The decision by Indian giant Tata to put its business at the Port Talbot steel plant in south Wales up for sale has forced Prime Minister David Cameron to hold crisis talks at the prospect of losing up to 15,000 jobs.
"Britain opposed the end of the lesser duty rule," Charles de Lusignan, a spokesman for Brussels-based Eurofer, told AFP, referring to an EU plan to ignore a key regulation when setting anti-dumping tariffs.
Eurofer boss Axel Eggert, whose organisation represents Europe's steelmakers, was quoted as telling the Financial Times today that London "is the ringleader in a blocking minority of member states that is preventing a European Commission proposal on the modernisation of Europe's trade defence instruments."
Britain in February signed a statement with six other European Union states urging Brussels to take action against "dumping" of steel at low prices.
But Eurofer said that statements by British business minister Sajid Javid showed that London was in fact opposed to getting rid of the lesser duty rule.
"As most dumping cases involve Chinese cases, that makes a direct link between changes to the anti-dumping system and relations with China."
Compared to the United States, EU import tariffs on Chinese steel imports are low - there is duty of 16 per cent on Chinese cold-rolled steel compared to a 236 per cent tariff in the US.
Cameron is now battling to avoid the Tata situation giving fuel to campaigners who want Britain to leave the European Union in a tight referendum on June 23.
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