China has extended its anti-subsidy investigation into European Union (EU) dairy products—including milk, cream, and cheese—by six months, pushing the deadline to February 2026. The Ministry of Commerce in Beijing cited the “complex nature” of the case as the reason for the extension.
This investigation is widely seen as part of a broader tit-for-tat trade strategy, coming after the EU’s scrutiny of Chinese electric vehicle subsidies. China has previously launched similar probes into EU pork and imposed tariffs on European brandy, signaling that dairy is now the latest bargaining chip in escalating trade tensions.
The move deepens uncertainty for European dairy exporters, many of whom rely on China as a key growth market. It also highlights how food trade is increasingly becoming entangled with geopolitical disputes, rather than just market dynamics.
Industry Insights
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Export Uncertainty: EU dairy companies face extended uncertainty over market access, pricing, and potential tariff implications, which could hurt long-term planning.
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Geopolitical Leverage: China’s use of food imports as a countermeasure to EU trade actions signals a growing trend of geopolitics driving agri-food trade.
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Risk Diversification: European exporters may need to diversify towards markets in the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and Africa to reduce dependence on China.
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Global Dairy Markets: Any restrictions on EU dairy into China could open short-term opportunities for suppliers from New Zealand, Australia, or even the U.S.
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Strategic Negotiation Tool: The dairy probe underlines how China is leveraging regulatory tools to influence negotiations in unrelated sectors like EVs and technology.
Source : Dairynews7x7 Aug 19th 2025 Reuters