BRUSSELS   (Reuters) - European Union governments rejected the bloc’s proposed   measures to levy punitive tariffs on hot-rolled steel from Brazil, Iran,   Russia and Ukraine on Thursday, with some member states considering the   measures too lax, others too tough. 
  European steelmakers have accused the four countries of dumping the steel   used in construction and machinery and the European Commission, which   oversees trade policy in the 28-member European Union, had set out plans to   levy tariffs of up to 33 percent. 
  It had also proposed that duties would not apply if the product was sold at   or above a set minimum price of 472.27 euros ($568) per tonne. 
  European steelmakers federation Eurofer, which had lodged a complaint and   wanted import duties, criticized the minimum price element of the proposal. 
  As a result EU countries, including those with steelmakers and those   interested in cheap steel, opposed the overall plan, EU sources said. The   former believed the measures were too weak, the latter considered them too   strong. 
  The case will now pass to a so-called appeals committee, also comprising the   28 EU members. In such appeal cases, the Commission often revises its plans.   The committee will meet on or after Sept. 25. 
  The Commission’s proposal would be then cleared unless a majority of   states also representing a majority of the EU’s population   vote against. 
  Chinese imports of hot-rolled steel into the EU are already subject to duties   of up to 35.9 percent, with no minimum price. 
  The Commission has previously used the minimum price approach for imports of   solar panels from China to settle one of the most contested trade disputes   between Brussels and Beijing. However, that has not stopped arguments over   what level that price should be. ($1 = 0.8318 euros)  |