Chinese probe to EU pork dumping still ongoing, no measures yet

Published 2025년 3월 5일

Tridge summary

In June 2024, China initiated an investigation into alleged dumping of EU pork, a process that could last until December 2025 with possible interim measures. Despite potential concerns, the Dutch Central Organisation for the Meat Sector remains confident, asserting that there is no dumping and that the investigation will verify this. Meanwhile, pork exports from Europe to China have returned to normal after a surge due to African Swine Fever, with exports now focusing on products that are less common in Europe but valued in China.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

In June 2024, China announced the launch of an investigation into alleged dumping of EU pork on the Chinese market. While no measures have yet been taken, the investigation is still ongoing. That confirmation was given by the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs. A ministry spokesperson confirmed to Pig Progress that regular dumping probes normally tend to last a year. Depending on the outcomes of the investigation, definitive measures might follow in June. An entirely different scenario, however, is equally likely: that the investigation period will be extended until December 2025 at the latest. It isn’t ruled out that China may take interim measures. That, however, has not happened yet, even though European slaughterhouses have been preparing for steps that China might take. In a response, the Dutch Central Organisation for the Meat Sector (COV) said it was “confident” about the outcome of the Chinese probe. Jort Heijmans, communication manager, said, “As we have ...

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