The European Commission has launched an expiry review of the antidumping measures in place on imports of certain polyvinyl alcohols (PVOH) originating from China, it announced on Sept. 25, as per Chemweek.
Antidumping duties were implemented on Sept. 25, 2020, after a complaint by Kuraray Europe GmbH, a subsidiary of Kuraray Ltd., that material being dumped was causing harm to the European market, triggered an investigation in 2019.
The review will determine whether the removal of duties up to 72.9% will cause dumping and subsequent harm to the industry.
A final decision to maintain or terminate the measures is expected by Sept. 24, 2026.
PVOH is produced using vinyl acetate monomer (VAM) through a process called hydrolysis, whereby VAM undergoes polymerization to form polyvinyl acetate, which is then reacted with an alcohol such as methanol or ethanol in the presence of a catalyst.
The original complaint indicated distortions for a number of raw materials that can be used to produce VAM, such as petroleum, natural gas or coal, which were having impacts on China.
However, it was found that VAM prices in China were higher than those in Europe and Russia.
Platts, part of S&P Global Commodity Insights, last assessed the three- to 30-day forward VAM spot price at €850 per metric ton free-delivered northwest Europe, stable week over week.
Imports of VAM into Europe from China have stagnated in the second half of 2025, following the EU’s duty-free quota being fully used up on July 23.
EU importers are, however, still sourcing material from South Korea at competitive prices.
mrchub.com