BERLIN/FRANKFURT, June 18 (Reuters) - German renewables
firm Enpal and metal processing group Schoder will be among the
companies joining Economy Minister Robert Habeck's trip to China
later this week, suggesting a low-profile delegation as Brussels
and Beijing clash over EV tariffs.
Unlike Chancellor Olaf Scholz's trip to China in April, no
German carmaker will accompany Habeck on the four-day trip to
South Korea and China, where growing trade tensions between
Europe's top economy and its second-biggest trading partner will
take centre stage.
Both Enpal and Schoder said company representatives would
participate in the trip, confirming a Handelsblatt report.
Automotive supplier Voss is also among the companies
travelling with Habeck, as is laboratory gear maker Sartorius
SATG.DE , according to people familiar with the matter, making
it the only German blue chip joining the delegation.
Voss did not respond to a request for comment.
Sartorius had no immediate comment.
Habeck's trip comes a week after the European Commission
proposed tariffs on electric vehicles imports from China,
marking a new low point in economic relations and raising fears
of economic retaliation.
Potential counter-tariffs would be particularly painful for
Germany's carmakers - Volkswagen VOWG_p.DE , Porsche
P911_p.DE , Mercedes-Benz MBGn.DE and BMW BMWG.DE - which
heavily rely on China, the world's biggest auto market.
Mercedes-Benz, BMW, BASF BASFn.DE , Bayer BAYGn.DE and
Merck MRCG.DE were among the large cap firms which travelled
with Scholz during his trip to Beijing earlier this year.
(Reporting by Rene Wagner, Christoph Steitz, Maria Martinez and
Patricia Weiss
Editing by Miranda Murray and Kim Coghill)
((christoph.steitz@thomsonreuters.com; +49 30 220 133 647))