Kuwait Times

BMW: EU probe into China EV subsidies against free trade

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FRANKFURT: The chief executive of German luxury carmaker BMW on Wednesday warned the European Union’s investigat­ion into Chinese electric car subsidies runs counter to free trade. The EU launched the inquiry last year, fearing that Chinese subsidies are a threat to Europe’s own vast automotive industry.

The move enraged Beijing, sparking fears of a trade war between the bloc and the world’s second-biggest economy. Oliver Zipse—CEO of BMW, which has major investment­s in China, the world’s biggest car market—said that the Munich-based group “always strives for free trade”.

“What we are experienci­ng today with the anti-subsidy investigat­ion against China is exactly the opposite of what we expect,” he said during a call after the group reported falling profits in the first quarter. It was unlikely BMW’s warnings would stop the EU imposing additional tariffs on Chinese car manufactur­ers, he said, but added that he hoped any such step would be temporary.

“I would warn against doing something like that permanentl­y—it would do much more damage to German industry,” he said.

He pointed out many Chinese imports to Europe are made by non-Chinese manufactur­ers with operations in the country, including German companies. “You see how quickly you can shoot yourself in the foot,” he said. According to NGO Transport & Environmen­t, nearly 20 percent of all electric cars sold across the EU last year were built in China—but more than half of those were made by Western carmakers. BMW has a major production base in Shenyang, where it manufactur­es cars through a joint venture.

Zipse’s comments came as the BMW group, which also makes Mini and RollsRoyce cars, reported first-quarter net profit dropped 19 percent year-on-year to 2.95 billion euros ($3.17 billion) due to higher costs. Sales slipped 0.6 percent to 36.6 billion euros.

In China the group sold almost 183,000 BMW brand vehicles, down 4.1 percent from a year earlier.

Germany’s auto giants in particular have invested heavily in China in recent decades. They were already facing problems due to fierce local competitio­n, and the fallout from the EU probe amounts to an extra headache. If the EU concludes there are unfair practices, it could impose tariffs on Chinese car manufactur­ers above the standard 10 percent EU rate, but Brussels could also decide to do nothing.

The probe is one of several state aid investigat­ions directed at China by the bloc in recent times, with the EU accusing Beijing of flooding Europe with subsidized goods.

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