Skip to main content
Trade
News article9 August 2023BrusselsDirectorate-General for Trade1 min read

EU renews duties on dumped metal compound from China, helping increase sustainability and reduce dependence on imports of critical raw material

The European Commission has renewed anti-dumping duties on imports of tungsten carbide from China for another five years, following an investigation which showed that EU industry would sustain injury from dumped imports if the measures were to lapse.

In place since the 1990s, the EU’s anti-dumping measures on tungsten carbide from China raised the prices of the compound to levels which made the recovery of scrap financially interesting for the EU industry and encouraged innovation of the recycling process.

As a result, EU producers have become more sustainable, following a pattern of circular economy embedded the European Green Deal. At the same, EU producers reduced their consumption of tungsten, the critical raw material needed to make tungsten carbide, and therefore reduced the Union’s dependency on tungsten imports, in line with the objectives of the recent proposal for the European Critical Raw Materials Act.

Tungsten carbide is needed to make hard metal tools which are used in the construction, mining, automotive and defence industries. The EU tungsten carbide industry currently employs over 1,000 people and is worth around EUR 500 million.

For more information

Renewed anti-dumping measures on tungsten carbide from China

Previous anti-dumping measures on tungsten carbide from China

EU Trade Defence Policy

Details

Publication date
9 August 2023
Author
Directorate-General for Trade
Location
Brussels
Country or region
  • China
Trade topics
  • Anti-dumping
  • Trade defence