Responsive Image Banner

Imports of Chinese cranes labelled “manifestly unfair”

Four of the largest crane manufacturers in Europe filed a complaint with the European Commission about imports of Chinese mobile cranes into the European Union.

Liebherr, Manitowoc, Sennebogen and Tadano filed the complaint via the VDMA Materials Handling and Intralogistics Association, of which they are members. It calls for urgent investigation into “imports of Chinese mobile cranes marketed in the EU at conditions that result in manifestly unfair competition for European producers.”

The four companies represent around 99 per cent of the mobile crane industry in the European Union, according to VDMA.

“Chinese mobile cranes [are] marketed in the EU at conditions that result in manifestly unfair competition for European producers,” VDMA said

The association said the complaint focuses on “mobile cranes designed for the lifting and moving of materials on land, with a lifting capacity of at least 30 tonnes, mounted on self-propelled vehicles.” Read that as wheeled mobile all terrain and rough terrain cranes and crawler cranes.

Part of the rationale is that “European manufacturers not only meet EU and global environmental and data protection standards, but they have invested to improve substantially the safety and performance of mobile cranes while providing quality and value for their customers. The unfair trade complaint emphasises the need for Europe to preserve the viability of this strategically vital European industry and avoid future dependence on non-EU suppliers.”

The complaint centres around the equipment’s essential value in constructing and maintaining critical infrastructure, power plants, road and rail networks, and so on. This infrastructure is crucial to the supply chain and rapid deployment of emergency services. It also includes the military angle, “Furthermore, mobile cranes are crucial to military operations and provide protection for military personnel during deployment,” VDMA said.

From the manufacturers

Comments made by the four manufacturers run as follows:

“Our European industry welcomes fair competition, but it is patently unfair to compete with products whose selling conditions do not come close to covering the raw materials, energy and production costs of a European mobile crane manufacturer. Chinese manufacturers benefit from a wide range of subsidy mechanisms, which gives them a massively unfair advantage when exporting to the EU.”

Christoph Kleiner, managing director sales, Liebherr-Werk Ehingen, Germany.

“We believe in fair competition and have urged the European Commission to address the material injury to European industry caused by the dumping tactics of Chinese exporting producers. We call on the Commission to restore a level playing field across the EU.”

Aaron Ravenscroft, president and CEO, The Manitowoc Company.

“While we believe in fair competition, the distortive pricing tactics of exporting producers from China warrant the opening of a trade defence investigation. We call on the European Commission to take swift and decisive action to ensure a fair and competitive environment for future production and employment in Europe’s mobile crane manufacturing sector.”

Noriaki Yashiro, CEO, Tadano Europe Holdings.

“Chinese mobile crane producers are increasingly focusing on export markets, with the EU market being a prime target. The combination of spare production capacities in China, existing stocks and substantial Chinese governmental support, means that material injury to the vulnerable European industry will continue if anti-dumping measures are not imposed. These measures need to be taken to ensure fair global competition.”

Erich Sennebogen, shareholder and managing director, Sennebogen Maschinenfabrik.

POWER SOURCING GUIDE

The trusted reference and buyer’s guide for 83 years

The original “desktop search engine,” guiding nearly 10,000 users in more than 90 countries it is the primary reference for specifications and details on all the components that go into engine systems.

Visit Now

STAY CONNECTED



Receive the information you need when you need it through our world-leading magazines, newsletters and daily briefings.

Sign up

Latest News
Uncertainty, headwinds weigh down 2026 CV outlook
Tariffs, long list of headwinds will continue to impact commercial vehicle orders
Scania’s Pilot Program evaluates fuel cell trucks
Testing covers performance and operational feasibility
TAFE presents its EVX75 hybrid tractor at Agritechnia
New model can operate in full EV mode, or combine hybrid power sources
CONNECT WITH THE TEAM
Becky Schultz Vice President of Content Tel: +1 480 408 9774 E-mail: becky.schultz@khl.com
Julian Buckley Editor Tel: +44 (0) 1892 784088 E-mail: julian.buckley@khl.com
Chad Elmore Managing Editor E-mail: chad.elmore@khl.com
Tony Radke Vice President of Sales Tel: +1 602 721 6049 E-mail: tony.radke@khl.com
CONNECT WITH SOCIAL MEDIA

US Steel Tariffs Raise Equipment Costs

NEW ANALYSIS & FREE WHITEPAPER

Expanded US tariffs on steel and aluminium are pushing up construction equipment prices. Read the analysis and download the whitepaper for data and forecasts.

Read & Download