BEIJING, Nov. 6 (Xinhua) -- China's Ministry of
Commerce (MOC) has decided to reevaluate the necessity of maintaining
anti-dumping duties imposed four years ago on coated art paper imported from the
Republic of Korea and Japan.
The review was launched Monday at the request of
Japan's Oji Paper Co. Ltd., which asserted that its alleged dumping range had
weakened since an anti-dumping duty of 56 percent was levied on Aug. 6, 2003.
An MOC statement said the re-examination targeted
coated art paper imports from Oct. 1, 2006, to Sept. 30, 2007, and would
determine their normal value and exports prices so as to estimate the dumping
ranges.
Parties concerned must submit written submissions
complete with evidence within 20 days since the beginning of the review.
A special questionnaire will be distributed to
relevant parties who must reply with 37 days of its arrival. If necessary,
parties concerned may submit a written request for hearings. MOC investigators
will also carry out field surveys.
In its first anti-dumping investigation after joining
the World Trade Organization, the Chinese government imposed temporary
anti-dumping tariffs on coated art paper imported from the United States, the
ROK and Japan on Nov. 26, 2002.
Duties of 5.58 percent to 31.09 percent were imposed
on at least six major ROK paper makers, including Hansol, Shinho, Shinmoorim,
Hankuk, Kye Sung and Moorim. Japan's Nippon Paper Industries was subject to an
import duty of 23.89 percent import duty and Oji Paper 56.52 percent.
The investigation was originally launched on the
application of four local paper manufacturers -- East Gold Paper, Shandong
Quanlin Paper, Jiangnan Paper Mill and Wanhao Paper Group -- which accounted for
65.6 percent of the country's total output of coated art paper in 2000 and 56.6
percent 2001.
Nine months later, a formal verdict was delivered,
requiring importers of the paper originating from the ROK and Japan to pay duty
ranging from four to 71 percent. But the investigations against imports from the
United States and Finland were dropped.
Statistics from the Paper Chapter of the All-China
Federation of Industry and Commerce show China's coated art paper output
rocketed from 180,000 tons in 1998 to 3.8 million tons last year, with 850,000
tons exported globally.
In September, China filed its first World Trade
Organization complaint against Washington in five years on the anti-dumping
duties ranging from 23.19 percent to 99.65 percent that the United States had
planned to impose on the coated paper imports from China that were mainly used
for publishing color pictorials, advertisements and packaging.