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EU Shipping Law


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CHAPTER 17

Regulation 4057/86: dumping of shipping services and the unfair pricing of shipping services

A. Introduction

17.001 “Dumping” occurs when a product or service from one country is introduced on to another country’s market at less than the normal value of that product or service. This practice has serious consequences for the economy in which the goods or services are dumped because it undermines unfairly industry in that second economy.1 Dumping can be a temporary phenomenon but the consequences can be long lasting. The European Union (“EU”) has fallen victim to dumping in sectors such as photocopiers, textiles, footwear and, most importantly for present purposes, shipping services.2 There is no doubt that the dumping by some non-EU shipowners particularly, the former USSR, of their freight rates on the EU markets had a detrimental effect on EU shipowners.3 The former USSR was able to “dump” shipping services because it had a desire for hard currency,4 a large shipping fleet and a cost base lower than western shipowners because it did not fact the same expenses (e.g. insurance and lower wage costs). The EU responded to such dumping by adopting Council Regulation 4057/86,5 which was the first EU anti-dumping


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measure to deal with services.6 The purpose of Regulation 4057/86 is to provide a remedy against:

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