The European Union and the United States have informed the World Trade Organization (WTO) that Washington has rejected Brussels' proposals to U.S. safeguard tariffs imposed on solar products, the two parties said in a joint filing published by the WTO on Tuesday.
In addition, there was no agreement on a form of compensation, but they said they will monitor the impact of the measures on trade flows and continue their discussions.
According to the WTO filing, on Feb. 15, the EU and the United States conducted consultations aimed at discussing documents related to the safeguard measure on solar products.
The EU suggested a form of measure that would be less penalizing for its imports such as a quota allocated by country or a minimum import price, but the United States rejected this.
In January, the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump announced it would impose as much as 50 percent tariffs on imported washing machines and up to 30 percent tariffs on imported solar panels among its first measures aimed at helping manufacturers in the United States.
The Trump administration's move against imported solar components was reported to have split the solar panel industry.
Local manufacturers were reported to favor the tariffs as a necessary step to save domestic subsidiary companies, with installers opposing them as job-killers and a move set to raise costs.
It was predicted by the head of the Solar Energy Industries Association in early February that the tariffs could lead to the loss of roughly 23,000 American jobs this year.
WTO rules permit safeguard tariffs if a country is facing a sudden, damaging surge in imports of a product.
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