Beijing yesterday criticized Canada's move to launch a dual
probe into oil and gas well casings from China.
The Canadian government is going ahead with its anti-dumping and
countervailing investigation into Chinese carbon or alloy steel oil
and gas well casings when the complaint lacks legal and factual
evidence, said Wang Xinpei, Ministry of Commerce spokesperson.
Wang said Canada is regarding China as a "non-market economy" in
the case, which could put it at a disadvantage. Canada will compare
China's costs with those of other non-market economies to determine
whether there is dumping.
The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) kicked off a dual
investigation into oil and gas well casings from China on Monday
after a complaint was filed by TenarisAlgomaTubes Inc of
Calgary.
The company claimed certain imports from China "are harming
Canadian production by causing lost sales, price erosion, price
suppression, lost revenues, reduced profitability, lost employment,
underutilization of capacity and impairment to make future
investments".
Wang said Canada was the first country to launch a
countervailing investigation into products made in China in 2004
and it has since initiated five dual probes into Chinese goods.
"Such frequent countervailing investigations on Chinese products
by the Canadian government are conveying the wrong message to its
industry and other World Trade Organization members," Wang said.
"And it is expected to have a negative impact on the development of
bilateral trade."
China urges the Canadian government to conduct trade remedy
investigations that abide by international trade rules and its law,
Wang said.
He said China reserves the right to seek WTO dispute
settlement.
The Canadian International Trade Tribunal is expected to make a
decision on whether the imports are harming Canadian producers on
October 12. The CBSA will investigate whether Chinese products are
being dumped or subsidized and will make a decision by November
9.
Wang also criticized the US government for launching
investigations into Chinese products such as coated paper and steel
pipes from November to July. The US probes affect 635 firms and
70,000 jobs in China with total exports of US$860 million.
(China Daily August 17, 2007)