NEW DELHI: India’s imports of radial tyres continued to grow in the fiscal first quarter despite a slowdown in the pace, driving local manufacturers to increase the pitch against what they called dumping by China and demand for a safeguard duty on supplies from abroad. Imports of truck and bus radial (TBR) tyres surged 40% during April-June, while those of passenger car radials increased 22%, the Automotive Tyre Manufacturers Association said. According to the industry body, dumping of radial tyres has reached unprecedented levels. Tyre dealers, however, said they are against any move to ban imports or impose a new duty, and cited “overpricing” by the local manufactures for the increased imports.
Imports of TBRs reached 1.5 lakh units a month from an average 1lakh units in fiscal 2016, ATMA said, citing government data. Over three years, the imports jumped sevenfold to 4.2 lakh units in Q1. The pace has slowed from 80% in the same period of 2015-16 and 115% in the same period of 2015-16 and 115% in the year before that.
But the association is still worried as the growth is on a higher base then last year, which means the volume increase is still high. “There is no letup in imports and dumping of radial tyres, especially truck & bus radials, from China. Such indiscriminate increase in imports has put the domestic operations in TBR in serious disarray,” said KM Mammen, chairman of tyre market leader MRF and head of ATMA.
Tyre dealers gave a contrary view, and said the imported products were as good as the local ones, but with lower prices. Also, despite the increasing import, local tyre makers have reported strong profit margins in the last few quarters because of falling raw material price, they claimed.
“The indiscriminately high tyre prices (by local manufactures) have been established by the latest CCI (Competition Commission of India) investigation and a Tariff Commission study (2016),” said SP Sing, convenor of All India Tyre Dealers’ Federation (AITDF) Truck Tyres.






