When China joined the WTO in 2001, it was written into the terms of the deal that member states could treat it as a non-market economy for 15 years.
The deadline passed late last year, but the EU has nevertheless opted to preserve tough rules that protect it from cheap Chinese products flooding its markets.
China today asked the WTO to establish a panel to rule on its demand that the EU stop using a "surrogate country" system -- judging the price of Chinese goods against a third country's -- to determine whether China is selling its products below market prices.
The request to the WTO came after China last December filed initial disputes against the EU and the United States over the issue, which are being handled separately in the WTO system.
Also Read
After the parties failed to reach an agreement during WTO-led consultations, the door was left open for China to ask the WTO to create a panel of experts to review the case.
Not surprisingly, the EU opposed the request, according to a source close to the WTO.
WTO's panels of independent trade and legal experts usually take several months to render their decisions.
They can authorise retaliatory trade measures if they rule in favour of a plaintiff.
The WTO polices global trade accords in an effort to ensure a level playing field for its 164 member economies.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content