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Industry chief Stephane Sejourne, meanwhile, is set to advocate the broader use of the foreign subsidies regulation (FSR). The tool has been widely used against individual companies, but the French commissioner is said to support using the tool in a much broader, sector-focused way to combat perceived market distortions by subsidised Chinese firms.
Both of those officials support the more widespread use of safeguard measures, seen as emergency tools that can place tariffs or quotas in the case of surges in imports. With an eye on the chemicals and machinery sectors, there is the view that time spent on anti-dumping and anti-subsidy probes could be halved to around six months through the use of safeguards.

At the heart of their concerns is that Europe’s industrial base could be decimated within years due to the breakneck growth of Chinese competitors, which are out-competing their European rivals on price and often quality in China, Europe and in third markets around the world.

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