EU's First FSR Case Hearing: A Tipping Point for Chinese Companies' Compliance in Europe

First Judicial Hearing under the EU’s Foreign Subsidies Regulation: A Tipping Point in Regulatory Contestation and a Systemic Overhaul of Compliance for Chinese Enterprises Going Global
In April 2025, the General Court of the European Union (First Chamber) held its inaugural judicial hearing in Tongfang Weishi v. European Commission—the first judicial review case since the entry into force of the EU’s Foreign Subsidies Regulation (FSR). This milestone marks the FSR’s formal transition from legislative text into the deep waters of judicial practice. At its core, the FSR establishes a novel non-tariff barrier grounded in the legal concept of “market distortion,” cloaked in procedural “transparency,” and enforced through two key instruments: public procurement scrutiny and merger control. On the surface, the case concerns whether Tongfang Weishi—a Chinese security inspection equipment manufacturer—concealed financial support from the Chinese government while bidding for a public procurement project in an EU Member State. In reality, it implicates three structural questions: (1) the inherent vagueness of the FSR’s review standards; (2) the systemic pressure imposed on Chinese enterprises by the regulation’s reversal of the burden of proof; and (3) the practical effectiveness of judicial remedies within an increasingly politicized context. The judgment will directly shape the compliance costs and legal risk exposure facing all Chinese enterprises operating in Europe over the next five years—across investment entry, M&A integration, and public contract bidding.
A Paradigm Shift in Review Logic: From “Existence of Subsidy” to the Labyrinth of Proving “Market Distortion”
The FSR’s central innovation lies in its complete departure from the WTO’s traditional subsidy definition, which hinges on “specificity” and “granting of benefit.” Under Article 3 of the FSR, any foreign financial contribution triggers mandatory notification and review as soon as it “may distort the internal market of the EU.” Crucially, the European Commission alone holds the authority to determine whether such “potential distortion” exists—and no evidence of actual harm is required. In the Tongfang Weishi case, the Commission alleges that R&D funding provided by Tsinghua Holdings—the company’s parent—constitutes a “distorting subsidy,” arguing that this support enabled Tongfang Weishi to submit bids for port security system contracts below cost. Yet the company’s audited reports clearly show the funds were used exclusively for developing CT imaging algorithms compliant with International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) standards—not to subsidize tender pricing. The crux of the issue? The FSR defines no quantitative threshold for “market distortion,” nor does it draw a legally precise line between “industrial policy support” and “unfair competitive tool.” This highly discretionary standard effectively transforms regulatory uncertainty into a permanent operational cost for enterprises: Chinese companies must now pre-emptively assess every cross-border technology collaboration, every domestic financing round, and even every industry–university–research joint initiative through the EU’s lens of “presumed distortion.”
Reversal of the Burden of Proof: Geopolitical Pressure Driving Compliance Costs to Exponential Levels
Article 21 of the FSR establishes its most formidable institutional feature: the reversal of the burden of proof. Once the Commission initiates an investigation, the enterprise must, within just 20 working days, submit a comprehensive inventory of all financial contributions received—not only from its direct parent and subsidiaries but also from affiliated entities and local government bodies. This includes tax breaks, preferential loans, land allocations, R&D subsidies, implicit guarantees, and other forms of support. For large Chinese conglomerates operating across Asia, Europe, and Africa—with complex, multi-layered equity structures—this requirement is near-impossible to meet. Compounding the challenge, the FSR permits the Commission to send direct information requests to Chinese authorities—including the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Science and Technology—while China’s Rules on Counteracting Unjustified Extraterritorial Application of Foreign Legislation and Other Measures (“Blocking Rules”) empower those agencies to lawfully refuse cooperation. When regulatory sovereignty collides with enforcement sovereignty, enterprises find themselves trapped in a double bind: non-cooperation triggers automatic non-compliance; cooperation risks disclosing sensitive commercial or state-related information. According to the latest analysis by Clifford Chance LLP, the average annual cost of full-cycle FSR compliance now amounts to 0.8%–1.5% of revenue for medium-sized Chinese enterprises—far exceeding initial GDPR compliance expenditures. This is no longer merely a legal matter; it has become a decisive factor in ESG ratings—particularly the “governance resilience” dimension—and a key variable influencing international credit spreads.
Structural Limitations of Judicial Remedies: When Legal Procedure Becomes Embedded in Geopolitical Contestation
The hearing exposed a fundamental tension at the heart of the FSR’s remedial framework. Although enterprises may bring an action for annulment before the European Court of Justice, Article 263 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) restricts judicial review strictly to procedural legality and manifest errors of fact—leaving the Commission’s substantive assessment of “market distortion” entirely outside the Court’s jurisdiction. Consequently, even if Tongfang Weishi successfully demonstrates that its funding was lawfully and transparently applied, the Court may still uphold the Commission’s decision based solely on “potential risk.” Even more concerning is the EU’s accelerating effort to coordinate the FSR with its new Anti-Coercion Instrument (ACI). Under this framework, if a third country is formally designated as having engaged in “economic coercion” against the EU, its enterprises are automatically placed on the FSR’s “enhanced scrutiny list.” Within this architecture, legal litigation can no longer be divorced from macro-political realities—as underscored by recent events in the English Channel, where maritime escort operations have been reframed as part of a broader “hybrid threat” assessment. Both the physical continuity of supply chains and the normative continuity of regulatory frameworks are now being politicized in tandem. For Chinese enterprises, compliance strategy must therefore evolve beyond isolated legal responses into a multidimensional defense system—integrating geopolitical risk early-warning mechanisms, proactive multilateral rule advocacy, and the reconstruction of localized governance architectures.
The Deepening Unraveling of Global Rule Alignment: A Paradigm Shift from Technical Standards to Legal Enforcement
The Tongfang Weishi case resonates quietly—but powerfully—with seismic shifts in the global energy order. The IMF, World Bank, and IEA have jointly issued an unprecedented warning about “the largest energy shock in history,” as persistent risks of disruption in shipping through the Strait of Hormuz continue to drive up supply-chain insurance premiums. Meanwhile, the relocation of U.S.–Iran negotiations to Islamabad reflects the steady erosion of traditional multilateral coordination mechanisms. Against this backdrop, the FSR is far more than an isolated trade instrument: it is a cornerstone of the EU’s legal infrastructure for achieving “strategic autonomy.” It unilaterally transplants industrial policy—an issue historically reserved for intergovernmental negotiation—into the capillaries of cross-border commercial activity via domestic legal transformation. As semiconductor indices break historic highs above 9,000 points and AI software indices surge 6.56% in a single day, technological dividends are increasingly offset by ever-more granular regulatory barriers. For Chinese enterprises, the real challenge is no longer whether they can manufacture advanced chips—but whether they can, in a courtroom in Brussels, deconstruct the legitimacy of their development model using legal language recognized and accepted by the EU. What began as a hearing over security scanners may well define the foundational logic of EU–China economic relations for the next decade: Will it be a gradual convergence toward co-governance of rules—or an inflexible standoff over legal sovereignty? The answer is already taking shape—in the transcripts emerging from Luxembourg.