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Steel trade issues should not be linked to MES: Chinese mission
 
Posting Date:[2015-12-31]

BRUSSELS, Dec. 24 (Xinhua) -- Steel trade issues should not be linked to Market Economy Status (MES) and should not be used as an excuse to continue discriminatory and unfair practices, the spokesperson of the Chinese Mission to the European Union (EU) has said recently.

At present, the global steel industry in general is facing overcapacity problems, the spokesperson said, and the root causes lie in the weak recovery of the global economy and a lack of effective demand for steel.

These are the main contributors to the sharp fall of global steel prices, the spokesperson said, noting the EU, the United States, Latin America and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) all face this problem, and China is no exception.

To effectively deal with this issue, the Chinese government has made unremitting efforts in recent years to accelerate economic restructuring.

In October 2013, the Chinese government issued guidance "on resolving the conflict of serious excess capacity," clearly prioritizing three specific tasks -- strict control of new capacity, complete elimination of outmoded capacity, and reduction of 80 million tons of steel production capacity by the end of 2017.

The government work reports both in 2014 and 2015 focused on resolving overcapacity as an integral part of structural adjustment.

Through relentless efforts, China has succeeded in controlling steel overcapacity. During the "Twelfth Five-Year Plan" period (2011-2015), China's steel industry has cut its capacity by 77.8 million tons, while investment in iron and steel fixed assets this year fell by 12.4 percent.

Moreover, fierce market competition and pressure on the environment also prompted the automatic exit of a large quantity of steel production capacity, both in the private sector and state-owned enterprises.

Overall, the growth of Chinese steel production has basically halted. However, China will continue to take measures to address overcapacity.

At an Extraordinary Competitiveness Council meeting last month, some EU member states reportedly urged the European Commission to adopt trade remedy measures to protect the European steel industry that has been suffering from global overcapacity.

Recently, some European and American iron and steel associations voiced their opposition to the EU's automatic granting China MES in 2016, claiming that the Chinese steel industry is the predominant global contributor to the problem.

The Mission of China to the EU said steel trade problems would be better resolved through dialogue, communication and cooperation between industries.

"China is willing to work together with other countries to actively improve the international trade environment and to encourage industries to collaborate in order to achieve shared and win-win growth," it said.
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