The European Commission said it will launch the first ever
litigation against China at the World Trade Organization (WTO) by
seeking a settlement panel for an auto parts dispute on Friday.
The EU's executive body said it expected the United States and
Canada also to request the establishment of a panel on the same
issue.
Chong Quan, spokesperson of the Ministry of Commerce, said China
has not yet received a formal request from the three parties, which
had called on Beijing in March to enter into talks on how to lower
barriers to China's US$19 billion auto parts market.
On Friday, they said the time for consultations had run out.
"We have tried again and again to find an acceptable, negotiated
solution to this issue; and without Chinese engagement, we have no
alternative but to take this course of action," EU Trade
Commissioner Peter Mandelson said in a statement.
The EU, the United States and Canada want China - which joined
the WTO in 2001 - to change its rules on import tariffs, which they
say hinder foreign auto makers and car parts suppliers in China,
now one of the world's biggest auto markets.
China considers car parts as a whole vehicle if they account for
60 per cent or more of the value of the final vehicle, and thus
charges a higher tariff on them, the Commission has said.
So far, China has been dragged into only one WTO dispute case,
which was filed by the United States over semiconductors but did
not enter the legislation stage.
In another development, foreign direct investment (FDI) in China
dropped by 2.1 percent from a year ago, to US$37.19 billion in the
first eight months of this year, according to the latest statistics
released by the Ministry of Commerce.
FDI in August alone fell 8.49 percent from last year, to US$4.48
billion.
The ministry did not issue data on contracted foreign direct
investment - investment pledged but not yet delivered.
Investment in the financial sectors, including banking,
insurance and securities, is not included. Last year, China's
financial sectors drew a total investment of over US$10
billion.
(China Daily September 16, 2006)