China urges EU to reverse EV tariffs, Chery undeterred

By Liz Lee, Laurie Chen and Nick Carey

BEIJING (Reuters) -Beijing on Thursday slammed EU tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles as protectionist behaviour even as the country's top auto exporter said the duties would not derail its expansion plans for Europe, including making EVs in Spain this year.

The reaction from China and others embroiled in the dispute, including European and Chinese car makers, points to clear opposition to the EU decision and an eagerness to de-escalate the situation.

Industry insiders say both Europe and China have reasons for wanting to strike a deal in the months ahead to avoid the addition of billions of dollars in new costs for Chinese electric car makers, as the EU process allows for review.

China said it would take "all necessary measures" to safeguard its interests after the European Commission announced on Wednesday it would impose extra duties of up to 38.1% on imported Chinese electric cars from July.

"We urge the EU to listen carefully to the objective and rational voices from all walks of life, immediately correct its wrong practices, stop politicising economic and trade issues, and properly handle economic and trade frictions through dialogue and consultation," Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said at a regular press briefing.

Even so, Chery Auto, China's largest automaker by export volume, appeared undeterred.

Charlie Zhang, vice president of Chery Auto and president of its European business, said the company plans to start EV production by year end at its recently acquired factory in Spain, the company's first manufacturing site in Europe.

He said that site will help offset the impact of the tariffs. Rivals BYD and Great Wall Motor are also looking to set up manufacturing and assembly plants in the region, aiming to blunt financial pain from the tariffs as they aim to ramp up sales of lower-cost cars to rival their European competitors and make up for slower sales in China.

ROOM TO FIND SOLUTION

Brussels seemed to have left some room for the two sides to continue consultations to find a solution, state news agency Xinhua said in a commentary, adding it hoped "the EU will make some serious reconsideration and stop going further in the wrong direction."

Beijing has rejected the EU and U.S. argument that overcapacity in China's EV industry has threatened overseas automakers through subsidised exports. It says tariffs will slow the uptake of electric vehicles, endanger climate-change goals and raise costs for consumers.

Brussels said it also would combat Chinese subsidies with additional tariffs ranging from 17.4% for BYD to 38.1% for SAIC, on top of the standard 10% car duty. That takes the highest overall rate to nearly 50%.