Six WTO members including China, have raised concerns over India's anti-dumping cases in the steel sector.
The issues were raised during the meeting of the Committee on Anti-dumping (AD) practices in Geneva.
China has stated that "it was concerned about recent Indian practices, noting that 18 AD investigations had been initiated against Chinese imports in 2016 alone," a Geneva- based trade official said.
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Japan and Ukraine also questioned several aspects of India's investigation into Japanese cold-rolled steel which resulted in a preliminary determination of dumping last August and which they said were inconsistent with WTO rules.
While Qatar said India's ongoing AD investigation on benzene violated several procedural requirements and failed to demonstrate injury to domestic producers of benzene in India, the official said.
The EU said it had serious doubts about India's decision to launch an AD investigation on styrene butadiene rubber and urged it to wrap up the investigation without imposing any measure.
"India said it would pass on the concerns to its capital and respond later," the official said.
Countries initiate anti-dumping probes to determine if the domestic industry has been hurt by a surge in below-cost imports. As a counter-measure, they impose duties under the multilateral WTO regime.
Anti-dumping measures are taken to ensure fair trade and provide a level-playing field to the domestic industry. They are not a measure to restrict imports or cause an unjustified increase in cost of products.
India has initiated maximum anti-dumping cases against below-cost imports from China.
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