“Actually in France, this market is quite developed and Huawei and Alcatel can coexist, just like in China,” Mr. Hu said at a hotel in the touristy Trocadéro neighborhood. “I don’t want there to be a misunderstanding. We are not here to replace Alcatel. It would be like saying Alcatel is coming to China to replace Huawei.”
A month later, on May 17, the European trade commissioner, Karel De Gucht, accused Huawei and another Chinese equipment maker, ZTE, of violating anti-dumping and subsidies laws of the European Union. Mr. De Gucht, a Belgian lawyer, called for negotiations between the Union and China to avoid an investigation that could lead to punitive customs duties.
Now the two sides appear set to meet in an attempt to work out their differences. China has asked that Mr. De Gucht hold an informal meeting with its vice commerce minister, Zhong Shan, in Brussels on Monday, China’s Ministry of Commerce and an E.U. trade spokesman confirmed on Sunday.
“It appears that the commission is using the telecom equipment situation as some kind of a stick and bargaining chip against China,” said Stuart Newman, an anti-dumping expert at the Foreign Trade Association, a Brussels group that represents European trade associations.
Mr. Newman said the Europe-China trade relationship had become more difficult over the past two years, fueled by disputes over solar panels and, now, telecom equipment.
The 27-nation Union is China’s biggest trading partner, the destination for Chinese exports worth €289.7 billion, or $377 billion, last year. Last September, Mr. De Gucht opened an anti-dumping investigation into Chinese solar panel makers after receiving a complaint from a European industry association, EU Pro Sun. That investigation is set to conclude later this year.
The stakes in the solar panel dispute dwarf those of the telecom equipment makers. Last year, Chinese exports of solar panels and components to the Union were roughly €21 billion, while shipments of telecom network gear were only about €1 billion, according to European Commission figures.
A meeting Sunday between the Chinese premier, Li Keqiang, and the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, also touched on the trade tensions. Both leaders stressed their desire to resolve the dispute over solar tariffs, which Mr. Li said China sees as being dangerous to the global economy.
“These are measures that will flood into the neighboring countries, and are not useful to anyone,” Mr. Li said.
A person close to the European negotiating team played down the Chinese push for dialogue, saying the country’s trade officials were maneuvering ahead of June 5, when Mr. De Gucht is expected to reveal the level of punitive tariffs that the European Commission intends to impose on Chinese solar panel makers. Serious negotiations with the Chinese will only commence after the commission publishes the customs duties, the person said.
An important legal difference separates the telecom equipment and solar panel cases. For the telecom sector, formal legal proceedings have not yet begun, and an agreement between governments could head them off.
On the solar panel case, anti-dumping and anti-subsidy cases are already well along, greatly limiting the statutory authority of European officials to negotiate. Once the Union announces the preliminary level of anti-dumping duties, then any deal would legally need to take the form of an offer by the Chinese industry, not the Chinese government.
Hakan Wranne, an analyst at Swedbank in Stockholm, said Mr. De Gucht’s accusations that the Chinese firms were violating anti-dumping and subsidies laws suggested that the commissioner believed he had a good case against Huawei and ZTE. “I don’t think he would be making these types of claims unless he felt he had solid evidence,” Mr. Wranne said.
But a prosecution of the Chinese telecom equipment makers could cost European rivals in terms of lost revenue in China, where the state-owned mobile operators are preparing for what may be multibillion-euro contracts to build the country’s first fourth-generation high-speed networks.
Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/27/technology/chinese-telecom-companies-caught-in-middle-of-trade-dispute.html?partner=rss&emc=rss