Chinese producers of polyester staple fibre (PSF) have urged the
government to take an EU anti-dumping ruling to the World Trade
Organization.
Cao Xinyu, vice-chairman of the China Chamber of Commerce for
Import and Export of Textiles, the industrial association of the
textile industry, said yesterday that the chamber, as a
representative of firms involved in the case, had made the
application to the Ministry
of Commerce.
The moves comes after the European Commission - the EU's
executive - slapped five-year-tariffs of up to 49.7 percent on PSF
from China.
"The enterprises who believed they were unfairly treated in the
case want to seek a solution to the dispute from the WTO," he
said.
The ministry is reviewing the case and will decide whether to
submit to the WTO's Dispute Settlement Body.
If the ministry approves the application, it will be the first
case independently filed by China to the WTO. China took part in a
case against US steel tariffs with the European Union, Japan and
South Korea.
PSF is used in clothes, bed linen and furniture fillings.
Chinese companies are angry with the ruling as they believe the
EU Commission took a cartel price to calculate the normal value,
said Cao.
As the European Union has refused to recognize China as a market
economy, it does not take the costs of Chinese companies in
anti-dumping cases and uses the costs of a "surrogate" country.
In this case, the commission chose Wellman Inc in United States
to establish a normal value after a verification visit.
But Fu Donghui, a lawyer from the Allbright Law Offices, said
Wellman was being sued for violating anti-trust laws in the United
States and Canada.
The US company, together with eight other companies, was sued of
"conspiracy, and artificially fixing, raising, maintaining, or
stabilizing PSF prices and having allocated portions of the PSF
market and specific PSF customers among themselves."
The prices provided by Wellman should be higher than the normal
price, Fu said.
And it is unfair to use Wellman's price, which is likely to be a
cartel price, as a substitute price for an anti-dumping charge, he
added.
But the commission has failed to offer a direct reply to Chinese
companies' concerns.
The commission launched an anti-dumping investigation against
PSF from China and the United Arab Emirates in December 2003.
Over 50 Chinese PSF manufacturing firms were involved in the
case, with a value of US$25 million.
Though the value of the case is not big, the commission's
mistake is apparent and the companies are confident the decision
will be revoked, said Fu.
Cao said the Chinese textile firms want to get fairer treatment
from foreign governments by taking the case to the WTO.
The commission made two anti-dumping rulings last week, both in
favour of EU companies.
Apart from the PSF case, it asked the Chinese polyester filament
apparel fabric manufacturers to pay anti-dumping duties of up to
85.3 percent in its preliminary ruling.
Over 800 Chinese enterprises are involved in the case.
Chinese textile companies are facing increasing anti-dumping
investigations or possible safeguard measures since their exports
may rise after the removal of global textile quotas.
(China Daily March 23, 2005)