I did not receive any notification from C&E yet.Be careful. Registration of e-bikes has already started, as of 1st May 2018.
I did not receive any notification from C&E yet.Be careful. Registration of e-bikes has already started, as of 1st May 2018.
more waffles.Christofer Fjellner, the MEP in charge
He appears to be trying to convince that the EU ensures anti-dumping measures aren't used to stifle competition.We talked to Christofer Fjellner, the MEP in charge.
I disagree.Just so you know its not being targeted at Chinese eBikes... its something the whole bike industry has been dealing with for years.
This from yesterday.
http://www.bike-eu.com/laws-regulations/nieuws/2018/06/eu-starts-review-anti-dumping-measures-regular-bicycle-imports-china-10133846
You're looking at the wrong thing. Does it hurt Brompton, Orange, Cotic, or any of the host of smaller Uk based bicycle brands who benefit from not having to compete with the Chinese?I disagree.
The anti-dumping action benefits very few (Accell, Pon, Prophete, Bosch) and hurt tens of millions of consumers.
the fact that EU production is concentrated in just a few very large companies speaks volume.
The current 6% duty on e-bikes is already fair, it takes into account that electronics is the major component cost in an e-bike whose duty is between 0% and 3% against the 48.5% ADD on regular bikes.
I am in complete agreement with Woosh, as I have previously said, this action is purely about the big players (most of whom are late comers to the ebike market) wanting to get rid of competing SMEs before we are any threat to them.I disagree.
The anti-dumping action benefits very few (Accell, Pon, Prophete, Bosch) and hurt tens of millions of consumers.
the fact that EU production is concentrated in just a few very large companies speaks volume.
they are taxed as bicycle and electronics and it is consistent at the time the EU set it up. The 6% rate is weighted against the average value of various components. It's not a favour given to e-bikes against regular bikes.I'm just saying it has to be consistent.
Yes, but by that logic, you'd tax a normal bike at the component rate wouldn't you.they are taxed as bicycle and electronics and it is consistent at the time the EU set it up. The 6% rate is weighted against the average value of various components. It's not a favour given to e-bikes against regular bikes.
There is no market distortion: companies producing e-bikes in the EU make more money year after year on e-bikes as the market grows. The complainers simply wanted to rid themselves of the competition, mainly at the low end of the market, and to force the average price up to increase their profit.
Who is losing out? the consumers who cannot afford buying their poncy bikes.
the point I made is that when the EU determined the 6% duty rate on e-bike, it was and still is a fair rate, taken into account all the main ingredients of an e-bike. The anti-dumping duty on regular bikes is in place since 1993, 25 years ago. If there is a distortion, then the EU will simply adjust the 6% to may be 7%, not the anti-dumping weapon.Yes, but by that logic, you'd tax a normal bike at the component rate wouldn't you.
Which you don't. You either import it as compoents, at the lower rate, or import it built at the higher rate. Which means you employ people in the EU to build it and you can advertise a "made in .... " product.
So now that some of the components happen to be electric, also bear in mind some of the components on normal bikes are electric. If you're importing complete bikes, you need to pay the complete tariff.
Its not trying to stop you selling bikes is it? Hasn't Wisper already given the solution? Import in component form, offer UK made bikes... employ more people in the UK and add about £100.00 to the RRP. This is what the solution is, its what all the bicycle brands have evolved to do and I'm sure it's what the current raft of Chinese eBike brands will do. Don't forget it will allow you to put a Made in the UK sticker on all your bikes and you'll be employing more Brits in the UK as an industry, isn't that a good thing?what would you think if your company is threatened with the theoretical 189% anti-dumping duty? even if you take it with a pinch of salt, you would be irresponsible not to worry about this potential threat.
Would you place more orders? no, you can't unless you have Elon Musk as your backer.
So until the dust settles, a few members of the EBMA will laugh their head off silly.
They won't back out... UK customers will just pay more for the products they want. Only the UK customers loose out. The UK market isn't big enough to suddenly create UK only brands even if it were possible.Just a thought, how will all the big European brands cope if there is a hard Brexit? Will they back out of the UK?
After stocks in the pipelines are sold, it will stop a lot of small companies selling Chinese e-bikes.Its not trying to stop you selling bikes is it?