China accuses Canada of protectionism over 100% tariffs on electric vehicles
BEIJING (AP) — China on Tuesday accused Canada of protectionism after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government imposed a 100% tariff on imports of Chinese-made electric vehicles, matching U.S. duties on Chinese EVs.
The Chinese Commerce Ministry said the tariffs would disrupt the stability of global industrial and supply chains, severely impact China-Canada economic and trade ties and damage the interests of enterprises in both countries.
“China is strongly dissatisfied and firmly opposes this,” it said in a statement.
“Canada claims it supports free trade and the multilateral trading system based on (World Trade Organization) rules, but it blatantly violated WTO rules and announced it will take unilateral tariff measures by blindly following individual countries. It is typical trade protectionism,” it added.
<bsp-audio-player class=«HTML5AudioPlayerB» data-hours-abbreviation=«hr» data-minutes-abbreviation=«min»> </bsp-audio-player>AP AUDIO: China accuses Canada of protectionism over 100% tariffs on electric vehicles
AP correspondent Haya Panjwani reports China accuses Canada of protectionism over 100% tariffs on electric vehicles.
The ministry urged Canada to “immediately correct its wrong practices” and said that Beijing would take any necessary measures to defend the rights and interests of Chinese companies.
Canada’s announcement came after encouragement by U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan during a meeting with Trudeau and Cabinet ministers on Sunday. Sullivan began his first visit to Beijing on Tuesday.
Chinese officials are likely to raise concerns about the American tariffs with Sullivan as Beijing continues to repair its economy, which was hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. In May, U.S. President Joe Biden