Advertisement
D-Day looms for China’s exporters as EU moves towards October 4 vote on EV tariffs
Chinese car companies’ offers to set minimum prices for their imports run up against toughening resolve led by France and others
Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
42
Finbarr Berminghamin Brussels
October 4 is a date that cannot come soon enough for European Union bureaucrats, but one the Chinese government desperately wants to avert.
Advertisement
This coming Friday, the EU’s 27 member states are slated to hold a crucial vote on whether to sign punitive tariffs of up to 35.3 per cent on Chinese-made electric vehicles into law for five years.
As Beijing looks to strike a deal that would nix the duties, talks with the European Commission will continue right up to the last minute.
Martin Lukas, the commission’s director of trade defence, broke away from “almost daily” technical negotiations to brief European Parliament lawmakers during a hearing on Monday.
China EVs hit with EU tariff hike
Chinese companies have made multiple offers to set minimum prices for EV imports, Lukas explained.
Advertisement
Advertisement