Logo 20 Aug 2025

China extends anti-subsidy probe into EU dairy

On Monday, the commerce ministry (MofCom) extended its probe into EU dairy subsidies for six months, citing "the complexity of the case."

  • The extension gives officials until late February to assess whether nine EU-wide subsidy schemes and 23 country-specific support measures have unfairly distorted prices for certain dairy products – including cheeses and creams – and if so, to determine related tariffs.

The extension is a mixed blessing for the EU's dairy sector.

  • On the one hand, it means these products won't face punitive tariffs in the near term, which is good news both for EU dairy processors and their upstream milk suppliers.
  • On the other hand, the longer regulators spend evaluating EU dairy subsidy regimes, the more likely they'll find something that could be used to justify punitive tariffs on a wider swath of products.

Don't forget: This investigation was initiated as a countermeasure to the EU's anti-subsidy probe into Chinese-manufactured new energy vehicles (NEVs).

Get smart: Beijing's logic is simple.

  • If Chinese state support for strategic emerging industries can be deemed market-distorting when those industries succeed, then so too can the EU's support for its rural and agricultural sector when dairy processors succeed.

The upshot: The EU won't be able to resolve the dairy probe without offering concessions on its NEV tariffs.

sources

Already a subscriber? Log in.

On Monday, the commerce ministry (MofCom) extended its probe into EU dairy subsidies for six months, citing "the complexity of the case."

The extension gives officials until late February to assess whether nine EU-wide subsidy schemes and 23 country-specific support measures have unfairly distorted...