China, EU 'goodwill' voiced in solar row
Updated: 2013-06-22 01:33
By DING QINGFEN and LI JIABAO (China Daily)
|
||||||||
Both sides have the willingness and sincerity to deal with issue: minister
China and the European Union have expressed "goodwill" for negotiating a settlement of their dispute over China's solar panel exports, Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng said on Friday.
Gao said the two sides have a consensus that a settlement will have to be reasonable and acceptable to each other.
The European Commission accuses China of dumping solar panels on the EU at below production cost. On June 4, it announced the imposition of 11.8 percent punitive tariffs on imports from China for two months starting from June 6, despite 18 of the 27 EU member states, including Germany, opposing the move.
"Both China and the EU have willingness and sincerity to appropriately deal with the solar panel case through negotiations, and we are also striving for this," Gao said.
He was speaking during a joint press briefing with EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht after the annual bilateral China-EU trade and investment meeting in Beijing.
"We expect the two sides to take a pragmatic and flexible approach in the following rounds of talks, enhancing coordination and cooperation in a bid to reach an agreement that is mutually beneficial, reasonable and mutually acceptable," Gao said.
Some European countries, led by Germany, are opposed to the commission's imposition of duties, with Sweden, Denmark and the Netherlands last week urging De Gucht to find a diplomatic solution with China to avoid a tit-for-tat trade war.
But De Gucht went ahead with tariffs at 11.8 percent, although he softened his earlier plan to levy punitive tariffs averaging 47 percent, leaving a window for the two sides to reach a solution through negotiations by early August.
The negotiations with China are expected to include setting a minimum price at which Chinese solar panel manufacturers can sell in the EU.
"During past days, both China and the EU have been holding communication, contact and consultation at all levels ... the bilateral talks are positive and constructive," Gao said.
China expects to end the negotiations and agree on a deal over the price by August 6, Gao added.
- Obama nominates new FBI director
- Lucky winners get 'best jobs'
- 'Americans In China' fashion show
- In with old and in with new
- Pact to boost cross-Straits service trade
- Foreigners in Tianjin find a fresh goal to aim for
- LeBron leads Heat to second straight title
- Singapore haze at worst yet, schools shut
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Passing down the business |
Pumping up power of consumption |
From China with love and care |
From the classroom to the boardroom |
Schools open overseas campus |
Domestic power of new energy |
Today's Top News
Agreement heralds further cross-Straits service trade
'Goodwill' voiced in solar row
US files charges against Snowden
Investment in US to create jobs
Economic confidence levels drop
Major source for Beijing water plan 'polluted'
Foreigners in Tianjin find a fresh goal to aim for
Jet exporter to spread wings abroad
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |