
·_
Articles 2.1 and
2.4 of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to demonstrate the
alleged specificity of LTAR programmes on the basis of positive evidence, and
failed to undertake an objective examination of evidence provided by the GOC
and interested parties in the course of the investigation;
·_
Article 14 of the
SCM Agreement, because the Commission improperly calculated the amount of
alleged benefit. As an illustrative example, which is not meant to be
exhaustive, the Commission rejected the transaction price in China as the
benchmark;
20_
In connection
with alleged revenue foregone through tax exemption and tax reduction
programmes:
·_
Articles 1.1(ii)
and 1.1(b) of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to demonstrate
the existence of alleged financial contribution, and failed to demonstrate the
existence of alleged benefit based on positive evidence;
·_
Articles 2.1 and
2.4 of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to demonstrate the
alleged specificity of the tax programmes on the basis of positive evidence,
and failed to conduct an objective examination of the evidence provided by the
GOC and interested parties in the course of the investigation;
21_
In connection
with the instances in which the Commission used facts available:
·_
Article 12.7 of
the SCM Agreement, inter alia,
because the Commission:(i) failed to give notice to the interested parties of
the information required; (ii) failed to demonstrate that the requested
information is necessary and that the absence of the requested information for
which facts available were applied would significantly impede the
investigation; (iii) improperly disregarded the verifiable evidence provided by
GOC and interested parties which is submitted in an appropriate and timely
manner and used adverse facts available on the pretext of non-cooperation by
GOC and interested parties[3];
(iv) improperly request the GOC and interested parties to submit information
not in control of GOC and the interested parties and used adverse facts
available on the pretext of non-cooperation;[4]
and (v) failed to use facts available from second resource with special
circumspection and failed to adopt the facts from a second resource in an
unbiased and objectively way;[5]
C._
Inconsistencies in Connection with the Determination
of Alleged Injury and the Causal Relationship
22_
Article 16.1 of
the SCM Agreement, because the Commission:(i) based its injury assessment on an
unknown and unrepresentative sample of Union BEV producers, and (ii) failed to
exclude from the definition of domestic industry Union BEV producers that
imported significant volumes of BEVs from China;
23_
Articles 15.1 and
15.2 of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to conduct an
objective examination, based on positive evidence, of the volume of the
allegedly subsidized imports and the effect of the
subsidized imports on prices in the domestic market for like products. As an illustrative example of this inconsistency, which is not meant to be exhaustive, the Commission failed to assess the volume of imports and the effect on the prices
based on product segments and comparable prices;
24_
Articles 15.1,
15.4 and 15.5 of the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to conduct an
objective examination, based on positive evidence, of the impact of the imports
on the domestic producers of like products. As an illustrative example of this
inconsistency, which is not meant to be exhaustive, the Commission failed to
establish that the economic factors and indices upon which the Commission based
its analysis, are determinative of injury;
25_
Article 15.5 of
the SCM Agreement, because the Commission failed to examine all known factors
to demonstrate the existence of a causal relationship between the allegedly
subsidized imports and the threat of material injury, and to avoid the
attribution of injury caused by these other factors to Chinese imports;
26_
Articles 15.1, 15.7,
15.8 of the SCM Agreement, among others, because the Commission failed to demonstrate,
based on established facts and with special care, that the alleged threat of
material injury is clearly foreseen and imminent;
*** ***
27_
As a result of
the foregoing, the measures at issue appear to nullify or impair benefits
accruing to China directly or indirectly under the cited covered agreements. In
particular, the measures at issue appear to be inconsistent with Article VI of
the GATT 1994, and Articles 1, 2, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 22, and
32 of the SCM Agreement.
28_
This
consultations request relates to the measures at issue and to any amendments,
extensions, related instruments, practices and/or re-opening related to such
measures.
29_
China reserves
the right to address additional measures and claims (or any other factual or
legal issue) under other provisions of the covered agreements regarding the
above matter during the consultations, and in any future request for the
establishment of a Panel, in light of the information that the EU may provide.
30_
China looks
forward to receiving the reply from the EU to this request and to setting a
mutually convenient date for consultations.
__________
[1] As corrected by 2024/90468, Corrigendum to Commission Implementing
Regulation (EU) 2024/1866 of 3 July 2024 imposing a provisional countervailing
duty on imports of new battery electric vehicles designed for the transport of
persons originating in the People’s Republic of China (Official Journal of the
European Union L, 2024/1866, 4 July 2024), 30 July 2024.
[2] China considers that
the sampling of Chinese exporting producers is inconsistent with the EU's
obligation to select a sample of exporters or producers and determine the
injury based on examination on a reasonable number of exporting producers,
either by using statistically valid samples on the basis of information
available to the Commission at the time of selecting the sample, or on the
basis of the largest percentage of the volume of the exports from China which
can reasonable be investigated. China refers in this regard to Article 6.10 of
the Agreement on Implementation of
Article VI of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994
("ADA"). China notes that, pursuant to the Declaration
on Dispute Settlement Pursuant to the Agreement on Implementation of Article VI
of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 or Part V of the Agreement
on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures, disputes arising from
anti-dumping and countervailing duty measures need consistent resolution.
[3] Pursuant to the Declaration on Dispute
Settlement Pursuant to the Agreement on Implementation of Article VI of the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 or Part V of the Agreement on
Subsidies and Countervailing Measures, disputes arising from
anti-dumping and countervailing duty measures need consistent resolution. China
considers that the Commission acted inconsistently with the disciplines on
facts available as required in paragraphs 3 and 7 of Annex II to the ADA.
[4] Pursuant to the Declaration on Dispute
Settlement Pursuant to the Agreement on Implementation of Article VI of the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 or Part V of the Agreement on
Subsidies and Countervailing Measures, disputes arising from
anti-dumping and countervailing duty measures need consistent resolution. China
considers that the Commission acted inconsistently with the disciplines on
facts available as required in paragraph 5 of Annex II to the ADA.
[5] Pursuant to the Declaration on Dispute
Settlement Pursuant to the Agreement on Implementation of Article VI of the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 or Part V of the Agreement on
Subsidies and Countervailing Measures, disputes arising from
anti-dumping and countervailing duty measures need consistent resolution. China
considers that the Commission acted inconsistently with the disciplines on
facts available as required in paragraph 7 of Annex II to the ADA