Logo 18 Jun 2024

Beijing announces anti-dumping investigation into EU pork

On Monday, China's commerce ministry (MofCom) initiated an anti-dumping investigation into EU pork and pork byproducts.

Officially, the investigation was requested by the China Animal Agriculture Association (CAAA), a government-affiliated industry association that includes all of China's largest pig farming companies.

Pork tariffs will hit supporters of the EV tariffs or other trade measures the hardest.

  • Spain, a vocal advocate of the EV tariffs, accounts for half of the EU's more than USD 3 billion in pork exports to China (Reuters).
  • France, the main backer of the EV tariffs, recently secured new market access for pork byproduct exports to China, worth ~USD 300 million.
  • The Netherlands, under rising pressure from the US to cut China's access to semiconductor equipment, sold USD 620 million in pork to China last year.
  • Denmark, also a major pork supplier, may be an unintentional casualty.

What's next: MofCom can drag out the investigation for up to 18 months, but provisional tariffs can also be announced after 60 days, by mid-August.

  • We expect Beijing to wait until the EU finalizes its EV tariffs – by mid-October at the latest – before applying pork tariffs.

The bigger picture: Beijing doesn't want to spark a trade war.

  • While this is unlikely to be the last of Beijing's retaliatory moves, we expect future action to remain similarly targeted, and to provide plenty of off-ramps for the EU to reconsider.
sources

Already a subscriber? Log in.

On Monday, China's commerce ministry (MofCom) initiated an anti-dumping investigation into EU pork and pork byproducts.
Officially, the investigation was requested by the China Animal Agriculture Association (CAAA), a government-affiliated industry association that includes all of China's largest pi...