ASIATODAY.ID, GENEVA — Indonesia has secured a significant legal victory at the World Trade Organization (WTO) after a dispute settlement panel found that key aspects of the European Union’s anti-dumping duties on Indonesian fatty acid imports violated global trade rules.
In a report circulated on 8 July 2026, the WTO panel ruled that the European Commission failed to apply the correct exchange rate when calculating dumping margins, resulting in anti-dumping duties that exceeded the level permitted under the WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement.
The dispute originated in February 2024 when Indonesia challenged the EU’s definitive anti-dumping measures on fatty acid imports, the investigation that led to those measures, and elements of the methodology used to determine dumping margins.
After reviewing the case, the panel found that the European Union acted inconsistently with Article 2.4.1 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement by failing to use the exchange rate applicable on the date of sale. As a consequence, the EU also breached Article 9.3 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement and Article VI:2 of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) 1994 by imposing duties that exceeded the legally established dumping margin.
The panel further concluded that these violations resulted in a breach of Article 1 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement, reinforcing Indonesia’s argument that parts of the EU’s anti-dumping measures were inconsistent with WTO obligations.
However, the WTO did not uphold all of Indonesia’s claims. The panel rejected several allegations concerning the European Commission’s injury assessment, the methodology used to construct normal values for certain products, and procedural aspects of the anti-dumping investigation, concluding that Indonesia had not presented sufficient evidence to substantiate those claims.
Despite those findings, the ruling represents an important legal success for Indonesia because it confirms that crucial elements of the EU’s anti-dumping measures were inconsistent with international trade law.
The panel recommended that the European Union bring its anti-dumping measures into conformity with its obligations under the WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement and GATT 1994. Under WTO dispute settlement rules, such violations are presumed to nullify or impair the trade benefits enjoyed by affected members.
Strategic Implications
The decision carries significance beyond the immediate dispute. Fatty acids are an important value-added export for Indonesia’s downstream palm oil industry and are widely used in the production of cosmetics, detergents, soaps, pharmaceuticals, food ingredients and other oleochemical products.
The ruling comes amid broader trade tensions between Indonesia and the European Union over palm oil-related products and other resource-based exports, as Brussels continues to tighten both trade defence measures and sustainability requirements affecting market access.
The case also drew extensive international attention. Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Japan, Russia, Singapore, Türkiye, Ukraine, the United Kingdom and the United States participated in the proceedings as third parties, highlighting the systemic importance of the dispute for the global trading system.
Although the panel upheld only part of Indonesia’s complaint, the decision strengthens Jakarta’s position in defending its export interests through the WTO’s dispute settlement mechanism.
It also sends a broader signal that anti-dumping measures imposed by major economies remain subject to rigorous multilateral legal scrutiny and must comply with internationally agreed trade rules. (AT Network)
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