Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Thursday, March 25, 2004
China triggers anti-dumping measures on chemical imports
China has started to collect import cash deposits on a chemical material made in Japan, the United States, Iran, Malaysia, Mexico and Taiwan province as temporary anti-dumping measures, the Ministry of Commerce said Thursday.
China has started to collect import cash deposits on a chemical material made in Japan, the United States, Iran, Malaysia, Mexico and Taiwan province as temporary anti-dumping measures, the Ministry of Commerce said Thursday.
The products, monoethanolamine and diethanolamine, are used in the pharmaceutical, fabric and chemical industries.
The ministry's primary verdict issued on Thursday affirmed that dumping of such goods did exist and caused substantial damage to domestic industries.
The ministry initiated the case last May, targeting such imports from Japan, the United States, Iran, Malaysia, Mexico, Germany and Taiwan province.
But the verdict did not impose cash deposits on imports from Germany, saying that was less than three percent of the total imports and could be ignored.