The European Union will on Friday begin imposing anti-dumping measures on some Chinese solar panels whose manufacturers rejected an amicable settlement.
The two-year measures will enter into force on Friday December 6, said the EU Commission, and will apply to those panels produced by Chinese manufacturers who rejected a deal to diffuse a brewing trade war.
The Commission said in a statement that "the final anti-dumping and anti-subsidy duty rates will apply only to those exports from China which do not meet the conditions set out in the undertaking."
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Inexpensive Chinese-made solar panels have flooded the European market in recent years, sparking complaints from European manufacturers.
This triggered the EU's biggest-ever trade probe covering a market worth some 21 billion euros (USD 28.5 billion) initially, although this has since fallen dramatically due to overcapacity and tumbling demand.