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- China, EU Seek Compromise In EV Trade Dispute

China and the European Union are trying to cool things down over their ongoing fight about Chinese-made electric cars entering Europe. Instead of escalating the issue, both sides now seem to be moving towards a compromise.
On Monday, the EU released a new guideline explaining how Chinese EV makers can continue exporting cars to Europe by offering minimum prices for their vehicles.
This follows last year’s decision by the EU to impose tariffs of up to 35.3% on Chinese EVs, after claiming these cars were sold too cheaply because of heavy government subsidies.

Instead of slapping on high taxes, Chinese brands can agree to sell their EVs above certain minimum prices. The EU says this is necessary because not all EVs are the same, and prices need to reflect different models and specs.
It also helps that Chinese carmakers planning to build factories or invest in Europe will get extra consideration.
China, for its part, welcomed the move. Its commerce ministry said this could help keep China-EU trade relations healthy and avoid breaking global trade rules. Industry groups also see it as a softer landing compared to outright trade penalties.

Experts say this is a balancing act for Europe. On one hand, European carmakers are worried about losing market share to cheaper Chinese EVs.
On the other, Europe still depends heavily on China for things like batteries, rare earth materials, and computer chips. Cutting ties completely just isn’t realistic.
The US took a much tougher stance last year, slapping a 100% tariff on Chinese EVs, which basically shut them out of the market. Europe can’t afford to do that. It needs affordable electric cars to hit its climate targets, including cutting emissions by 55% by 2030.
And Chinese cars are already making their presence felt. Imports of electric cars into Europe have exploded over the past few years, jumping from US$1.6 billion in 2020 to US$11.5 billion in 2023.
China-made cars now account for about 6% of all car sales in the EU, up from 5% a year earlier.

European brands still dominate the market, but Chinese automakers are catching up fast. Analysts think their share could double to around 10% by the end of the decade.
For now, it looks like both China and the EU are choosing compromise over confrontation while keeping competition alive without turning the EV race into a full-blown trade war.
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Anis
Previously in banking and e commerce before she realized nothing makes her happier than a revving engine and gleaming tyres........
