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European farmers caught in crossfire of EU-China trade war as Beijing targets dairy

  • Beijing’s moves to hit farm goods seen as attempt to flip formerly neutral bloc members ahead of crunch vote on electric vehicle tariffs

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China is investigating subsidies into cheese, milk and cream from across the European Union. Photo: Shutterstock
On his family farm half an hour south of the Irish border, Thomas Duffy could have been forgiven for thinking he was safe from the expanding tentacles of China’s brewing trade war with Europe.
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But this week, he and many of Ireland’s 17,000 other dairy farmers were stunned by news that China is investigating subsidies into cheese, milk and cream from across the European Union.

Ireland exported almost US$50 million of the products named in the announcement to China last year. Most of it is shipped via co-operatives that take produce from dairy farms like Duffy’s, on the outskirts of Virginia, a picturesque town that hugs the shore of Lough Ramor in County Cavan.

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The probe is seen as retaliation for the EU’s anti-subsidy duties of up to 36.3 per cent that were proposed this week, and which could be slapped on Chinese-made electric vehicles (EVs) from October.

“It’s funny, because I’m a dairy farmer and an EV driver,” said Duffy, whose 100-strong herd of cattle provides produce that is shipped to China, as well as the Middle East and North Africa.

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