Beijing has criticised new European tariffs on Chinese steel as "unjustifiable" protectionism, coming just weeks after commerce ministers from G-20 nations pledged to promote free trade.
The European Union said on Friday that it had set definitive anti-dumping duties on certain Chinese steel bars at rates higher than initially proposed, following a 2015 investigation prompted by complaints from European steelmaking association Eurofer.
The announcement drew an immediate response from the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, which said the EU unfairly set new tariffs based on higher profit margin targets for European producers.
Fears of a potential trade war over steel have dominated G-20 talks hosted this year by China. The country — the world's largest producer and consumer of steel — is looking to stage a smooth summit showpiece next month in the eastern city of Hangzhou.
In G-20 public communiques issued this year, member nations have sought to appear unified, pledging to work together to cut steelmaking capacity at a time when prices are at 10-year lows and struggling mills are closing from Wales to China's Hebei province. Prices have plummeted in recent quarters as China's decades-long construction boom cools.
But tensions remain high. European member states and steel producers accuse China of issuing unfair subsidies and flooding global markets at below-market prices.
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Beijing, meanwhile, has denied the accusations and said it is working to cut the supply glut even though the central government's efforts to pare down its enormous steelmaking industry — which produces half the world's steel — have met political resistance.
In a statement on Friday, China's Ministry of Commerce said it regretted Europe's protectionist move after a recently concluded G-20 trade ministers' meeting in Shanghai and called on Brussels to uphold its commitments and avoid sending the wrong signal to the world.
China, the EU's second-largest trading partner, has been seeking market economy status from Brussels, which would make it harder for the bloc to impose new anti-dumping tariffs.
EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said in July at the EU-China Summit in Beijing that he would vigorously defend Europe's steel industry.
He added that China's handling of the steel issue would shape whether or not Brussels would give it the market economy designation. German and British leaders facing mounting pressure from steelmakers back home have also made similar complaints on visits to Beijing.
In China's five-year plan, central leaders have prioritised restructuring heavy industrial sectors and pushed for mergers between steel and coal producers that would shutter scores of inefficient firms and shed hundreds of thousands of workers.
But officials openly acknowledge that local governments and state-owned firms, under political pressure to preserve jobs, have not fully carried out top- level directives from Beijing.