BEIJING - China denounced an EU investigation into Chinese-made modems in a growing series of trade disputes with the European bloc, as an industry group warned affected firms could face huge losses.
The European Union this week launched anti-dumping and safeguard probes into wireless wide-area networking modems imported from China, the Commerce Ministry said on Thursday.
The modems are digital devices that allow connection to wireless networks.
The case affects products worth around 4.1 billion yuan (US$ 605 million), the ministry said on its website.
"The Chinese public and industry players are deeply unhappy with it and China expresses its deep concern," it said in a statement.
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An explosion in trade between the European Union and China has led to an accumulation of disputes between the two sides at the WTO, notably over Chinese shoes and certain raw materials.
Such probes are carried out to determine whether a product violates trade rules and can lead to retaliatory action.
The Chinese statement added that Beijing "reserved the rights to take further measures" under World Trade Organisation rules.
Liu Huijuan, an official with the China Chamber of Commerce for Import and Export of Machinery and Electronic Products, the industrial association representing Chinese modem makers, said they could incur massive losses.
"A huge impact will be caused to the sector if (the EU) decides to take actions against the product because the European Union and the United States are the two key markets of WWAN modems," she said.