Week of 05 Jul – 11 Jul 2026: After a quiet start, the EU unleashed a series of major trade defence measures, hitting Turkish steel, imposing significant anti-dumping duties on Chinese and Turkish tyres, and targeting Chinese Pekin duck. The actions signal a broad and active enforcement posture across multiple strategic sectors.

Following a quiet start to the month, the European Union’s trade policy took a sharp enforcement turn this week. Regulators launched a series of significant new trade defence actions, moving sequentially from the steel sector to the automotive supply chain and finally to agri-food. The week was defined by major new anti-dumping duties on tyres from China and Türkiye, alongside new restrictions on Turkish steel and Chinese Pekin duck, demonstrating a broad and assertive regulatory posture.

The week in brief

After two quiet days following last week’s major half-year regulatory reset, EU trade policy shifted into high gear. The week’s activity was defined by a series of targeted, high-impact trade defence actions that signal a distinct tightening of enforcement. While the total volume of over 1,200 changes was substantial, the narrative was driven by a few key interventions. The EU’s regulatory spotlight moved decisively from one sector to another, beginning with steel, pivoting to the automotive supply chain, and then moving to agri-food. This strategic enforcement activity played out against a backdrop of high-volume administrative updates to preferential tariffs and the entry into force of new non-tariff barriers for cultural goods and wood products, before the week concluded on a quieter, more administrative note.

What mattered most

The week’s most consequential developments were a series of new trade defence measures targeting specific origins and products:

  • Massive anti-dumping duties on tyres: The most significant action was the imposition of new anti-dumping duties on new pneumatic tyres from China and Türkiye, effective 8 July. The measures on Chinese imports, implemented via Regulation (EU) R1540/26, apply to tyres for passenger cars (HS 4011100000) and commercial vehicles (HS 4011201000), with 258 exporter-specific rates for car tyres and 236 for truck tyres, reaching as high as 45.3%. Concurrent measures were also applied to Turkish tyres. This single action accounted for over 500 regulatory records and marked a major shift in focus to the automotive sector.
  • New measures on Turkish steel: Continuing the intense focus on the steel sector from early July, regulators loaded new trade defence measures on 25 commodity lines of iron and steel from Türkiye. Effective 6 July, the actions target a range of hot-rolled flat steel products under HS chapters 7208, 7211, and 7225, indicating sustained regulatory pressure on these trade flows.
  • Pivot to agri-food with Pekin duck: In a notable change of direction, the EU loaded new trade defence measures on preparations of Pekin duck (HS heading 0207) from China, effective 9 July. This move extended the week’s enforcement posture into the agricultural sector.

In parallel, new non-tariff barriers took effect. As of 7 July, new import controls and conditions now apply to cultural goods under Chapter 97, followed on 9 July by new import controls on certain coniferous wood (HS codes 4407110000, 4407120000, 4407130000) from all origins.

Threads to watch

The clear thread this week is the EU’s active and multi-sectoral trade defence campaign. The sequential targeting of steel, automotive components, and agricultural products raises the question of how broad this enforcement posture will become. While the week ended with a focus on routine administrative updates, the preceding days established a pattern of assertive, targeted action. Traders should watch closely to see if this represents a new, more aggressive regulatory phase and whether the enforcement spotlight will continue to pivot to other sectors in the weeks ahead.

By the numbers

Zolltor AI is an AI-powered global trade intelligence platform that helps European businesses stay ahead of changing tariffs, customs regulations, sanctions, and trade agreements. By combining artificial intelligence with official customs regulation, Zolltor AI converts complex global trade rules into clear, actionable insights that help companies understand business impact, reduce compliance risk, and make informed international trade decisions. Its mission is to make enterprise-grade trade intelligence accessible to every business—not just the Fortune 500.Â