Chinese battery producers,
barely taking a breath after winning a three-year-long infringement
accusation case in the U.S. market, have joined hands in tackling
troubles on cadmium battery exports to the EU market.
Chinese battery
producers and industry experts met here in Guangzhou, capital of
south China's Guangdong Province to deliberate on measures to face the
challenge from the EU's late revision on cadmium batteries, which
requires a further reduction of the cadmium content in portable and
rechargeable batteries from 0.025 percent to 0.002 percent.
"The new directive raises
the requirement ten times, which would augment the production cost a
great deal," said Liu Xu, a senior technical manager with the Tiger
Head Battery Co., whose annual exports tops 3.7 billion batteries.
The company was the chief
respondent to the preliminary report made by the U.S. International
Trade Commission in 2004, which held that Chinese battery
enterprises "constitute an infringement" against two American native
battery enterprises, Energizer Holding Group and EVEREADY.
"Our experience was
to use mechanisms in the World Trade Organization (WTO) in tackling trade barriers. Meanwhile, Chinese
producers should quickly adjust their own production technology and
the material structure to comply with the market changes," said Liu.
The Chinese WTO/TBT
National Notification Authority and Enquiry Center has accepted the
battery producers' application to carry out research on WTO rules,
foreign technical regulations and assessment procedures to assist
the firms in breaking the technical barrier in trade (TBT).
A WTO member can raise its
notion on new technical regulations proposed by another member
country in 60 days.
Zeng Guoqing, senior
engineer with the China Association of Battery Industry, said that
in the past, Chinese firms were slow to understand new technical
directives in foreign countries. It was often not until the goods
were obstructed at foreign customs that Chinese exporters became
aware of new requirements.
"More and more Chinese
exporters are resorting to the WTO mechanism in countering technical
and green barriers in international trade now," said Zeng.
With two thirds of its
annual battery output for exports, China turned out 30 billion units
of batteries in 2005. The soaring exports have placed the product on
top of the categories facing foreign trade barriers, said Zeng.
In responding to the
American accusation, seven battery enterprises in Chinese mainland,
including Shuanglu, Nanfu, Baowang, Tiger Head, Changhong, Sante and
Zhenglong, appeared in the list of defendants. The backbone
enterprises of mercury-free batteries in China account for 50
percent of the total domestic output. The companies witnessed a drop
in exports or even cancellation of orders from its long-term
customers in the American market because of the U.S. investigation.
Wu Junjie, general manager
of the Zhongyin Battery Import & Export Company, China's largest
battery producer, reminded domestic battery enterprises that western
nations are likely to enforce new environmental protection standards
for electronic products, including batteries, and require further
reduction of the content of heavy metals this year.
The result would be that
the content of materials essential for batteries, such as mercury,
lead and cadmium, will be rigidly restricted, Wu said.
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