Following a year-long investigation, the Ministry of Commerce
yesterday imposed anti-dumping tariffs on potato starch imports
from the EU.
The ministry announced that its punitive duties would range
between 17 percent and 35 percent.
"The move will save our industry from disaster," said Zhou
Qingfeng, director of the Chinese commission on potato starch.
He said China's potato starch production capacity worked at
under 30 percent in 2005 due to low-priced EU products, but leapt
to 60 percent last year following the preliminary ruling, showing
the direct effect of such tariffs.
The price of potato starch rose from 4,600 yuan
(US$593.1) to 4,800 yuan (US$618.9) per ton last year
after the preliminary ruling, up from less than 4,000 yuan
(US$515.7) in 2005.
The use of potato starch varies across a range of industries
including food processing, pharmaceuticals, textiles and animal
feed.
In December 2005, 17 Chinese starch manufacturers from Heilongjiang, Qinghai, Gansu and Yunnan provinces and the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region filed a
petition to the Ministry of Commerce targeting their EU
competitors. The petition alleged that the European players were
flooding the Chinese potato starch market at low prices.
The ministry began an investigation last February covering all
imports for 2005.
Following a six-month investigation, which ended last August,
the ministry moved to impose primary tariffs on the EU, with
German, French and Dutch companies responding to the charge.
"It is China's first dumping charge against an agricultural
product," a web statement by the ministry announced.
According to Zhou, the case will benefit millions of Chinese
potato farmers across 12 provinces and autonomous regions. He gave
the example of the average potato price that increased to 0.48 yuan
(US$0.06) per kilogram last year from 0.34 yuan
(US$0.04) in 2005.
An agricultural institution in Yunnan Province would put
estimated losses to local farmers at close to 120 million yuan
(US$15.5 million) had the anti-dumping charge not been imposed.
Zhou called on Chinese firms from other industries to further
defend their interests following WTO rules.
As it stands, Chinese companies are on the receiving end of the
most anti-dumping tariffs in the world, while seldom imposing
similar duties on foreign rivals.
Zhou said his commission had been formed not only to handle the
potato starch case but also to stand for "the whole industry in
China."
(China Daily February 6, 2007)