China Hits EU Pork With up to 62 Percent Tariff, Escalating Trade Dispute

China has intensified its trade clash with Europe by slapping anti-dumping duties of up to 62.4 percent on European Union pork, in a move widely seen as retaliation for Brussels’s tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles.
The Commerce Ministry said on Sept. 5 it had reached a preliminary finding that EU pork and pig by-products are being dumped on the Chinese market, causing “material injury” to domestic producers. Provisional duties ranging from 15.6 to 62.4 percent will take effect on Sept. 10, with the investigation now extended until mid-December.
Beijing opened the pork probe in June 2024, just days after the EU imposed provisional tariffs on China-made electric vehicles (EVs), concluding after an eight-month investigation that Chinese EVs benefit from “unfair subsidization” and pose “a threat of economic injury” to European manufacturers. The following month, China hit European brandy imports—particularly French cognac—with anti-dumping duties, though major producers were later exempted…. 

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