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EU countries vote to impose import duties on Chinese EVs if trade stand-off isn’t resolved

  • EU countries have voted for import duties, except Germany and Hungary
  • China-made EVs will be slapped with duties of up to 35.3%
  • Brussels and Beijing have four weeks to come to another arrangement
  • EU markets and China are having a wider trade stand-off

Time 7:40 am, October 7, 2024

Chinese cars will be slapped with import duties by the European Union if a solution to a trade stand-off between Brussels and Beijing isn’t found by the end of October.

The European Commission, which manages trade on behalf of the 27 member countries, welcomed their majority approval of its plan to impose the duties, even though EU automotive powerhouse Germany and Hungary voted against it.

Those duties will come into force on October 31 unless China has a solution to end the standoff.


As the UK is outside of the European Union, Chinese-made EVs won’t be slapped with the import duties.

EVs have become a major clash point in a broader trade dispute over the influence of Chinese government subsidies on European markets – which has forced the undercutting of EU industry prices – and Beijing’s burgeoning exports of green technology to the bloc.

Commission spokesman Olof Gill said that any solution proposed by Beijing would have to be fully compatible with World Trade Organisation rules, remedy ‘the injurious subsidisation’ by China, and be ‘monitorable and enforceable’.


Beijing opposes the duties.

‘China firmly opposes the EU’s unfair, non-compliant and unreasonable protectionist practices in this case, and firmly opposes the EU’s imposition of anti-subsidy duties on Chinese electric vehicles,’ a spokesperson at China’s Commerce Ministry said in comments posted online.

The EU and the Chinese government have four more weeks to negotiate.

Talks have already been held and are due to resume negotiations today (October 7).

The duties on Chinese manufacturers, if applied, would be 17% on cars from BYD, 18.8% on those from Geely and 35.3% for vehicles exported by China’s state-owned SAIC.

Geely has brands including Polestar and Volvo, while SAIC owns Britain’s MG, one of Europe’s bestselling EV brands.

Other EV manufacturers in China including Western companies such as Volkswagen and BMW would be subject to duties of 20.7%.

The commission has an ‘individually calculated’ rate for Tesla of 7.8%.

The retaliatory duties have run into opposition in Germany, which has Europe’s biggest economy and is home to major carmakers.


Germany’s car industry association, the VDA, said the German government sent the ‘right signal’ by voting against them.

Hildegard Muller, who chairs the group, called the decision ‘a further step away from global co-operation’.

She acknowledged that there is a need for negotiations with China and said that they ‘must prevent an escalation – ideally avert the tariffs, so that we don’t risk a trade conflict’.

Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban warned that the EU risks starting an ‘economic cold war’ with China, and he pledged to vote against the duties.

‘This is the worst thing that can happen to Europe… If this continues, the European economy will die,’ he told state radio.

According to the commission, Chinese-built electric cars jumped from 3.9% of the EV market in 2020 to 25% by September 2023, in part by unfairly undercutting EU industry prices.

Brussels says companies in China accomplished that with the help of subsidies across the production chain.

They ran from cheap land for factories from local governments to below-market supplies of lithium and batteries from state-owned enterprises to tax breaks and easy financing from state-controlled banks.

The rapid growth in market share has sparked fears that Chinese cars will eventually threaten the EU’s ability to produce its own green technology to combat climate change, as well as the jobs of 2.5 million car industry workers and 10.3 million more people whose jobs depend indirectly on EV production.

James Batchelor's avatar

James – or Batch as he’s known – started at Car Dealer in 2010, first as the work experience boy, eventually becoming editor in 2013. He worked for Auto Express as editor-at-large and was the face of Carbuyer’s YouTube reviews. In 2020, he went freelance and now writes for a number of national titles and contributes regularly to Car Dealer. In October 2021 he became Car Dealer's associate editor.



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