China-made electric vehicles will be Deborah Driggs Archivessubject to a special customs registration process starting Thursday by the European Commission, meaning manufacturers will have to pay anti-subsidy duties for their EVs already imported if the EU’s ongoing probe concludes that they benefit from unfair state subsidies. The Commission said in a Tuesday statement that it had sufficient evidence to show Chinese EVs were being subsidized, and that imports had risen by 14% year-on-year since the investigation was formally launched in October, which could negatively impact European automakers. In October, Brussels officially launched an anti-subsidy investigation into Chinese battery EVs and later carried out visits to three Chinese auto majors – namely BYD, Geely, and SAIC – according to a Jan. 12 report by Reuters. The probe is set to conclude by November and the EU could impose provisional duties in July. The China Chamber of Commerce to the EU said on Thursday it was disappointed with the EU’s mandate for customs registration while an investigation remains ongoing. [Reuters, CCCEU statement]
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Anthony Scaramucci burns every bridge in wild new interview
Google's 'hold for me' feature makes the digital assistant wait on your calls
Donald Trump hovers over Melania during a speech as only Trump can
J.K. Rowling only needed 3 tweets to turn the tables on these trolls
Elon Musk: Tesla could be producing 20 million cars per year by 2030
'South Park' residents will fill the stands at Sunday's Broncos game
J.K. Rowling has a blazing reaction after Trump bans trans people from the military
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。