Posted on 28 Apr 2016
In bold move, US Steel launches campaign to stop China imports
US Steel Corp has launched a campaign to prevent imports from China’s
largest steel producers, it said on Tuesday, the boldest step yet by a
US company as a trade brawl with the world’s largest steel producer
escalates.
In a complaint to the US International Trade Commission (ITC), the US
steelmaker called on regulators to investigate dozens of Chinese
producers and their distributors for allegedly conspiring to fix prices,
stealing trade secrets and circumventing trade duties by false
labeling.
Analysts said it could be the most significant development in US steel
trade in a quarter of a century, and will likely ratchet up tension
between China and major steel producing nations, as the global industry
grapples with chronic oversupply and sluggish demand.
The petition, known as Section 337 and used to protect against
intellectual property theft, listed some of China’s top producers,
including Hebei Iron & Steel Group and Anshan Iron and Steel Group
and Shandong Iron & Steel Group Co.
“We have said that we will use every tool available to fight for fair
trade,” said US Steel Corp president and chief executive officer Mario
Longhi in a statement.
“With today’s filing, we continue the work we have pursued through
countervailing and antidumping cases and pushing for increased
enforcement of existing laws.”
It comes after US officials last week warned that China should take
steps to cut excess output or face possible trade action and Australia
said it will impose import duties on certain types of Chinese steel to
protect domestic steelmakers.
China’s Commerce Ministry called steel a “mature product” where
“intellectual property rights disputes do not exist”, and said industry
from both the United States and China should work together to address
overcapacity caused by weak global demand.
“So-called accusations of intellectual property rights violations have
no factual basis. We hope the US International Trade Commission will
reject these accusations,” the ministry said on Wednesday in a statement
on its website.
Even before the ITC makes its ruling, Chinese exporters may curb
shipments fearing retroactive measures, said Michelle Applebaum, analyst
at Steel Market Intelligence.
The ITC has 30 days to decide whether to initiate the case.
It is also investigating allegations of unfair trade practices in the stricken aluminium industry.
Beijing has defended itself against the allegations, saying it has done
enough to reduce steel capacity and blaming global excess and weak
demand for the industry’s woes.
Going it alone
The Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-headquartered company has filed the
complaint on its own and is relying on a clause in US tariff law 337 not
used by the steel industry for almost four decades.
“It’s a bold step,” by US Steel, said Patrick Macrory, director of the
International Trade Center at the International Law Institute in
Washington.
In 1978, eight US firms that used the clause went after 35 Japanese competitors over welded stainless steel pipe imports.
Back then, rather than barring the product from US shores, ITC issued a
“cease and desist” order against 11 companies for engaging in unfair
competitive practices.
An official with a large Chinese state-owned steel mill, who asked not
to be named, told Reuters that foreign steel producers should adapt
rather than try to force China to change.
“The whole world is asking China to cut overcapacity and China is doing
it. But steel mills in those regions are not competitive themselves and
keep pointing their fingers at China,” the official said.