Auto industry underlines conditional nature of today’s Council decision on free trade agreement with South Korea
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Brussels, 16 September 2010 – The European automobile industry, in
response to the Council decision today to give its conditional go-ahead
to the free trade agreement with South Korea, reiterates that further
improvements remain necessary to ensure a fairer and more balanced deal.
ACEA underlines that the Council has made the provisional application of
the trade agreement conditional to:
· The European Parliament’s consent;
· Related safeguard regulation being into force;
· The assurance that the introduction of CO2 regulation for cars in
South Korea will not impose an unfair burden on EU exporters;
· The impact of the discussions between the United States and Korea on
their trade agreement;
The Council also agreed on the importance of an effective safeguard which
provides protection in the case of sudden surges of imports in sensitive
sectors, including small cars.
“We call on the European Commission, EU Member States and the European
Parliament to respect these significant points”, said Ivan Hodac,
Secretary General of ACEA. The free trade agreement in its current form
will lead to undue pressure on manufacturing levels in Europe. The
safeguard regulation, in particular, must be defined in such a way that
its application is feasible and effective. The EU must also keep a close
watch on whether improvements will be granted to the United States, and
if so, automatically apply these also for the EU.
In line with the recent vote in the European Parliament, the safeguard
mechanisms should cover the so-called duty drawback arrangements granted
to South Korea and this from the very moment that the agreement enters
into force. With the duty drawback system, South Korean manufacturers
will maintain an unfair competitive advantage over their European
competitors because they can purchase components from neighbouring
countries and, subsequently, claim the import duties back when exporting
the whole vehicle to the EU. This, in fact, translates into an export
subsidy.
It would be the first time that the EU agrees to such a definite
provision in an FTA, thereby setting a worrying precedent in view of
upcoming trade agreements with other major economic forces. ACEA asks
that the duty drawback clause, if at all granted, be at least limited in
time.
A background dossier on all points in the FTA is available at www.acea.be
About ACEA
The European automotive industry is key to the strength and
competitiveness of Europe. The ACEA members are BMW Group, DAF Trucks,
Daimler, FIAT Group, Ford of Europe, General Motors Europe, Jaguar Land
Rover, MAN Nutzfahrzeuge, Porsche, PSA Peugeot Citroën, Renault Group,
Scania, Toyota Motor Europe, Volkswagen Group, Volvo Cars, Volvo Group.
They provide direct employment to more than 2.3 million people and
indirectly support another 10 million jobs. Annually, ACEA members
invest over €26 billion in R&D, or 5% of turnover.
For further information, please contact Sigrid de Vries, Director
Communications ACEA +32 2 738 73 45 or sv@acea.be
Please also visit www.acea.be
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