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A worker checks coiled aluminium plates at a plant in Shandong province, eastern China. Photo: ImagineChina

China urges US to act ‘prudently’ in aluminium foil dispute

Commerce ministry says Washington ignored Chinese offers to cooperate when it ruled on anti-dumping duties

Trade

China urged the US government on Thursday to act “prudently” to avoid damaging economic relations between the two countries, in a strongly worded response to Washington’s preliminary decision to slap anti-dumping duties on Chinese aluminium foil.

In a statement posted on its Wechat account, the Ministry of Commerce said the United States had ignored offers of cooperation from the government and Chinese companies in making its ruling this week.

The statement, attributed to Wang Hejun, head of the commerce ministry’s trade remedy and investigation bureau, was more strongly worded than typical responses to trade disputes with the United States.

A worker checks aluminium ingots for export at the port of Qingdao in Shandong province. Photo: Reuters

The statement said there were no grounds to accuse China’s downstream aluminium companies of benefiting from subsidies.

Washington has previously made similar claims about China’s banking sector, unreasonably labelling Chinese commercial banks as public institutions, the statement also said.

The Wechat post followed news on Wednesday that China’s top foil producers are preparing to launch a legal challenge to a US Commerce Department ruling that would slap anti-dumping duties of 16.56 per cent to 80.97 per cent on Chinese aluminium foil imports.

China’s government said it was highly concerned about the action the United States is taking to provide relief to its aluminium industry.

Washington is also investigating whether to curb aluminium imports from China under the rarely used Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, which allows restrictions on imports for reasons of national security.

US President Donald Trump’s administration is conducting a separate investigation into steel imports from China.

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