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The European Commission has opened a review into tariffs applied on electric cars produced by the Volkswagen group in China, potentially offering the German auto manufacturer respite from anti-subsidy measures.
The EU last year imposed tariffs on EVs made in China at the end of an investigation into subsidies provided to Chinese carmakers and their suppliers.
Volkswagen currently pays 20.7 per cent duty on its Cupra brand manufactured in China in addition to the basic 10 per cent tariff.
In a notice published on Thursday, the commission said it had opened a review into the anti-subsidy tariffs following a proposal from VW Anhui in China, which produces the Cupra model. The commission did not immediately respond to a request for additional comment.
Seat-Cupra said in a statement it had proposed an import quota for the EVs and a minimum import price to the commission. The Spanish mass-market brand, which is part of the Volkswagen group, said a decision on the proposal could take “a few months”.
The move follows pressure from EU member who want the commission to protect producers in the bloc, particularly those making smaller cars that have been undercut by Chinese pricing.
The EU imposed tariffs of up to 45 per cent on Chinese made electric vehicles last October after an investigation found they benefited from cheap loans and land, government grants and other subsidies. The levies are due to last five years.
Several companies have sought an agreement with the commission on minimum price undertakings, under which they would sell cars at higher prices. While that would hurt their competitiveness, such an agreement would let them retain the extra revenue that would have been paid as tariffs.
Four companies — China’s BYD, Geely, SAIC and Tesla of the US — were allocated individual duties that ranged from 7.8 per cent for Tesla to 35.3 per cent for SAIC, according to the level of subsidies they received and whether they provided information to EU investigators.
All other manufacturers that co-operated with Brussels, such as VW, pay 20.7 per cent. Those that did not, pay a 35.3 per cent levy.
The tariffs applied by Brussels on Chinese made EVs had a “significant impact” on Volkswagen, as well as the industry as a whole, Seat-Cupra said.
