BRUSSELS — The European Commission is cracking down on two Chinese companies,
airport scanner maker Nuctech and e-commerce giant Temu, that are suspected of
unfairly penetrating the EU market with the help of state subsidies.
The EU executive opened an in-depth probe into Nuctech under its Foreign
Subsidies Regulation on Thursday, a year and a half after initial inspections at
the company’s premises in Poland and the Netherlands.
“The Commission has preliminary concerns that Nuctech may have been granted
foreign subsidies that could distort the EU internal market,” the EU executive
said in a press release.
Nuctech is a provider of threat detection systems including security and
inspection scanners for airports, ports, or customs points in railways or roads
located at borders, as well as the provision of related services.
EU officials worry that Nuctech may have received unfair support from China in
tender contracts, prices and conditions that can’t be reasonably matched by
other market players in the EU.
“We want a level playing field on the market for such [threat detection]
systems, keeping fair opportunities for competitors, customers such as border
authorities,” Executive Vice President Teresa Ribera said in a statement, noting
that this is the first in-depth investigation launched by the Commission on its
own initiative under the FSR regime.
Nuctech may need to offer commitments to address the Commission’s concerns at
the end of the in-depth probe, which can also end in “redressive measures” or
with a non-objection decision.
The FSR is aimed at making sure that companies operating in the EU market do so
without receiving unfair support from foreign governments. In its first two
years of enforcement, it has come under criticism for being cumbersome on
companies and not delivering fast results.
In a statement, Nuctech acknowledged the Commission’s decision to open an
in-depth investigation. “We respect the Commission’s role in ensuring fair and
transparent market conditions within the European Union,” the company said.
It said it would cooperate with the investigation: “We trust in the integrity
and impartiality of the process and hope our actions will be evaluated on their
merits.”
TEMU RAIDED
In a separate FSR probe, the Commission also made an unannounced inspection of
Chinese e-commerce platform Temu.
“We can confirm that the Commission has carried out an unannounced inspection at
the premises of a company active in the e-commerce sector in the EU, under the
Foreign Subsidies Regulation,” an EU executive spokesperson said in an emailed
statement on Thursday.
Temu’s Europe headquarters in Ireland were dawn-raided last week, a person
familiar with Chinese business told POLITICO. Mlex first reported on the raids
on Wednesday.
The platform has faced increased scrutiny in Brussels and across the EU. Most
recently, it was accused of breaching the EU’s Digital Services Act by selling
unsafe products, such as toys. The platform has also faced scrutiny around how
it protects minors and uses age verification.
Temu did not respond to a request for comment.
Tag - Foreign subsidies
Brussels and Beijing got 99 problems — but an upcoming high-level summit ain’t
gonna solve a single one.
When EU leaders Ursula von der Leyen and António Costa travel to China in two
weeks, they will have several concerns in their travel bags — from market access
to China’s chokehold over strategic raw materials. America’s lurch into
protectionism under President Donald Trump is disturbing trade flows, meanwhile,
making it harder to resolve those thorny issues.
Von der Leyen reeled off a litany of political and economic complaints on
Tuesday — from China’s state-subsidized overproduction to price gouging,
“systematic” discrimination against foreign companies, export restrictions and
more — setting the tone for a contentious summit.
“China has an entirely different system,” she said in an address to European
lawmakers. The country has “unique instruments at its disposal to play outside
the rules,” allowing it “to flood global markets with subsidized overcapacity —
not just to boost its own industries, but to choke international competition.”
And the pain points are multiplying: The latest is a move by Beijing to restrict
government purchases of EU medical devices, in retaliation for a similar ban on
Chinese medical equipment imposed by Brussels last month. Those come on top of a
lingering dispute over the EU’s imposition of duties on Chinese-made electric
vehicles last year and retaliatory duties slapped by Beijing on European liquor.
Despite the milestone it’s supposed to celebrate — the 50th anniversary of
EU-China diplomatic ties — the summit is shaping up to be more symbolic than
substantive. With both sides entangled in trade spats, expectations are at a new
low. Officials are bracing for a summit that’s going to be more about saving
face than achieving concrete results.
While Brussels and Beijing usually alternate as summit hosts, Chinese President
Xi Jinping snubbed EU leaders earlier this year by declining an invitation to
come to Brussels.
The summit — originally planned to run for two days — will now only take place
on July 24 in Beijing. It’s still unlikely that Xi will attend the gathering,
which will be chaired by Premier Li Qiang, China’s second-ranked leader. Xi
might yet meet bilaterally with von der Leyen and Costa, but that is TBC.
“Not only doesn’t he [Xi] show up in Brussels, he doesn’t even attend in Beijing
… it’s so embarrassing, I would not take it over my dead body, I swear,” said
Alicia García-Herrero, chief economist for Asia-Pacific at French investment
bank Natixis and a senior fellow at Bruegel, a think tank.
“As a European I would say: Do not go, do not accept this shit.”
MOOD SHIFT
What’s more, the EU and the U.S. are scrambling to seal a provisional trade deal
ahead of Trump’s (newly postponed) deadline to reimpose sweeping tariffs on Aug.
1. Should that happen before the EU-China summit, it’s bound to spell further
trouble for the meeting.
“If the EU and the U.S. are going to seal a similar deal to [the deal the U.S.
sealed with the U.K.], other trading partners will be put at a disadvantage and
China will retaliate,” said a person from the Chinese business sector who was
granted anonymity to speak candidly.
In an attempt to find common ground with Trump, von der Leyen has hardened her
tone toward Beijing, accusing China at a G7 summit in Canada last month of
“weaponizing” its leading position in producing and refining critical raw
materials.
Unsurprisingly, those comments didn’t land well.
Guo Jiakun, spokesperson for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, hit back at
von der Leyen’s remarks on raw materials. Beijing “fully considered the
reasonable needs and concerns of various countries, and reviewed export license
applications in accordance with laws and regulations,” Guo said.
Von der Leyen’s remarks were “quite hawkish and unsettling,” said the person
from the Chinese business sector quoted above.
“If [von der Leyen] was trying to charm Trump, she may have done so at the cost
of credibility — reminding China that the EU can talk cooperation with China one
day and posture like a Cold Warrior the next,” they added.
In short: The mood is sour — at a time when neither side, and especially the EU,
can afford it.
In a sign of its concerns over trade imbalances with China, Brussels launched a
tool in April to monitor the diversion of trade flows toward the bloc after
Trump imposed tariffs of up to 145 percent on Chinese goods (later lowered to 30
percent). While it’s too early to identify a clear trend, Chinese exports to
Europe are sharply up in sectors including chemicals, textiles and machinery.
HUGE UNCERTAINTY
When the summit was announced — days before Trump’s inauguration in January —
the EU struck an amicable tone, broadcasting its willingness to rekindle its
relationship with China amid uneasy transatlantic relations.
Nearly six months on, however, there has been scant progress toward resolving
bilateral disputes. And the Chinese commerce ministry has warned “any country”
against sealing trade deals with the U.S. that “undermine Chinese interests.”
“The situation is not good. The European Union has 70 percent of its exports to
the United States aimed at new tariffs. We are facing trade diversion because of
some of the actions being taken, and there’s a huge uncertainty in the trade
world,” Maria Martin-Prat De Abreu, a senior official at the Commission’s trade
department who is in charge of the EU’s China policy, told an event last month.
On top of rifts over electric vehicles, medical devices, spirits and pork, China
has imposed — as part of its retaliation against Washington — additional
controls on exports of rare earths. Those are inevitably hitting EU countries as
well.
Although EU trade chief Maroš Šefčovič has managed to negotiate faster
permitting procedures for European companies, industry continues to sound the
alarm over threats to supply chains for the manufacture of everything from
smartphones to car engines. China provides almost 99 percent of the EU’s supply
of the 17 rare earths.
In a reflection of the frosty relations between Brussels and Beijing, the two
sides don’t plan to issue a joint statement summing up their mutual commitments,
departing from the usual practice in international diplomacy.
The EU and China are instead looking at publishing a mere press release, two EU
officials said, just like they did in 2023.
“There’s a huge amount of work that needs to be done between now and the
summit,” said Martin-Prat De Abreu, adding that Brussels and Beijing were
focusing on both “general, structural issues” and more specific issues such as
market access for agricultural goods and cosmetics. “It is very difficult,” she
added.
What’s more, the usual high-level trade dialogue that typically precedes the
summit won’t be held due to the lack of progress on trade issues, according to a
person from the Chinese business sector and a European official. And Brussels is
refusing to sign a joint declaration on climate action unless China pledges
greater efforts to slash its greenhouse gas emissions, Climate Commissioner
Wopke Hoekstra told the Financial Times.
“It’s not that we shut the door,” a third EU official said. “It’s more that we
never opened it. We’re sending a signal to both China and the United States.”
This story has been updated.