THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION,
Having regard to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
Having regard to Regulation (EU) 2016/1037 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 8 June 2016 on protection against subsidised imports from countries not members of the European Union (‘the basic Regulation’)(1), and in particular Article 15 thereof,
Whereas:
1. PROCEDURE
Benxi Iron & Steel Group, China
Hesteel Group, China
Jiangsu Shagang Group, China
Shougang Group, China.
Export Import Bank of China, Beijing, China;
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, Beijing, China;
China Construction Bank, Beijing, China;
Agricultural Bank Of China, Beijing, China;
Bank of China, Beijing, China.
Sampled Union producers
ThyssenKrupp Steel Europe AG, Duisburg, Germany;
Tata Steel IJmuiden BV, Velsen-Noord, the Netherlands;
Tata Steel UK Limited, Port Talbot, South Wales, United Kingdom;
ArcelorMittal Mediterranee SAS, Fos-sur-Mer, France;
ArcelorMittal Atlantique Et Lorraine SAS, Dunkerque, France;
ArcelorMittal España SA, Gozón, Spain.
Sampled producers in the PRC
Benxi Iron & Steel Group:
Benxi Iron & Steel (Group) Co., Ltd, Benxi, PRC;
Bengang Steel Plates Co., Ltd, Benxi, PRC;
Benxi Beiying Iron & Steel (Group) Co., Ltd., Benxi, PRC;
Benxi Iron & Steel (Group) Mining Industry Co., Ltd., Benxi, PRC;
Benxi Iron & Steel (Group) International Trading Co., Ltd., Benxi, PRC;
Liaoning Henderson Assets Operating & Management Co., Ltd., Benxi, PRC.
Jiangsu Shagang Group:
Jiangsu Shagang Group Co., Ltd., Zhangjiagang City, PRC,
Zhangjiagang Hongchang Plate Co., Ltd., Zhangjiagang City, PRC
Zhangjiagang GTA Plate Co., Ltd., Zhangjiagang City, PRC
Zhangjiagang Yangtze River Cold rolled Sheet Co., Ltd, Zhangjiagang City, PRC
Zhangjiagang Hongchang Pellets Co., Ltd, Zhangjiagang City, PRC
Jiangsu Shagang International Trade Co., Ltd., Jinfeng Town, Zhangjiagang City, PRC.
Hesteel Group:
Hesteel Group Co., Ltd., Shijiazhuang and Beijing, PRC;
Hesteel Co., Ltd., Shijiazhuang, PRC;
Handan Iron & Steel Group Han-Bao Co., Ltd., Handan City, PRC;
Hesteel Co., Ltd. Tangshan Branch, Tangshan City, PRC;
Hesteel Co., Ltd. Chengde Branch, Chengde City, PRC;
Hebei Iron & Steel Group Mining Co., Ltd, Tangshan, PRC;
Hesteel Group International Trade Corporation, Beijing, PRC;
Sinobiz Holdings Limited (British Virgin Islands), Tangshan City, PRC.
Shougang Group:
Shougang Jingtang United Iron & Steel Co. Ltd., Caofeidian, PRC;
Tangshan Shougang Jingtang Xishan Coking Co. Ltd., Caofeidian, PRC;
Shougang Qian'an Iron and Steel, branch of Beijing Shougang Co. Ltd., Qian'an, PRC;
Qian'an Coal Chemical Company, Qian'an, PRC;
Shougang Mining Co. Ltd., branch of Shougang Corporation, Qian'an, PRC;
Beijing Shougang Co. Ltd., Beijing, PRC;
China Shougang International Trade & Engineering Corporation, Beijing, PRC;
Shougang Holding Trade Hong Kong Limited, Hong Kong;
Shougang Corporation, Beijing, PRC.
Users
Marcegaglia Carbon Steel Spa, Gazoldo degli Ippoliti, Italy.
2. PRODUCT CONCERNED AND LIKE PRODUCT
The product concerned does not include:
products of stainless steel and grain-oriented silicon electrical steel,
products of tool steel and high-speed steel,
products, not in coils, without patterns in relief, of a thickness exceeding 10 mm and of a width of 600 mm or more, and
products, not in coils, without patterns in relief, of a thickness of 4,75 mm or more but not exceeding 10 mm and of a width of 2 050 mm or more.
The product concerned is currently falling within CN codes 7208 10 00, 7208 25 00, 7208 26 00, 7208 27 00, 7208 36 00, 7208 37 00, 7208 38 00, 7208 39 00, 7208 40 00, 7208 52 10, 7208 52 99, 7208 53 10, 7208 53 90, 7208 54 00, 7211 13 00, 7211 14 00, 7211 19 00, ex 7225 19 10, 7225 30 90, ex 7225 40 60, 7225 40 90, ex 7226 19 10, 7226 91 91 and 7226 91 99.
the product concerned;
the product produced and sold on the domestic market of the PRC;
the product produced and sold in the Union by the Union industry.
3. SUBSIDISATION
Decision No. 40 of the State Council on Promulgating and Implementing the ‘Temporary Provisions on Promoting the Industrial Structure Adjustment’(‘Decision No. 40’). This Decision states that the ‘Guidance Catalogue for the Industrial Structure Adjustment’, which is an implementing measure of Decision No. 40 is an important basis for guiding investment directions. It also guides the GOC to administer investment projects, and to formulate and enforce policies on public finance, taxation, credit, land, import and export(12). The steel industry is indicated as an encouraged industry in Chapter VIII of this Guidance Catalogue. As to its legal nature, the Commission noted that Decision No. 40 is an Order from the State Council, which is the highest administrative body in the PRC. In that regard, the decision is legally binding for other public bodies and the economic operators.(13)
According to its chapters III.5 and VIII, the National Outline for the Medium and Long-term Science and Technology Development (2006-2020) supports the development of key fields and priority themes, and encourages financial and fiscal support to these key fields and priorities.
Order No. 35 of the National Development and Reform Commission (‘NDRC’)(14)‘Policies for the development of the Iron and Steel Industry’ (2005) (‘Order No. 35’) mentions that the iron and steel industry is an important basic industry of the national economy.
The Blueprint for Steel Industry Adjustment and Revitalisation issued by the State Council in March 2009 (‘the Revitalisation Plan’) initiates several policies and support measures to guide the steel industry out of the international financial crisis, to maintain growth, and to guarantee the stable operation of the industry, because it is regarded as an important pillar industry of the national economy.
Preferential policy loans, credit lines, other financing, and guarantees;
De facto guarantee on the continuity of operations for companies in the HRF industry that face difficulties to repay loans;
Grant Programmes
China World Top Brand Programme
Famous Brand Programme
Anti-dumping Respondent Assistance
The State Key Technology Project Fund Subsidies
Export Assistance Grants, such as e.g. rewards for advanced exporting enterprises or export performance, fair trade subsidies, grants for international economic cooperation
Innovative Experimental Enterprise Grant
Special support fund for non-state owned enterprises (non-SOEs)
Environmental Protection grants, such as e.g. incentives for Environmental Protection and Resource Conservation, Promotion of synergistic resource utilization, Incentive funds for energy conservation retrofit projects, Promotion of Energy Management Demonstration Centres
Grants related to technological upgrading or transformation, such as e.g. promotion of R&D tasks under Science and Technology Support Plans, Promotion of Key Industry Adjustment, Revitalisation and Technology Renovation, grants for the Commercial Application of R&D Results, Promotion of Quality Improvement, Promotion of Patent Registration, funds received under the ‘Three Categories’ Programme
Grants for elimination of outdated capacity
Liaoning Province Grants — Five Point One Line Programme
Tianjin Binhai New Area and the Tianjin Economic and Technological Development Area subsidies: Science and Technology Fund and Accelerated Depreciation Programme
Ad-hoc subsidies provided by the municipal/provincial authorities;
Direct Tax Exemption and Reduction programmes
Enterprise Income Tax (EIT) privileges for Resource Products from Synergistic Utilisation
EIT credits for investment expenses on equipment related to environmental protection, energy and water conservation as well as production safety
EIT privileges for High and New Technology Enterprises
EIT privileges under the Great Western Development Program,
EIT privileges for revenues from Encouraged Products,
EIT Credit for the purchase of domestic equipment
Exemption or reduction of contributions related to water construction funds
The two free/three half programme for foreign invested enterprises (FIEs)
EIT offset for research and development
Income tax reductions for FIEs purchasing Chinese-made equipment
Preferential tax policies under the Northeast Revitalisation Programme
Western Region preferential tax policies
Coastal Economic Open Areas and Economic and Technological Development Zones preferential tax policies for FIEs
Special Economic Zones preferential tax policies for FIEs
Land Use Tax exemption or reduction
Local tax discounts
Dividend exemption between qualified resident enterprises;
Indirect Tax and Import Tariff Programmes
VAT exemptions and import tariff rebates for the use of imported equipment and technology
VAT rebates on FIE purchases of Chinese-made equipment
VAT exemption for products sold by FIEs
VAT reduction/exemption for products generated from synergistic Resource Utilisation
Tax concessions for Central and Western Regions;
Government provision of goods and services for less than adequate remuneration (LTAR)
Government provision of iron ore for less than adequate remuneration
Government provision of coke extrusions for less than adequate remuneration
Government provision of coking coal for less than adequate remuneration
Government provision of power for less than adequate remuneration
Government provision of land and land-use rights for less than adequate remuneration;
‘Foreign Trade Transformation and Upgrading Demonstration Bases’ (‘Demonstration Bases’) and ‘Common Service Platforms’;
Subsidisation of the provision of hot-rolled flat products to the EU during the investigation period.
Article 34 of the Law of the PRC on Commercial Banks (‘Bank law’);
Articles 7 and 15 of the General Rules on Loans (implemented by the People's Bank of China);
Chapter 5 of the 12th Five Year Steel Plan;
Chapter 5 of the 13th Five Year Steel Plan;
Decision No 40;
Guidelines of the People's Bank of China, China Banking Regulatory Commission (‘CBRC’), China Securities Regulatory Commission (‘CSRC’), and China Insurance Regulatory Commission (‘CIRC’) on supporting the steel and coal industries to resolve overcapacity and achieve turnaround in development (2016) ) (‘Guidelines of the People's Bank of China, CBRC, CSRC and CIRC’);
Notice ‘Several Opinions on Resolving Overcapacity’, issued by the NDRC, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (‘MIIT’) and CBRC (2016) (‘notice “Several Opinions on Resolving Overcapacity”’);
Green Credit Guidelines of the CBRC (read in combination with the Opinions on Strengthening Energy Saving and Emission Reduction and Accelerating Structural Adjustment in the Iron and Steel Sector, June 2010, State Council) (‘Green Credit Guidelines’).
‘Banking financial institutions shall raise their appreciation of the pillar and strategic role of the iron and steel industry and the coal industry in the national economy, and earnestly implement credit extension policies of differentiated treatment that are both accommodative and controlling.’
‘Financial support shall be stepped up for iron and steel enterprises and coal enterprises that engage in merger and reorganization.’
‘Banking financial institutions are encouraged to reorganize the loans disbursed to iron and steel enterprises and coal enterprises that are in difficult conditions but take the initiative to reduce capacity.’
‘As regards iron and steel enterprises and coal enterprises with marketable products or services and promising development potentials that are in line with national industrial policies and take the initiative to reduce capacity, adjust structures and transform development models, banking financial institutions shall set up creditor committees, adjust the maturity, interest rates and repayment methods of loans and take other measures.’
‘Banking financial institutions should fully recognize the pillar role and strategic position of steel and coal industries, accurately grasp the law of their development, continue to give credit support, in accordance with the principles of risk controllability and business sustainability, to high-quality backbone enterprises, which have advanced technology and equipment, competitive products, markets, and may restore their competitiveness and get rid of temporary difficulties after deepening reform and strengthening internal management; actively offer comprehensive financial services to the enterprise which adjusts and regroups itself but doesn't increase its production capacity.’
‘Improve interest rate pricing management, and reduce enterprise's financing costs.’
‘Actively promote the innovation of green of bonds and high yield bonds. Expand the issuance of green financial bonds, green asset securitization and other innovative financial instruments to guide the green development of the steel and coal industries.’
‘Actively and steadily promote debt restructuring at the enterprise. For the enterprise which comply with national industrial policies, and actively take the initiative to reduce production capacity, adjust structure and transform for development, and has certain solvency, under the premise of loan quality monitoring and precise classification, help them weather the storm by adjusting the loan period, ways of repayment, and other debt restructuring measures.’
‘Improve the M & A loan business, and expand the scale of M & A loans, reasonably determine the loan term and interest rate, so as to support enterprises and regions with comparative advantage to integrate the industrial capacity’.
| Bank name | Information on ownership structure |
|---|---|
| China Development Bank | 100 % State-owned policy bank |
| Bank of Communications | The Ministry of Finance and Central Huijin Investments hold 26,53 % of the bank's shares. |
| China Everbright Bank | The Ministry of Finance and Central Huijin Investments hold 41,24 % of the bank's shares. |
| Postal Savings Bank | Initially set up in 2007 by the State Post Bureau, a Department which is currently annexed to the Ministry of Transport. Currently 64 % of shares are held by the China Post Corp., which is wholly-owned by the State. |
| China Merchants Bank | This bank is part of the China Merchants Group, a state-owned enterprise (SOE). |
| Shanghai Pudong Development Bank | China Mobile Communication Group Guangdong Limited (SOE): 20 % Shanghai International Group Co., Ltd (state-owned financial holding group): 16,93 % Shanghai Sitico Assets Management Co., Ltd. (part of the Shanghai International Group): 5,23 % Central Huijin Asset Management Co., Ltd.: 1,49 % (…) |
| China Industrial Bank | Finance Bureau of Fujian 17,86 % (State authority) State-owned legal persons:
Domestic non state-owned legal person:
(…) |
| Shenyang Rural Commercial Bank | Shareholding (as of end of 2014) State-owned legal persons:
Domestic non state-owned legal person:
(…) |
| Benxi City Commercial Bank | Shareholding as of End of 2015:
Main shareholders:
|
| Benxi Commercial Bank | Idem |
| Kailuan Group Financial Co. | The Hebei Province State Asset Commission controls 100 % of the Kailuan Group, which in turn controls Kailuan Group Financial Co. |
| Liaoning Hengyi Financing Lease Co., Ltd. | Owned by the Benxi Group (SOE) |
| Bank of Chengde | Shareholding, as of end of 2015:
(…) |
| Bank of Hebei | Shareholding, as of end of 2013: State-owned legal persons:
|
| Bank of Shanghai | Major shareholders according to the annual report 2015: 206 Chinese state-owned enterprises owned 56 % stake of the share capital in total, as at 31 July 2015. Subsidiaries and wholly owned subsidiaries of Shanghai Municipal People's Government and district-level governments:
Companies under the supervision of the State Council (SASAC and the Ministry of Finance):
|
| Ningbo Bank | Largest shareholder with 21,38 % is the government of Ningbo, second largest with 20 % is the OCBC Bank of Singapore, and next (11,57 %) is a large Chinese textiles group. |
| China CITIC Bank | CITIC Group Corporation Ltd., formerly the China International Trust Investment Corporation, is a state-owned investment company of the People's Republic of China. It now owns 44 subsidiaries including China CITIC Bank, CITIC Holdings, CITIC Trust Co. and CITIC Merchant Co. |
| China Guangfa Bank | In 2015, 71,86 % of shares were held by state-held legal persons, 20 % were held by Citigroup |
| China Bohai Bank | SOEs:
State-held legal persons:
Foreign investor:
|
| Huaxia Bank | 20 % stake held by the Shougang Group (SOE), who is the largest shareholder. In addition, 18 % is held by the SOE China State Grid and 1,3 % by Central Huijin. |
| China Resources Bank | The controlling shareholder is the China Resources Group (large SOE) with a 75 % stake |
| China Zheshang Bank | Shareholding as of March 2015: State-held legal persons:
Domestic non state-owned legal person
|
| China Credit Trust | This financial institution is related to one of the four state-owned asset management companies, whose main task is the acquisition, management and disposal of non-performing assets of state-owned banks. |
| Huarong International Trust Co. Ltd. | This financial institution is related to one of the four state-owned asset management companies, whose main task is the acquisition, management and disposal of non-performing assets of state-owned banks. |
| Northern International Trust Co., Ltd. | This financial institution is related to one of the four state-owned asset management companies, whose main task is the acquisition, management and disposal of non-performing assets of state-owned banks. |
| Zhangjiakou Bank Handan Branch | Owned by the local government. |
| Hebei Iron and Steel Group Financial Co., Ltd | Owned by the Hesteel Group (SOE) |
| Shougang Group Finance | Owned by the Shougang Group (SOE) |
| Finance Bureau of Benxi City | Local bureau of the Ministry of Finance, which provided a loan to one of the sampled companies |
| Zunhua Rural Credit Union | Owned by the local farmers' village |
International banking practice works by a reference to a benchmark plus an additional premium, which is expressed as an absolute mark-up and not as a relative mark-up. As example, it could be IBOR or LIBOR or EURIBOR plus 1 %.
The two elements of the interest rate reflect the country or currency risk (that is the part of the interest that corresponds to the central bank or risk-free company rate) and the company specific risk (that is the mark-up, expressed in absolute terms, for the BB-rated company).
The relative spreads get larger when the risk free rate gets lower, even though the absolute spread stays the same. In addition, the methodology produces extremely high relative spreads for negative interest rates.
According to historical data provided by the GOC (‘Historical Data on Relative Spread’), the absolute spread remains roughly stable over time, while the relative spread shows great variations. Furthermore, the average absolute spread over time is close to the absolute spread found in the IP.
The Commission used the average relative spread during the IP for loans with different maturities, ranging from 1 to 10 years. In fact, the application of the relative spread to bonds with different maturities shows big differences depending on the duration of the loans, and shows that absolute and relative spread move in different directions for different maturities.
Using a single average relative spread of bonds with different maturities instead of a weighted average assigns too much weight to short-term maturities, as bonds are typically issued with a long maturity. This was especially relevant since the Commission only used the relative spread for long-term loans.
The relative spread has been applied to the wrong PBoC reference rate for loans granted before 2015 but which were still outstanding during (part of) 2015, as the Commission took into account the PBoC rate applicable at the time when the loan was granted. The Commission should have used the 2015 PBoC rates instead.
The sources referred to in the additional disclosure document referred to the use of a relative spread with regards to yields and not to the difference between loan interest rates obtained from banks. None of the sources stated that this difference needed to be expressed in a relative way, and not all of them were credible sources.
The Commission classified all loans with a duration of two years and less as revolving loans without an adequate explanation or supporting evidence. Not all short-term loans provided to the sampled companies were revolving loans.
Revolving loans are not necessarily a sign of liquidity issues. Revolving loans are part of standard business practices in Europe. They do not generate higher interest rates, and have been used by the EU steel industry. More specifically, the Shougang Group claimed that the Commission identified revolving loans mainly for the companies Qian'an Coal, Xishan Coking and Shougang Corp., which were not in financial distress.
The proxy benchmark used by the Commission was not consistent with Article 14 of the SCM Agreement. The loan which was used as a basis for the proxy benchmark was a single, exceptional loan accounting for only 2 % of the total loans provided to the Jiangsu Shagang Group, and the Commission did not provide a reasoned explanation on why this would be comparable to a commercial loan. In addition, the Commission did not make adjustments to approximate this loan to comparable commercial loans.
The Commission did not disclose the essential facts related to its finding of ‘State support’ absent which these companies could not have received the concerned loans.
The countervailing of certain loan amounts as grants was inconsistent with Articles 1.1(b), 14 and 14(b) of the SCM Agreement. The GOC based its claim on the Panel Report in the case EC — DRAMS, in which this approach was found to be unreasonable and inconsistent with Articles 1.1(b) and 14 of the SCM Agreement.(32)
The Commission's calculation methodology represented an exception not permitted by Article 14(b) of the SCM Agreement, as it converted the legal nature of the contribution from loans to grants. The Panel in EC — DRAMS underlined that a loan is fundamentally different from a grant, as it entails a debt still owed(33). All loans were accounted for as loans and not grants in the companies' accounting records, none of the loans reported in the loan tables mentioned any debt forgiveness, and interest payments were paid on those loans. Finally, section E(b)(V) of the EU's 1998 guidelines to calculate the amount of a subsidy assumes the existence of debt forgiveness or default.
The alleged economic situation of the concerned companies did not justify the treatment of certain loan amounts as grants. Indeed, the concerned companies formed part of a large group of companies, and their loans were guaranteed by the parent companies. In addition, EU producers were also making losses since 2012, but still received loans and were able to refinance their debts. More specifically, concerning the Shougang Group, the Jingtang production company actually made profits in 2014 and 2015, even though it only started commercial operations in 2010. Finally, the Commission itself considered the financial situation of the Shougang and Benxi Groups as corresponding to a ‘BB’ rating, which should be sufficient to obtain loans on the market.
The Shougang Group noted that certain loan amounts were reclassified as grants for three companies of the Group without adequate explanation or reasoning.
The Shougang Group as a whole was profitable during 2014 and 2015, and had high levels of undistributed profits. The Qian'an production company in the group was loss-making in 2015, but was actually profitable between 2011 and 2014. The Shougang group also disagreed with the fact that the production companies did not generate sufficient profit to cover their interest expenses, and pointed out that the operating profit reported in the financial statements actually was the profit after payment of the financial expenses.
The Benxi Group claimed that the financial indicators mentioned in its specific disclosure document did not adequately demonstrate that Bengang had no ability to repay its loans. Furthermore, even if Bengang might have been faced with some financial difficulties in recent years, it still kept normal operations during these years, and had sufficient capacity to repay its loans.
The Benxi Group also argued that the analysis of its credit rating was not comprehensive enough.
Finally, the Benxi Group claimed that the complainant had not submitted this subsidy program in its application, and that the approach to treat loans as grants was therefore not in accordance with Article 11.1 of the SCM Agreement.
| Preferential policy loans | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Company/Group | Overall Subsidy amount | From state owned banks | From other financial institutions |
| Benxi Group | 26,70 % | 26,70 % | 0 % |
| Hesteel Group | 4,68 % | 4,66 % | 0,02 % |
| Jiangsu Shagang Group | 1,99 % | 1,44 % | 0,55 % |
| Shougang Group | 27,91 % | 27,17 % | 0,74 % |
Law of the People's Republic of China on Urban Real Estate Administration;
Interim Regulations of the People's Republic of China Concerning the Assignment and Transfer of the Right to the Use of the State-owned Land in the Urban Areas;
Regulation on the Implementation of the Land Administration Law of the People's Republic of China;
Provision on Assignment of State-owned Construction Land Use Right through Bid Invitation, Auction and Quotation;
State Council's Notice regarding Strengthening Regulation of Land (Guo Fa [2006] No.31).
the comparable level of economic development, GDP and economic structure in Chinese Taipei and a majority of the provinces and cities in the PRC where the sampled exporting producers are based;
the physical proximity of the PRC and Chinese Taipei;
the high degree of industrial infrastructure in both Chinese Taipei and many provinces of the PRC;
the strong economic ties and cross border trade between Chinese Taipei and the PRC;
the high density of population in many of the provinces of the PRC and in Chinese Taipei;
the similarity between the type of land and transactions used for constructing the relevant benchmark in Chinese Taipei with those in the PRC; and
the common demographic, linguistic and cultural characteristics between Chinese Taipei and the PRC.
| Provision of Land use rights at less than adequate remuneration | |
|---|---|
| Company/Group | Subsidy Amount |
| Benxi Group | 1,46 % |
| Hesteel Group | 2,71 % |
| Jiangsu Shagang Group | 1,20 % |
| Shougang Group | 7,63 % |
Notice of the Ministry of Finance, National Development and Reform Commission and the State Administration of Taxation on Issuing the ‘Administrative Measures for the Determination of Synergistic Utilisation encouraged by the State’ (Fa Gai Huan Zi [2006] No. 1864);
Notice of the Ministry of Finance, National Development and Reform Commission and the State Administration of Taxation on publication of the Catalogue of Enterprise Income Tax Preference for Synergistic Utilisation (Cai Shui [2008] No. 117);
Notice of the Ministry of Finance and the State Administration of Taxation on implementing the Catalogue of Enterprise Income Tax Preference for Synergistic Utilisation (Cai Shui [2008] No. 47);
Notice of the State Administration of Taxation on Management Issues on Enterprise Income Tax Preference for Synergistic Utilisation (Guo Shui Han [2009] No. 185).
Notice of the Ministry of Finance, the State Administration of Taxation and the Ministry of Science and Technology on Improving the Policy of Pre-tax Deduction of R&D Expenses. (Cai Shui [2015] No. 119);
Notice of the State Administration of Taxation on Issues Concerning Policy of Pre-tax Deduction of R&D Expenses of Enterprises.
Guidance on the Priority Areas for High-Tech Industrialization Priority Development [2007] No. 6, issued by the NDRC, the Ministry of Science of Technology, the Ministry of Commerce and the National Intellectual Property Office
Provisional Regulations of the People's Republic of China on Real Estate Tax (Guo Fa [1986] No. 90) and
Provisional Regulations of the People's Republic of China on Urban Land Use Tax (State Council Order No. 483).
| Direct tax exemptions and reductions | |
|---|---|
| Company/Group | Subsidy Amount |
| Benxi Group | 0,00 % |
| Hesteel Group | 0,34 % |
| Jiangsu Shagang Group | 0,00 % |
| Shougang Group | 0,66 % |
Circular of the State Council on Adjusting Tax Policies on Imported Equipment, Guo Fa No. 37/1997;
Notice of the Ministry of Finance, the General Administration of Customs and the State Administration of Taxation on the Adjustment of Certain Preferential Import Duty Policies;
Announcement of the Ministry of Finance, the General Administration of Customs and the State Administration of Taxation [2008] No. 43;
Notice of the NDRC on the relevant issues concerning the Handling of Confirmation letter on Domestic or Foreign-funded Projects encouraged to develop by the State, [2006] No. 316;
Catalogue on Non-duty-exemptible Articles of importation for either FIEs or domestic enterprises, 2008.
‘Law of the People's Republic of China on Energy Conservation’, version revised and adopted on October 28, 2007, and version amended on July 2, 2016;
‘State Council Opinions on Strengthening Energy Saving and Emission Reduction and Accelerating Structural Adjustment in the Iron and Steel Sector’, State Council, June 2010;
‘Key Points of Energy Conservation and Comprehensive Utilization in Industry in 2015’, issued by the MIIT on 3 April 2015;
The 2014 Recycling Economy Development Special Fund;
The 2011 Industrial Enterprise Energy Management Center Construction Demonstration Project- Financial allowance fund Gongxinting Jie Han(2011).
| Energy saving and conservation grants | |
|---|---|
| Company/Group | Subsidy Amount |
| Benxi Group | 0,26 % |
| Hesteel Group | 0,05 % |
| Jiangsu Shagang Group | 0,38 % |
| Shougang Group | 0,38 % |
The 12th Five-year Industrial Technology Innovation Planning;
The Blueprint for Steel Industry Adjustment and Revitalisation issued by the Chinese State Council in March 2009 (‘the Revitalisation Plan’);
Medium to Long-Term Programme on Technological and Scientific Development (2006-2020) promulgated by the State Council in 2006;
Administrative Measures for National Science and Technology Support Plan as revised in 2011;
Administrative measures for National High Technology Research and Development Plan (863 Plan) as revised in 2011;
Notice of establishment of the Guidance Catalogue of high and new technology products;
| a Based on the highest subsidy amount found for this type of grants, which corresponds to the subsidy amount found for the Shougang Group. | |
| Technological upgrading or transformation grants | |
|---|---|
| Company/Group | Subsidy Amount |
| Benxi Group | 0,09 % |
| Hesteel Group | 0,01 % |
| Jiangsu Shagang Groupa | 0,94 % |
| Shougang Group | 0,94 % |
| a Based on the highest subsidy amount found for this type of grants, which corresponds to the subsidy amount found for the Shougang Group. | |
| Ad hoc grants | |
|---|---|
| Company/Group | Subsidy Amount |
| Benxi Group | 0,001 % |
| Hesteel Group | 0,02 % |
| Jiangsu Shagang Groupa | 0,13 % |
| Shougang Group | 0,13 % |
| Grants | |
|---|---|
| Company/Group | Subsidy Amount |
| Benxi Group | 0,34 % |
| Hesteel Group | 0,09 % |
| Jiangsu Shagang Group | 1,45 % |
| Shougang Group | 1,45 % |
| Company name | Amount of countervailable subsidies |
|---|---|
| Benxi Group | 28,5 % |
| Hesteel Group | 7,8 % |
| Jiangsu Shagang Group | 4,6 % |
| Shougang Group | 38,6 % |
| Other cooperating companies | 16,9 % |
| All other companies | 38,6 % |
4. INJURY
| Table 1 | ||||
| Captive consumption on the Union market (tonnes) | ||||
| Source: Eurofer questionnaire reply. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Captive consumption | 40 775 889 | 42 418 062 | 42 887 175 | 42 271 071 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 104 | 105 | 104 |
| Table 2 | ||||
| Free market consumption (tonnes) | ||||
| Source: Eurofer questionnaire reply. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free market consumption | 31 405 157 | 32 292 192 | 33 139 474 | 35 156 318 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 103 | 106 | 112 |
| Table 3 | ||||
| Overall consumption (captive and free market) (tonnes) | ||||
| Source: Eurofer questionnaire reply and Eurostat. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall consumption | 72 181 046 | 74 710 254 | 76 026 649 | 77 427 389 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 104 | 105 | 107 |
| Table 4 | ||||
| Total subsidised imports (tonnes) and market share | ||||
| Source: Eurostat. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Volume of imports from the PRC | 246 720 | 336 028 | 592 104 | 1 519 304 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 136 | 240 | 616 |
| Market share PRC | 0,79 % | 1,04 % | 1,79 % | 4,32 % |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 132 | 227 | 550 |
| Table 5 | ||||
| Import prices (EUR/tonne) | ||||
| Source: Eurostat. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average price of subsidised imports | 600 | 505 | 463 | 404 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 84 | 77 | 67 |
the weighted average sales prices per product type of the six Union producers charged to unrelated customers on the free Union market, adjusted to an ex-works level; and
the corresponding weighted average prices at CIF Union frontier level per product type of the imports from the cooperating producers of the country concerned to the first independent customer on the Union market, with appropriate adjustments for post-importation costs.
| Table 6 | ||||
| Production, production capacity and capacity utilisation | ||||
| Source: Eurofer questionnaire reply. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Production volume (tonnes) | 73 050 974 | 74 588 182 | 75 509 517 | 74 718 189 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 102 | 103 | 102 |
| Production capacity (tonnes) | 102 247 218 | 100 667 836 | 100 040 917 | 98 093 841 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 99 | 98 | 96 |
| Capacity utilisation | 71,4 % | 74,1 % | 75,5 % | 76,2 % |
| Table 7 | ||||
| Sales volume and market share (free market) | ||||
| Source: Eurofer questionnaire reply and Eurostat. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales volume (tonnes) | 27 273 319 | 27 468 243 | 27 910 748 | 27 327 906 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 101 | 102 | 100 |
| Market share | 86,8 % | 85,1 % | 84,2 % | 77,7 % |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 98 | 97 | 90 |
| Table 8 | ||||
| Captive volume on the Union market and market share | ||||
| Source: Eurofer questionnaire reply and Eurostat. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Captive volume on the Union market (tonnes) | 40 775 889 | 42 418 062 | 42 887 175 | 42 271 071 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 104 | 105 | 104 |
| Total production of Union industry (tonnes) | 73 050 974 | 74 588 182 | 75 509 517 | 74 718 189 |
| % of captive volume compared to total production | 55,7 % | 56,7 % | 56,6 % | 56,4 % |
| Table 9 | ||||
| Employment and productivity | ||||
| Source: Eurofer questionnaire reply. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of employees(Full time employment/ employee) | 18 729 | 18 632 | 17 739 | 17 829 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 99 | 95 | 95 |
| Productivity (tonne/employee) | 3 900 | 4 003 | 4 257 | 4 191 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 103 | 109 | 107 |
| Table 10 | ||||
| Inventories | ||||
| Source: Eurofer questionnaire reply. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Closing stocks (tonnes) | 2 908 745 | 2 646 989 | 2 653 224 | 2 798 420 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 91 | 91 | 96 |
| Closing stocks as a percentage of production | 4,0 % | 3,5 % | 3,5 % | 3,7 % |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 89 | 88 | 94 |
| Table 11 | ||||
| Sales prices on the free market in the Union | ||||
| Source: Questionnaire reply of sampled Union producers. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales price (EUR/tonne) | 553 | 498 | 471 | 427 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 90 | 85 | 77 |
| Unit cost of production (EUR/tonne) | 572 | 511 | 469 | 431 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 89 | 82 | 75 |
| Table 12 | ||||
| Average labour costs per employee | ||||
| Source: Questionnaire reply of sampled Union producers. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average labour costs per employee (EUR) | 63 722 | 63 374 | 66 039 | 66 023 |
| Index (2011 = 100) | 100 | 99 | 104 | 104 |
| Table 13 | ||||
| Profitability, cash flow, investments and return on investment | ||||
| Source: Questionnaire reply of sampled Union producers. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Profitability of sales in the Union on the free market (% of sales turnover) | – 3,3 % | – 2,7 % | 0,4 % | – 0,8 % |
| Cash flow ('000 EUR) | 150 190 | 139 285 | 221 982 | 122 723 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 93 | 148 | 82 |
| Investments ('000 EUR) | 334 789 | 256 013 | 289 581 | 291 771 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 76 | 86 | 87 |
| Return on investment | – 4,5 % | – 3,5 % | 0,5 % | – 1,0 % |
| Table 14 | ||||
| Profitability per quarter of the sampled Union producers | ||||
| Source: Questionnaire reply of sampled Union producers. | ||||
| Quarter of 2015 | Profitability (Loss) per quarter of the companies (in millions of euro) | Net sales price per tonne | Net sales on the free market(in millions of euro) | Profitability percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| First | 37,98 | 444,71 | 1 073,34 | 3,5 % |
| Second | 22,78 | 436,19 | 1 001,6 | 2,3 % |
| Third | – 22,92 | 426,36 | 857,49 | – 2,7 % |
| Fourth | – 69,80 | 392,92 | 699,47 | – 10,0 % |
| Total | – 31,9 | 427,2 | 3 631,9 | – 0,8 % |
First, the total production volume increased by 2 % between 2012 and the investigation period. Moreover, the production capacity utilization of the Union industry increased by 4,8 % during the period considered;
Second, the Union's industry sales volumes remained stable, and a decrease of a market share by nine percentage points would not be that significant in view of the fact that the Union industry still retained a dominant share of 77,7 % in the investigation period;
Third, though employment decreased by 5 % during the period considered, this would have to be seen in the light of a parallel increase of 7 % in productivity.
Fourth, the decrease in sales prices should be viewed in the context of a similar decrease in unit costs of production. In addition, the GOC disagreed with the Commission's statement that the profitability developed negatively over the period considered because there was, in fact, an improvement of 2,5 % as compared to 2012. Moreover, the data indicate that the cash flow of the Union industry remained positive over the whole period considered and the sampled Union producers could still make investments of around 250-330 million euro annually.
Fifth, a comparison of the facts of the present case with those of Case T-528/09 Hubei Xinyegang Steel v Council (55) would show that the facts in the latter case were much more indicative of a weak position of the Union industry.
First, concerning the arguments of the GOC on the data of production and production capacity, the Commission acknowledged as described in recital (461) above the fact that some macroeconomic indicators (such as the production volumes, the capacity utilisation rates due to the increase in the captive and free consumption) were still following a positive trend. Those trends, however, do not call into question the overall findings that the Union industry was in a weak situation at the end of the investigation period since other indicators showed a deterioration of the Union industry as described in recital (462).
Second, concerning the arguments of the GOC on the data of sales volumes and market shares, the Commission acknowledged in recital (436) above that the sales volume of the Union industry remained relatively stable. However, the Commission disagreed with the GOC that a decrease by nine percentage points in market share is not significant. Indeed, as explained in recital (437) above the Commission found that ‘the decrease of Union industry's market share exceeded significantly the slight increase in its sale on the Union market’. The analysis is based on the entire Union industry, irrespective of whether they have complained or not. The increases by non-complainant Union producers are marginal compared to the massive reductions of complainant Union producers.
Third, concerning the arguments of the GOC on employment and productivity, the Commission acknowledged in recital (442) above that the productivity of the Union's industry workforce, measured as output per person, increased much more (+ 7 %) than the increase in actual production. Moreover, even if the Commission would exclude the employees for the captive market segment, the indicator clearly shows the reduction in headcount of persons working in HRF over the period considered.
Fourth, regarding the arguments of the GOC on the decrease in sales prices and a similar decrease in unit costs of production, profitability, and cash flows, the Commission rejected them for the following reasons:
Concerning the similar decrease in unit cost and sales price, the Commission acknowledged in Table 11 of recital (448) above that the evolution of the Union industry sales price is similar to the evolution of the unit cost of production. Nevertheless, as mentioned in recital (449) above, the Commission also pointed to the fact that the sales prices have been on average lower than the unit cost of production, with the exception of 2014, where the market started picking up and where the market share of the Chinese imports was lower than in the investigation period. Moreover, as mentioned in recital (589) below, the cost of production within the Union industry decreased altogether by 25 % over the period considered, whereas the average Chinese import prices decreased by a higher percentage, i.e. by 33 % over the same period (see recital (517) below. In addition, as mentioned in recital (590) below, the Union industry could have maintained its sales price levels so as to reap the benefits of a reduction in its costs. However, it was not capable of doing so because of the subsidised lower priced imports from China.
Regarding the claim of the GOC that the profitability did not develop negatively over the period considered but even improved by 2,5 % during the investigation period as compared to 2012, the Commission disagreed with this argument for the following reasons. The Commission referred to recital (544) below where it found that, even if the loss for the investigation period was – 0,8 %, the profitability of the sampled Union producers reached the unsustainable level of – 10 % in the fourth quarter of 2015, when Chinese price pressure was felt most.
Concerning the positive cash flow, the Commission acknowledged this fact already in recital (461) above as part of those injury indicators which developed positively during the period considered.
Fifth, concerning the comparison of the present case with Case T-528/09 Hubei Xinyegang Steel v Council: here, the GOC claims that the facts allegedly showed that in the latter case there were much more elements indicative of a weak position of the Union industry. The Commission rejected this claim of GOC as follows: the Commission's assessment in the present case was in line with the quoted case-law. By contrast with Council Regulation (EC) No 926/2009(56), which was the regulation at issue in Case T-528/09 Hubei Xinyegang Steel v Council, it should be noted that:
first, every investigation that the Commission undertakes is fact-specific in its own right, including in relation to the product scope, the industry involved, and the injury indicators that require consideration;
a threat of injury case is an even more complex endeavour in this regard. So, while, already, a comparison between injury investigations of different products, industries, and periods of investigations is a difficult task, a comparison between threat of injury investigations is an extremely difficult and complex endeavour given the multitude of individual qualifying factors that flow into a threat of injury finding. That comparison cannot be pinned down to one factor alone, or for that matter, as the GOC seems to insinuate, to a mere import volume and market share comparison; and;
third, the Commission analysed and assessed thoroughly post-IP data to the extent possible in order to confirm or invalidate its findings, as required by that judgment, and found that the Union industry was in a weak situation at the end of the investigation period, but not to the extent that it had suffered material injury during the period considered within the meaning of Article 3(5) of the basic Regulation. As such, and in important contrast to the findings of Case T-528/09, the injury indicators considered do not paint a picture of an industry in a situation of strength, which the General Court found to be the case vis-à-vis the industry at issue therein.(57)
In summary, the Commission is of the opinion that the GOC does not raise factors beyond those considered that would call the above findings into question: the GOC refers in its argumentation mainly to the indicators which were still positive at the end of the investigation period and which the Commission acknowledged in recital (461) above. However, the GOC does not provide explanation that would call into question, for instance, the findings in recital (462) above where the Commission listed the other indicators, which showed a deterioration of the situation on the free Union market. In recital (462) above, apart from referring to the loss of market share and the reduction of investments in the light of the negative return on investment, the Commission also highlighted that the losses reached unsustainable levels in the second half of 2015. Therefore the Commission rejected all arguments of the GOC in this respect.
5. THREAT OF INJURY
the nature of the subsidy or subsidies in question and the trade effects likely to arise therefrom;
a significant rate of increase of subsidised imports into the Union market indicating the likelihood of substantially increased imports;
sufficient freely disposable capacity of the exporting producer on the part of the exporter or an imminent and substantial increase in such capacity indicating the likelihood of substantially increased subsidised exports to the Union, account being taken of the availability of other export markets to absorb any additional exports;
whether imports are entering at prices that would, to a significant degree, depress prices or prevent price increases which otherwise would have occurred, and would probably increase demand for further imports, and;
the level of inventories.
| Table 15 | ||||||
| Evolution of Chinese import volume (tonnes) | ||||||
| Source: Eurostat. | ||||||
| 2014 | IP (2015) | January-June 2016 | July-September 2016 | October-December 2016 | January-February 2017 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Volume of imports from China | 592 104 | 1 519 304 | 773 275 | 296 267 | 1 460 | 5 024 |
| Average monthly Chinese imports | 49 342 | 126 608 | 128 879 | 98 756 | 486 | 2 512 |
The average monthly Chinese import volumes in the period July-September 2016 are still twice as high as the average monthly imports in 2014;
The decrease in the average monthly Chinese import volumes from July 2016-September 2016 (compared to 2015) can be explained by:
the chilling effect of the request for registration by the complainant on 5 April 2016 and its update in June 2016 on financial data in the anti-dumping proceeding against dumped imports from China on the product concerned (which, though, was withdrawn only in mid-August 2016);
the adoption by the Commission of Implementing Regulation (EU) 2016/1329 of 29 July 2016 levying the definitive anti-dumping duty on the registered imports of certain cold-rolled flat steel products originating in the People's Republic of China and the Russian Federation(61), under which anti-dumping duties were collected retroactively for the first time and;
the knowledge of the intention of the Commission to decide on provisional measures within 8 months of initiation (instead of 9 months).
The significant decrease in the average monthly Chinese import volumes from October 2016-February 2017 can be explained by the imposition of provisional anti-dumping measures in the parallel ongoing anti-dumping proceeding on 7 October 2016(62).
On the basis of the Steel Communication from the Commission of 16 March 2016 (‘Steel: Preserving sustainable jobs and growths in Europe’)(63) the Chinese exporting producers had been made aware of the intention of the Commission to ‘immediately use the available margins to further accelerate the adoption of provisional measures by reducing investigation procedures by one month (from nine to eight months).’ As a result, due to the initiation of the anti-dumping proceeding against dumped imports from China on the product concerned on 13 February 2016, they had been aware that provisional measures could be imposed early October 2016 in the anti-dumping proceeding against dumped imports from China on the product concerned;
On 5 April 2016, the Complainant submitted a request for registration of imports from the PRC of the product concerned in the anti-dumping proceeding against dumped imports from China on the product concerned. On 2 June 2016, the complainant updated the request by providing more recent information. As a result, well-informed exporting producers and exporters knew that there was a risk that — if they shipped the product concerned from the second half of 2016 onwards — their exported like products could become subject to retroactive duties 90 days prior to the potential imposition of provisional duties in October 2016 in the anti-dumping proceeding against dumped imports from China on the product concerned, i.e. by July 2016;
On 29 July 2016, the Commission adopted Implementing Regulation (EU) 2016/1329(64), under which anti-dumping duties were collected retroactively for the first time on certain cold-rolled steel products, also a steel product. As a result, the risk that measures would apply as of early July 2016 in the anti-dumping proceeding against dumped imports from China on the product concerned became even more certain because of the retroactive collection in this case involving a steel product;
On 7 October 2016, provisional anti-dumping measures were imposed in the parallel ongoing anti-dumping proceeding.
| Table 16 | ||||||
| Actual production of the like product by third countries (in thousands of tonnes) | ||||||
| a Source for capacity data: OECD (OECD, DSTI/SU/SC(2016)6/Final, 5 September 2016, Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation, Updated steelmaking capacity figures and a proposed framework for enhancing capacity monitoring activity, Annexe, p. 7 and following). | ||||||
| b Source for production data: World Steel Association, Steel Statistical Yearbook 2015 (World Steel Association, Steel Statistical Yearbook 2016 table 1 on pages 1 and 2 and table 13 on page 35, http://www.worldsteel.org/statistics/statistics-archive/yearbook-archive.html). | ||||||
| Country | Crude steel capacity estimated for the year 2015a | Crude steel production in 2014 | Crude steel production in 2015b | Theoretical excess capacity in 2015 | HRF actual production in 2014 | HRF actual production in 2015 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Russia | 90 000 | 71 461 | 70 898 | 19 102 | 26 898 | 27 509 |
| PRC | 1 153 098 | 822 750 | 803 825 | 349 273 | 317 387 | 322 259 |
| Ukraine | 42 500 | 27 170 | 22 968 | 19 532 | 7 867 | 6 314 |
| Iran | 28 850 | 16 331 | 16 146 | 12 704 | 8 276 | 7 872 |
| Brazil | 49 220 | 33 897 | 33 256 | 15 964 | 14 229 | 13 388 |
There are reports that the country concerned suffers from a phenomenon of ‘zombie’ steel mills(72): these are mills that are forever said to be dying but never actually die.
Another source also reported that 41 blast furnaces have been reopened, and more recent reports even indicate that over 50 million tonnes of steel capacity has been restarted in the PRC since the start of 2016(73).
The World Steel Association states the following on the world crude steel production for the first six months of 2016: ‘World crude steel production in the first six months of 2016 was 794,8 Mt, a decrease of – 1,9 % compared to the same period of 2015... Crude steel production … decreased by – 6,1 % in the EU 28… China's crude steel production for June 2016 was 69,5 Mt, an increase of 1,7 % compared to June 2015….(74)’
A 2016 OECD projection(75) estimated that the Chinese capacity would even further increase in 2016, 2017 and 2018. A recent 2017 OECD report(76) mentioned that Chinese steelmaking capacity is expected to have stabilised at 1,16 billion tonnes per year (2016 compared to 2015). The Chinese side continued to avoid engaging in a bilateral platform between the Union and the PRC to monitor steel excess capacity. In addition, the 13th Five-Year Plan in relation to ‘Steel industry adjustment and upgrading plan’ (2016-2020) assumes crude steel production volume forecast at 750-800 million tonnes in 2020 and crude steel production capacity reduction by 100-150 million till 2020. It also encourages steel enterprises being in a good position to go overseas and set up steel production bases as well as processing and distribution centres.
On the one hand, Malaysia terminated in January 2016 a safeguard investigation with regard to hot-rolled coils against China and some other countries in January 2016, whereas Turkey terminated in April 2016 an anti-dumping investigation concerning imports of hot-rolled coils from China, France, Japan, Romania, Russia, Slovakia and Ukraine;
On the other hand, India imposed final duty rates in a safeguard investigation of hot-rolled flat sheet and plates of alloy and non-alloy steel. Furthermore, Brazil initiated an anti-subsidy investigation against imports of hot-rolled flat carbon steel. Finally, Turkish producers have filed new anti-dumping and countervailing duty petitions against imports of hot-rolled coils, originating inter alia in China. In this respect, one interested party informed the Commission that the Turkish authorities had opened in the meantime a new dumping investigation on 21 December 2016, covering heavy plate and certain types of HRF.
| Table 17 | |||||
| Sales prices on the free market in the Union compared to Chinese subsidised import prices during the period considered | |||||
| Source: Questionnaire reply of sampled Union producers and exporting producers, and Eurostat. | |||||
| See recital | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales price of the 5 sampled Union producers (EUR/tonne) | (448) | 553 | 498 | 471 | 427 |
| Average price of Chinese imports according to Eurostat(EUR/tonne) | (421) | 600 | 505 | 463 | 404 |
| Difference (EUR/tonne) | – 47 | – 7 | + 8 | + 23 | |
a further continuing decrease of Chinese unit prices during the post-investigation period January-June 2016 when entering the Union market,
the rising price levels of the subsidised imports for the period July-December 2016.
| Table 18 | |||
| Chinese subsidised import prices during the post-IP period | |||
| Source: Eurostat. | |||
| Average import prices of Chinese imports (first half of 2016) | (euro/tonne) | Average import prices of Chinese imports(second half of 2016 and first two months of 2017) | (euro/tonne) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan-16 | 326 | Jul-16 | 371 |
| Feb-16 | 312 | Aug-16 | 367 |
| Mar-16 | 313 | Sep-16 | 370 |
| Apr-16 | 303 | Oct-16 | 729 |
| May-16 | 299 | Nov-16 | 795 |
| Jun-16 | 308 | Dec-16 | 1 289 |
| Jan-17 | 454 | ||
| Feb-17 | 7 840 | ||
on the one hand, the significant price differential is likely to cause (further) a shift towards these subsidised imports, because users will be more likely to buy increasing quantities of goods that are sold at low prices; and
on the other hand, the existence of such low prices in the market is likely to be used by buyers as a negotiating tool to depress the prices offered by the Union producers and other sources, thereby causing further a depressive effect in terms of both diminishing volumes and lower prices. While these effects can be questioned in situations where the price differentials are not substantial, in the case at hand, and considering the price undercutting found, the resulting damage to the Union industry is expected to be serious.
The Chinese import prices were not the only ones to increase after 30 June 2016. Import prices of other main exporting countries to the Union also increased after 30 June 2016;
The level reached in the period July-September 2016 was still below the average costs of production of the EU industry (around 431 EUR/tonne at the end of the investigation period). Hence, despite the increase in price levels, the enormous price depression up to September 2016 remains. In this context, it is important to highlight that the cost of production- data of the Union industry at the end of the IP were the most recent available data in this proceeding since post-IP data on the costs of production of the Union industry are not collected. In any case, even if — hypothetically — the cost of production of the Union industry in the most recent period had decreased, this would not invalidate the fact that the level of Chinese subsidised prices in September 2016 had still been exerting an enormous prices pressure on the Union steel industry;
On the other hand, the price level reached in the period October-February 2017 is far above the average cost of production of the EU industry. Nevertheless, the price levels during this period relate to an insignificant volume of imports (1 460 tonnes during the period October-December 2016 and 5 024 tonnes during the first two months of 2017, see table 15 above). It could be that these imports relate to a limited number of high-end products. The Commission also observed that the export prices of other third countries, apart from Japan, for the period October-December 2016 are much lower (ranging between 375 and 439 EUR/tonne). Accordingly, the price levels of an insignificant volume of Chinese exports during October 2016-February 2017 cannot be regarded as sufficiently representative; and
The global price increases of the product concerned can to some extent be explained by the increase in the raw material prices. In particular, prices of coking coal nearly doubled (to about 200 USD/tonne) in the last quarter of 2016, compared to prices in the first half of 2016. In addition, prices of coking coal during the first quarter of 2017 remained volatile and amounted to about 150 USD/tonne at the end of March 2017, which is still above the price levels during the first half of 2016.
| Table 19 | ||||||
| Evolution of profitability and order intakes of the Complainants | ||||||
| Source: Eurofer. | ||||||
| Description | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | April 2015-March 2016 | July 2015-June 2016 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Profitability | – 1,31 % | – 4,86 % | – 1,28 % | – 3 to – 5 % | – 5 % to – 7 % | – 7 to – 9 % |
| Order intakes | 16 763 734 | 16 631 630 | 16 677 099 | 15 529 155 | 15 636 444 | 15 944 183 |
6. CAUSATION
In view of the coincidence in time between, on the one hand, the ever-increasing level of subsidised imports at continuously decreasing prices and, on the other hand, the Union industry's loss of market share and price depression resulting in further losses, in particular from the second half of 2015 onwards, the Commission concluded that the subsidised imports had a negative impact on the situation of the Union industry. Moreover, the progressive slowing down of the Chinese economy and the significant overcapacity of the Chinese steel industry has pushed Chinese steel producers to direct their excess production towards export markets and the Union market is an attractive export destination. Indeed, some other traditionally important export markets imposed measures against Chinese steel products, including hot-rolled flat steel products.
Eurostat import statistics which show that the level of Chinese imports continues to be significant after the end of the investigation period, in particular during the first half of 2016; and
weakened Chinese internal steel demand.
Moreover, the reasons for the decrease in subsidised Chinese import volumes to the Union have been explained in recital (550). As also set out in recital (545), it is likely that this decrease in subsidised import volumes would be only temporarily, and that this trend would reverse if no definitive countervailing measures were imposed.
| Table 20 | ||||
| Volumes, unit prices and market shares from third countries | ||||
| Source: Eurostat. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BRAZIL | ||||
| Volume of imports from Brazil | 69 457 | 41 895 | 108 973 | 580 525 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 60 | 157 | 836 |
| Unit import prices from Brazil | 515 | 461 | 433 | 386 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 89 | 84 | 75 |
| Market share | 0,22 % | 0,13 % | 0,33 % | 1,65 % |
| Share in total Union import volume | 1,68 % | 0,87 % | 2,08 % | 7,42 % |
| IRAN | ||||
| Volume of imports from Iran | 96 505 | 125 202 | 527 161 | 1 015 088 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 130 | 546 | 1 052 |
| Unit import prices from Iran | 499 | 454 | 415 | 369 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 91 | 83 | 74 |
| Market share | 0,31 % | 0,39 % | 1,59 % | 2,89 % |
| Share in total Union import volume | 2,34 % | 2,60 % | 10,08 % | 12,97 % |
| RUSSIA | ||||
| Volume of imports from Russia | 1 341 666 | 1 334 322 | 1 376 412 | 1 714 880 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 99 | 103 | 128 |
| Unit import prices from Russia | 500 | 448 | 431 | 387 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 90 | 86 | 77 |
| Market share | 4,27 % | 4,13 % | 4,15 % | 4,88 % |
| Share in total Union import volume | 32,47 % | 27,66 % | 26,32 % | 21,90 % |
| SERBIA | ||||
| Volume of imports from Serbia | 156 894 | 155 055 | 211 835 | 427 558 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 99 | 135 | 273 |
| Unit import prices from Serbia | 523 | 468 | 442 | 400 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 89 | 84 | 77 |
| Market share | 0,50 % | 0,48 % | 0,64 % | 1,22 % |
| Share in total Union import volume | 3,8 % | 3,21 % | 4,05 % | 5,46 % |
| UKRAINE | ||||
| Volume of imports from Ukraine | 906 872 | 905 397 | 939 545 | 1 084 477 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 100 | 104 | 120 |
| Unit import prices from Ukraine | 478 | 429 | 415 | 370 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 90 | 87 | 78 |
| Market share | 2,89 % | 2,81 % | 2,84 % | 3,08 % |
| Share in total Union import volume | 21,95 % | 18,77 % | 17,97 % | 13,85 % |
| Table 21 | |||||
| Actual production of the like product by third countries (in thousands of tonnes) | |||||
| Source for capacity data: OECD (OECD, DSTI/SU/SC(2015)8/Final, Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation, Capacity developments in the world steel industry, Table 1, p. 10, http://www.oecd.org/officialdocuments/publicdisplaydocumentpdf/?cote=DSTI/SU/SC(2015)8/FINAL&docLanguage=En). | |||||
| Source for production data: World Steel Association, Steel Statistical Yearbook 2015 (World Steel Association, Steel Statistical Yearbook 2015, table 1 on pages 1 and 2 and table 13 on page 35, http://www.worldsteel.org/statistics/statistics-archive/yearbook-archive.html). | |||||
| Country | Crude steel capacity estimated for the year 2014 | Crude steel production in 2013 | Crude steel production in 2014 | HRF actual production in 2013 | HRF actual production in 2014 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Russia | 89 000 | 69 008 | 71 461 | 26 140 | 26 996 |
| PRC | 1 140 000 | 822 000 | 822 698 | 311 564 | 317 387 |
| Table 22 | ||||||
| Actual production of the like product by third countries (in thousands of tonnes) | ||||||
| a Source for capacity data: OECD (OECD, DSTI/SU/SC(2015)8/Final, Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation, Capacity developments in the world steel industry, Table 1, p. 10, http://www.oecd.org/officialdocuments/publicdisplaydocumentpdf/?cote=DSTI/SU/SC(2015)8/FINAL&docLanguage=En). | ||||||
| b Source for production data: World Steel Association, Steel Statistical Yearbook 2015 (World Steel Association, Steel Statistical Yearbook 2015, table 1 on pages 1 and 2 and table 13 on page 35, http://www.worldsteel.org/statistics/statistics-archive/yearbook-archive.html). | ||||||
| Country | Crude steel capacity estimated for the year 2014a | Crude steel production in 2013 | Crude steel production in 2014b | Theoretical excess capacity in 2014 | HRF actual production in 2013 | HRF actual production in 2014 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Russia | 89 000 | 69 008 | 71 461 | 17 539 | 26 140 | 26 996 |
| PRC | 1 140 000 | 822 000 | 822 698 | 317 302 | 311 564 | 317 387 |
| Ukraine | 42 500 | 32 771 | 27 170 | 15 330 | 8 929 | 7 867 |
| Iran | 27 000 | 15 422 | 16 331 | 10 669 | 8 250 | 8 276 |
| Brazil | 48,000 | 34 163 | 33 897 | 14 103 | 15 014 | 14 229 |
| Table 23 | ||||
| Export volumes to unrelated customers by the sampled Union producers | ||||
| Source: Questionnaire reply of sampled Union producers. | ||||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | IP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Export volume to unrelated customers | 2 344 463 | 2 379 035 | 2 777 446 | 2 409 721 |
| Index (2012 = 100) | 100 | 101 | 118 | 103 |
| Average price (EUR/tonne) | 516 | 463 | 459 | 391 |
| Index (2011 = 100) | 100 | 90 | 89 | 76 |
7. UNION INTEREST
8. DEFINITIVE ANTI-SUBSIDY MEASURES
For both products (iron ore and coking coal) certain alloys are major parts of their cost of production and they go through similar processes (furnace, hot strip mill).
As set out in recital (40) above, the product concerned is the primary material for the production of various value-added downstream steel products, starting with cold-rolled products.
| Table 24 | |||||
| Definitive Countervailing duty | |||||
| Chinese exporting producers | Dumping margin (established in the anti-dumping investigation) | Amount of countervailable subsidies | Injury elimination level | Countervailing duty rate | Anti-dumping duty |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benxi Group | 97,3 % | 28,5 % | 28,1 % | 28,1 % | 0 % |
| Hesteel Group | 95,5 % | 7,8 % | 18,1 % | 7,8 % | 10,3 % |
| Jiangsu Shagang Group | 106,9 % | 4,6 % | 35,9 % | 4,6 % | 31,3 % |
| Shougang Group | Not sampled in the anti-dumping investigation | 38,6 % | 31,5 % | 31,5 % | 0 % |
| Other companies cooperating in both anti-subsidy and anti-dumping investigation | 100,5 % | 17,1 % | 27,9 % | 17,1 % | 10,8 % |
| Other companies cooperating in anti-dumping investigation but not in anti-subsidy investigation | 100,5 % | 38,6 % | 35,9 % | 35,9 % | 0 % |
| All other companies | 106,9 % | 38,6 % | 35,9 % | 35,9 % | 0 % |
9. DISCLOSURE
HAS ADOPTED THIS REGULATION:
1.A definitive countervailing duty is imposed on imports of certain flat-rolled products of iron, non-alloy steel or other alloy steel, whether or not in coils (including ‘cut-to-length’ and ‘narrow strip’ products), not further worked than hot-rolled, not clad, plated or coated, originating in the People's Republic of China. The product concerned does not include:
products of stainless steel and grain-oriented silicon electrical steel,
products of tool steel and high-speed steel,
products, not in coils, without patterns in relief, of a thickness exceeding 10 mm and of a width of 600 mm or more, and
products, not in coils, without patterns in relief, of a thickness of 4,75 mm or more but not exceeding 10 mm and of a width of 2 050 mm or more.
The product concerned is currently falling within CN codes 7208 10 00, 7208 25 00, 7208 26 00, 7208 27 00, 7208 36 00, 7208 37 00, 7208 38 00, 7208 39 00, 7208 40 00, 7208 52 10, 7208 52 99, 7208 53 10, 7208 53 90, 7208 54 00, 7211 13 00, 7211 14 00, 7211 19 00, ex 7225 19 10 (TARIC code 7225 19 10 90), 7225 30 90, ex 7225 40 60 (TARIC code 7225 40 60 90), 7225 40 90, ex 7226 19 10 (TARIC code 7226 19 10 90), 7226 91 91 and 7226 91 99.
2.The rate of the definitive countervailing duty applicable to the net, free-at-Union-frontier price, before duty, of the products described in paragraph 1 and manufactured by the companies listed below shall be as follows:
| a Formerly ‘Hebei Iron & Steel Co., Ltd. Tangshan Branch’. | |||
| b Formerly ‘Hebei Iron & Steel Co., Ltd. Chengde Branch’. | |||
| Country | Company | Definitive countervailing duty | TARIC additional code |
|---|---|---|---|
| People's Republic of China | Bengang Steel Plates Co., Ltd. | 28,1 % | C157 |
| Handan Iron & Steel Group Han-Bao Co., Ltd. | 7,8 % | C158 | |
| Hesteel Co., Ltd. Tangshan Brancha | 7,8 % | C159 | |
| Hesteel Co., Ltd. Chengde Branchb | 7,8 % | C160 | |
| Zhangjiagang Hongchang Plate Co., Ltd. | 4,6 % | C161 | |
| Zhangjiagang GTA Plate Co., Ltd. | 4,6 % | C162 | |
| Shougang Jingtang United Iron and Steel Co. Ltd. | 31,5 % | C164 | |
| Beijing Shougang Co. Ltd., Qian'an Iron & Steel branch | 31,5 % | C208 | |
| Other cooperating companies listed in the Annex | 17,1 % | See Annex | |
| All other companies | 35,9 % | C999 | |
3.The application of the individual countervailing duty rates specified for the companies mentioned in paragraph 2 shall be conditional upon presentation to the customs authorities of the Member States of a valid commercial invoice, on which shall appear a declaration dated and signed by an official of the entity issuing such invoice, identified by his/ her name and function, drafted as follows: ‘I, the undersigned, certify that the (volume) of hot-rolled flat steel products sold for export to the European Union covered by this invoice was manufactured by (company name and address) (TARIC additional code) in the (country concerned). I declare that the information provided in this invoice is complete and correct.’ If no such invoice is presented, the duty rate applicable to ‘all other companies’ shall apply.
4.Unless otherwise specified, the provisions in force concerning customs duties shall apply.
1.Article 1(2) of Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/649 is hereby replaced by the following.
‘2.The rate of the definitive anti-dumping duty applicable to the net, free-at-Union-frontier price before duty, of the product described in paragraph 1 and manufactured by the companies listed below shall be as follows:
| a Formerly “Hebei Iron & Steel Co., Ltd. Tangshan Branch”. | |||
| b Formerly “Hebei Iron & Steel Co., Ltd. Chengde Branch”.’ | |||
| Country | Company | Definitive anti-dumping duty | TARIC Additional Code |
|---|---|---|---|
| People's Republic of China | Bengang Steel Plates Co., Ltd. | 0 % | C157 |
| Handan Iron & Steel Group Han-Bao Co., Ltd. | 10,3 % | C158 | |
| Hesteel Co., Ltd. Tangshan Brancha | 10,3 % | C159 | |
| Hesteel Co., Ltd. Chengde Branchb | 10,3 % | C160 | |
| Zhangjiagang Hongchang Plate Co., Ltd. | 31,3 % | C161 | |
| Zhangjiagang GTA Plate Co., Ltd. | 31,3 % | C162 | |
| Shougang Jingtang United Iron and Steel Co. Ltd. | 0 % | C164 | |
| Beijing Shougang Co. Ltd., Qian'an Iron & Steel branch | 0 % | C208 | |
| Angang Steel Company Limited | 10,8 % | C150 | |
| Inner Mongolia Baotou Steel Union Co., Ltd. | 0 % | C151 | |
| Jiangyin Xingcheng Special Steel Works Co., Ltd. | 0 % | C147 | |
| Shanxi Taigang Stainless Steel Co., Ltd. | 0 % | C163 | |
| Maanshan Iron & Steel Co., Ltd | 10,8 % | C165 | |
| Rizhao Steel Wire Co., Ltd. | 10,8 % | C166 | |
| Rizhao Baohua New Material Co., Ltd. | 10,8 % | C167 | |
| Tangshan Yanshan Iron and Steel Co., Ltd. | 0 % | C168 | |
| Wuhan Iron & Steel Co., Ltd. | 10,8 % | C156 | |
| All other companies | 0 % | C999 | |
2.Article 1(5) of Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/649 is hereby replaced by the following.
‘5.Where any new exporting producer in the People's Republic of China provides sufficient evidence to the Commission that:
(a)it did not export to the Union the product concerned in paragraph 1 in the period between 1 January 2015 and 31 December 2015 (investigation period);
(b)it is not related to any exporter or producer in the People's republic of China which is subject to the anti-dumping measures imposed by this Regulation;
(c)it has actually exported to the Union the product concerned after the investigation period on which measures are based, or it has entered into an irrevocable contractual obligation to export a significant quantity to the Union,
Article 1(2) may be amended by adding the new exporting producer to the list of companies identified in the table and subject to an individual duty not exceeding the duty rate applicable to those companies that cooperated in the anti-dumping investigation but not in the anti-subsidy investigation, i.e. 0 %.’
The Annex to Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 2017/649 is hereby repealed.
This Regulation shall enter into force on the day following that of its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union.
This Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States.
Done at Brussels, 8 June 2017.
For the Commission
The President
Jean-Claude Juncker
| Country | Name | TARIC additional code |
|---|---|---|
| PRC | Angang Steel Company Limited | C150 |
| PRC | Maanshan Iron & Steel Co., Ltd | C165 |
| PRC | Rizhao Steel Wire Co., Ltd. | C166 |
| PRC | Rizhao Baohua New Material Co., Ltd. | C167 |
| PRC | Wuhan Iron & Steel Co., Ltd. | C156 |
This Regulation was replaced as of 30 June 2016 by Regulation (EU) 2016/1037 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 8 June 2016 on protection against subsidised imports from countries not members of the European Union (OJ L 176, 30.6.2016, p. 55).
The term ‘GOC’ is used in this Regulation in a broad sense, including the State Council, as well as all Ministries, Departments, Agencies and Administrations at central, regional or local level.
Notice of initiation of an anti-dumping proceeding concerning imports of certain hot-rolled flat products of iron, non-alloy or other alloy steel originating in the People's Republic of China (OJ C 58, 13.2.2016, p. 9).
Notice of initiation of an anti-dumping proceeding concerning imports of certain hot-rolled flat products of iron, non-alloy or other alloy steel originating in Brazil, Iran, Russia, Serbia and Ukraine (OJ C 246, 7.7.2016, p. 7).
Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/649 of 5 April 2017 imposing a definitive anti-dumping duty on imports of certain hot-rolled flat products of iron, non-alloy or other alloy steel originating in the People's Republic of China (OJ L 92, 6.4.2017, p. 68).
Cold rolling process is defined by passing a sheet or strip — that has previously been hot rolled and pickled — through cold rolls, i.e. below the softening temperature of the metal.
Introduction to the 13th Five Year Steel Plan.
Chapter 17, section 1 of the 13th Five Year Plan, emphasis added.
Ibidem.
Chapter III, Article 12 of Decision No. 40.
See Council Implementing Regulation (EU) No 215/2013 (OJ L 73, 15.3.2013, p. 16), recital 182 (Organic coated steel).
The function of the NDRC is, among others, to formulate and implement strategies of national economic and social development, annual plans, medium and long-term development plans.
W. Maliszwewski/S. Arslanalp/J. Caparusso and others, ‘Resolving China's Corporate Debt Problem’, IMF Working Paper, WP/16/203 of October 2016.
WT/DS379/AB/R (US — Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duties on Certain Products from China), Appellate Body Report of 11 March 2011, DS 379, paragraph 318. See also WT/DS436/AB/R (US — Carbon Steel (India)), Appellate Body Report of 8 December 2014, paragraphs 4.9-4.10, 4.17-4.20 and WT/DS437/AB/R (United States — Countervailing Duty Measures on Certain Products from China) Appellate Body Report of 18 December 2014, paragraph 4.92.
Article 2 of the ‘Interim Regulations on the Board of Supervisors in Key State-owned Financial Institutions’, Decree No. 293 of the State Council, issued on 15 March 2000.
The People's Bank of China RMB loan benchmark interest rate of financial institutions.
Meeting minutes between Shougang Jingtang and bank consortium, 2013, exhibit 14 in the limited verification file of Shougang for the English version, and annex 13.3 in the deficiency response for the Chinese version.
WT/DS/296 (DS296 United States — Countervailing duty investigation on Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAMS) from Korea), Appellate Body Report of 21 February 2005, para.116.
Appellate Body Report, DS 296, para. 116.
Appellate Body Report, DS 296, para. 115.
Appellate Body Report, DS 296, para. 114, agreeing with the Panel Report, DS 194, para. 8.31. on that account.
WT/DS194/R, Panel Report, US — Export Restraints, para. 8.29.
Appellate Body Report, DS 296, paras. 110-111.
WT/DS353/AB/R, Appellate Body Report, US — Aircraft (Second Complaint), para. 753.
WT/DS316/R, Panel Report, EC — Aircraft, para. 7.919.
IMF Working Paper ‘Resolving China's Corporate Debt Problem’, by Wojciech Maliszewski, Serkan Arslanalp, John Caparusso, José Garrido, Si Guo, Joong Shik Kang, W. Raphael Lam, T. Daniel Law, Wei Liao, Nadia Rendak, Philippe Wingender, Jiangyan, October 2016, WP/16/203
Article X, point II of the CBRC's Guidelines on risk-based loan classification.
Also the example of BNP Paribas provided by the GOC makes this point.
Guidelines for the calculation of the amount of subsidy in countervailing duty investigations (OJ C 394, 17.12.1998, p. 6).
Panel Report, EC — DRAMS, para. 7.213.
Panel Report, EC — DRAMS, para. 7.212.
Panel Report, EC — DRAMS, para. 7.178.
Panel Report, EC — DRAMS, para. 7.212.
WT/DS294/AB/R (US- Zeroing), Appellate Body Report of 18 April 2006, paragraph 198; and WT/DS438/AB/R (Argentina — Import Restrictions), Appellate Body Report of 15 January 2015, paragraph 5.108.
Nie Huiha, Jiang Ting, Fang Mingyue, ‘China's zombie firms: cause, consequence and cure’, Renmin University, 2016.
WT/DS/294/AB/R, Appellate Body Report of 18 April 2006, US — Zeroing, para. 204.
G/STR/N/15/CHN, State trading new and full notification pursuant to article XVII:4(a) of the GATT 1994 and paragraph 1 of the understanding on the interpretation of article XVII, 19 October 2015.
Council Implementing Regulation (EU) No 215/2013 of 11 March 2013 imposing a countervailing duty on imports of certain organic coated steel products originating in the People's Republic of China (OJ L 73, 15.3.2013, p. 16), recital 182 (Organic coated steel).
Article 24 of the Order of the NDRC No. 35 (Policies for Development of Iron and Steel Industry): ‘For any project that fails to comply with the development policies for the iron and steel industry and has not been subject to examination and approval or where the examination and approval thereof fails to comply with the relevant provisions, the department of state land and resources shall not handle the formalities for land-use rights.’
Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/366 of 1 March 2017 imposing definitive countervailing duties on imports of crystalline silicon photovoltaic modules and key components (i.e. cells) originating in or consigned from the People's Republic of China following an expiry review pursuant to Article 18(2) of Regulation (EU) 2016/1037 of the European Parliament and of the Council and terminating the partial interim review investigation pursuant to Article 19(3) of Regulation (EU) 2016/1037 (OJ L 56, 3.3.2017, p. 1), (Solar panels).
See, amongst others, Council Implementing Regulation (EU) No 452/2011 (OJ L 128, 14.5.2011, p. 18) (Coated fine paper), Council Implementing Regulation (EU) No 215/2013 (OJ L 73, 15.3.2013, p. 16) (Organic coated steel), Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/366 (OJ L 56, 3.3.2017, p. 1) (Solar panels), Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 1379/2014 (OJ L 367, 23.12.2014, p. 22) (Filament glass fibre), Commission Implementing Decision 2014/918/EU (OJ L 360, 17.12.2014, p. 65) (Polyester Staple Fibers).
As accepted by the General Court in Case T-444/11 Gold East Paper and Gold Huacheng Paper versus Council, Judgment of the General Court of 11 September 2014 ECLI:EU:T:2014:773.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liaoning.
Council Implementing Regulation (EU) No 451/2011 of 6 May 2011 imposing a definitive anti-dumping duty and collecting definitively the provisional duty imposed on imports of coated fine paper originating in the People's Republic of China (OJ L 128, 14.5.2011, p. 1) (Coated fine paper).
Council Implementing Regulation (EU) No 451/2011 (OJ L 128, 14.5.2011, p. 1) (Coated fine paper), Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/366 (OJ L 56, 3.3.2017, p. 1) (Solar panels).
Such as e.g. Council Implementing Regulation (EU) 451/2011 (OJ L 128, 14.5.2011, p.1) (Coated fine paper), Council Implementing Regulation (EU) No 215/2013 (OJ L 73, 11.3.2013, p.16) (Organic coated steel), Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/366 (OJ L 56, 3.3.2017, p. 1) (Solar panels), Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 1379/2014 (OJ L 367, 23.12.2014, p. 22) (Filament glass fibre), Commission Implementing Decision 2014/918/EU (OJ L 360, 17.12.2014, p. 65) (Polyester Staple Fibers).
WT/DS489/7 of 19 April 2016, Memorandum of Understanding Between the People's Republic of China and the United States of America Related to the Dispute China — Measures Related to Demonstration Bases and Common Service Platforms Programs (DS489).
See WT/DS46/R, Brazil — Aircraft, Panel Report.
See also, mutatis mutandi, WT/DS294/AB/RW, US — Zeroing (Article 21.5 DSU), Appellate Body Report of 14 May 2009, paragraph 453.
Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2016/1328 of 29 July 2016 imposing a definitive anti-dumping duty and collecting definitively the provisional duty imposed on imports of certain cold rolled flat steel products originating in the People's Republic of China and the Russian Federation (OJ L 210, 4.8.2016, p. 1).
This conclusion is in line with the conclusion of the Government of China in its submission of 26 August 2016‘that the EU Industry did not suffer material injury during the period considered’ (see the submission of the Government of China, 26 August 2016, recital 298). On the other hand, on the basis of the data collected, the Commission does not agree with the conclusion of the Government of China that the EU industry ‘was, moreover, not in a vulnerable situation at the end of the IP’ (see the submission of the Government of China, 26 August 2016, recital 298).
Judgment of 29 January 2014, ECLI:EU:T:2014:35. This judgement was upheld on 7 April 2016 by the Court of Justice in Joined Cases C-186/14 and C-193/14 P ArcelorMIttal Tubular Products Ostrava and Others v Hubei, ECLI:EU:C:2016:209.
Council Regulation (EC) No 926/2009 imposing a definitive anti-dumping duty and collecting definitively the provisional duty imposed on imports of certain seamless pipes and tubes of iron or steel originating in China (OJ L 262, 6.10.2009, p. 19).
Judgment of 29 January 2014, Case T-528/09 Hubei Xinyegang Steel v Council, ECLI:EU:T:2014:35, paragraph 61.
World Trade Organization, WT/DS132/R, 28 January 2000, Mexico- Anti-dumping investigation of high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) from the United States — Report of the Panel, recital 7.140, page 214. The WTO Panel stated the following in an anti-dumping case ‘in order to conclude that there is a threat of material injury to a domestic industry that is apparently not currently injured, despite the effects of dumped imports during the period of investigation, it is necessary to have an understanding of the current condition of the industry as a background. Merely that dumped imports will increase, and will have adverse price effects, does not, ipso facto, lead to the conclusion that the domestic industry will be injured — if the industry is in very good condition, or if there are other factors at play, dumped imports may not threaten injury’. This reasoning can be transposed to anti-subsidy cases as well. [Emphasis added by the Commission.]
Judgment of the Court of Justice of 7 April 2016 in Case C-186/14 P ArcelorMittal Tubular Products Ostrava and Others v Hubei, ECLI:EU:C:2016:209, recital 72, confirming the General Court's judgment of 29 January 2014 in Case T-528/09 Hubei Xinyegang Steel v Council, ECLI:EU:T:2014:35.
Submission of the Government of China, 26 August 2016, recitals 336 and following.
Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2016/1778 of 6 October 2016 imposing a provisional anti-dumping duty on imports of certain hot-rolled flat products of iron, non-alloy or other steel originating in the People's Republic of China (OJ L 272, 7.10.2016, p. 33).
Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the European Council, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee, the Committee of the Regions and the European Investment Bank, Brussels, 16.3.2016, COM (2016) 155 final, Steel: Preserving sustainable jobs and growth in Europe.
Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2016/1329 of 29 July 2016 levying the definitive anti-dumping duty on the registered imports of certain cold-rolled flat steel products originating in the People's Republic of China and the Russian Federation (OJ L 210, 4.8.2016, p. 27).
World Steel in figures 2015, World Steel Association, p. 14, http//www.worldsteel.org/publications/bookshop/product-details.~World-Steel-in-Figures-2015~PRODUCT~World-Steel-in-Figures-2015~.html.
COM(2016) 155 final, Brussels, 16.3.2016, Communication form the Commission to the European Parliament, The European Council, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee, the Committee of the Regions and the European Investment Bank, Steel: Preserving sustainable jobs and growth in Europe, p. 2.
OECD, DSTI/SU/SC(2015)8/Final, Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation, Capacity developments in the world steel industry, Table 1, p. 10, http://www.oecd.org/officialdocuments/publicdisplaydocumentpdf/?cote=DSTI/SU/SC(2015)8/FINAL&docLanguage=En.
World Steel Association, World Steel in Figures 2016, table ‘major steel-producting countries 2014 and 2015’, p. 9, http://www.worldsteel.org/media-centre/press-releases/2016/World-Steel-in-Figures-2016-is-available-online.html.
OECD Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation (2015): ‘Excess capacity in the global steel industry: the current situation and ways forward’, Technology and Industry Policy Papers, No. 18, OECD Publishing, pages 5 and 6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/5js65x46nxhj-en.
Submission by Dentons on behalf of China Iron and Steel Association (CISA) and its members, Comments in the anti-dumping proceeding concerning imports of certain hot-rolled flat products of iron, non-alloy or other alloy steel originating the People's Republic of China, 21 March 2016, paragraph (24), page 7.
Report of the OECD Steel Committee, 13 March 2017, Capacity developments in the world steel industry, paragraph 14.
Reuters, press article, China's zombie steel mills fire up furnaces, worsen global glut, http://in.reuters.com/article/china-steel-overcapacity-idINKCN0XI070.
Reuters press article, BHP says over 50 million tonnes of steel capacity restarted in China, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-bhp-china-idUSKCN0YA09E.
World Steel Association, media centre, June 2016 crude steel production, https://www.worldsteel.org/media-centre/press-releases/2016/June-2016-crude-steel-production0.html.
Report of the OECD Steel Committee, 13 March 2017, Capacity developments in the world steel industry.
Report of the OECD Steel Committee, 8-9 September 2016, Updated steelmaking capacity figures and a proposed framework for enhancing capacity monitoring activity.
World Steel Association, Steel Statistical Yearbook 2015, table 1 on page 2 and table 13 on page 35, http://www.worldsteel.org/statistics/statistics-archive/yearbook-archive.html.
The sample consisted of 679,4 million tonnes of Chinese exports of the like product for the year 2015 and of 343,8 million tonnes of Chinese exports of the like product for the first 6 months of 2016.
Worldsteel Short Range Outlook 2014-2015, World Steel Association, https://www.worldsteel.org/media-centre/press-releases/2015/worldsteel-Short-Range-Outlook-2015-2016.html.
See also recital (444) for the slight decrease in inventories at the sampled Union producers as a percentage of production.
Richard Lu, the downside Chinese steel demand scenario: gory details, http://www.crugroup.com/about-,cru/cruinsight/The_downside_Chinese_steel_demand_scenario_gory_details, 15 July 2016.
See also recital (443) for the slight decrease in inventories at the sampled Union producers as a percentage of production.
Platts, press article, European steel producers on the offensive, but will price increases stick? Article, http://blogs.platts.com/2016/04/05/european-steel-producers-on-offensive/, 4 may 2016.
Platts, press article, 2017 could be a huge year for the European steel industry, http://blogs.platts.com/2017/03/08/2017-european-steel-industry/, 8 March 2017.
WorldSteel Association, The Chinese steel industry, A monthly update for world steel members, Issue 115, June 2016.
Worldsteel Association, Extract from Worldsteel monthly update on the Chinese steel industry, October 2016.
Marketrealist, press article, Are rising Chinese steel inventories a risk for steel investors? http://marketrealist.com/2017/03/are-rising-chinese-steel-inventories-a-risk-for-steel-investors/, 1 March, 2017.
Reuters, press article, China's surging steel, iron ore inventories at odds with price gains: Russell, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-column-russell-ironore-china-idUSKBN1610FI, 22 February 2017.
Platts, press article, 2017 could be a huge year for the European steel industry, http://blogs.platts.com/2017/03/08/2017-european-steel-industry/, 8 March 2017.
As mentioned before, on 7 July 2016, the Commission initiated an investigation into dumped imports of the same product originating inter alia in Russia. However, the initiation of that investigation does not prejudge the outcome of the present investigation.
Notice of initiation of an anti-dumping proceeding concerning imports of certain hot-rolled flat products of iron, non-alloy or other alloy steel originating in Brazil, Iran, Russia, Serbia and Ukraine (OJ C 246, 7.7.2016, p. 7).
Submission of the Government of China, 26 August 2016, recitals 362- 366.
Extract from the latest EC bottom-up study on energy prices and costs performed by a consortium of consultants, including Ecofys and CEPS, July 2016.
Submission of the Government of China, 26 August 2016, recitals 367-370.
See Commission Decision No 284/2000/ECSC of 4 February 2000 imposing a definitive countervailing duty on imports of certain flat rolled products of iron or non-alloy steel, of a width of 600 mm or more, not clad, plated or coated, in coils, not further worked than hot-rolled, originating in India and Taiwan and accepting undertakings offered by certain exporting producers and terminating the proceeding concerning imports originating in South Africa (OJ L 31, 5.2.2000, p. 44), para. 338.
Submission by the Government of China, open version, 26 August 2016, recital 311, p. 114.
Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2016/1246 of 28 July 2016 imposing a definitive anti-dumping duty on imports of high fatigue performance steel concrete reinforcement bars originating in the People's Republic of China (OJ L 204, 29.7.2016, p. 70), recital (127).
Council Regulation (EC) No 954/2006 of 27 June 2006 imposing definitive anti-dumping duty on imports of certain seamless pipes and tubes, of iron or steel originating in Croatia, Romania, Russia and Ukraine, repealing Council Regulations (EC) No 2320/97 and (EC) No 348/2000, terminating the interim and expiry reviews of the anti-dumping duties on imports of certain seamless pipes and tubes of iron or non-alloy steel originating, inter alia, in Russia and Romania and terminating the interim reviews of the anti-dumping duties on imports of certain seamless pipes and tubes of iron or non-alloy steel originating, inter alia, in Russia and Romania and in Croatia and Ukraine (OJ L 175, 29.6.2006, p. 4), recital (233).
See Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2016/1328 of 29 July 2016 imposing a definitive anti-dumping duty and collecting definitively the provisional duty imposed on imports of certain cold rolled flat steel products originating in the People's Republic of China and the Russian Federation (OJ L 210, 4.8.2016, p. 1), Recital 156.
McKinsey & Company, Laying the foundations for a financially sound industry, OECD Steel Committee meeting of 5th December 2013, p. 7.
Regulation (EU) 2016/1036 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 8 June 2016 on protection against dumped imports from countries not members of the European Union (OJ L 176, 30.6.2016, p. 21).