BERLIN — The new all-electric Mini Cooper made in China is set to be hit by the highest EV tariff of 38.1% under the EU’s provisional plans, a Reuters source familiar with the matter said on Friday, a potential terminal blow for the car’s sales prospects.
Mass production of the roughly 35,000-euro ($37,345) vehicle, produced by a joint venture of BMW and China’s Great Wall Motor Co Ltd, began late last year – shortly after the EU launched its probe.
With production still in early days, the joint venture was unable to fulfil the European Commission’s survey to the level of detail required to be classed as a company cooperating with the investigation, the source said, declining to be named because discussions are private.
Companies seen as cooperating with the EU were subject to lower tariffs of 17.4%-21%, according to a European Commission document seen by Reuters. That includes BMW Brilliance Automotive, another BMW joint venture that has produced the electric iX3 for export to Europe from China since 2021.