China slaps anti-dumping duties on plastics from US, EU, Japan, Taiwan
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In January, China’s Commerce Ministry said initial investigations had determined that dumping by the US, the EU, Japan and Taiwan was taking place.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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BEIJING – China on May 18 announced anti-dumping duties as high as 74.9 per cent on imports of POM copolymers, a type of engineering plastic, from the US, the European Union, Japan and Taiwan.
The Commerce Ministry’s findings conclude a probe launched in May 2024, shortly after the US sharply increased tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles, computer chips and other imports.
POM copolymers can partially replace metals such as copper and zinc and have various applications, including in auto parts, electronics and medical equipment, the ministry has said.
In January, the ministry said initial investigations had determined that dumping was taking place, and implemented preliminary anti-dumping measures in the form of a deposit starting from Jan 24.
According to May 18’s announcement, the highest anti-dumping rates of 74.9 per cent are levied on imports from the US, while European shipments will face 34.5 per cent duties.
China slapped 35.5 per cent duties on Japanese imports, except for Asahi Kasei Corp, which received a company-specific rate of 24.5 per cent.
General duties of 32.6 per cent were placed on imports from Taiwan, while Formosa Plastics received a 4 per cent tariff and Polyplastics Taiwan 3.8 per cent.
Hopes have risen that the US-China trade war is easing after the two sides said on May 12 they had agreed to slash reciprocal tariffs in a 90-day truce, a deal that state media outlet Global Times said on May 16 should be extended.
The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation group of nations warned of “fundamental challenges” facing the global trading system in a communique on May 16 after a meeting in South Korea. REUTERS

