You mean something on top of the endless Non-Tariff Barriers you've got ?
Tit-for-Tat mein maraa jaiii gaaa !
Non tariff barriers are available dime a dozen. The solar example that @
Dillinger quoted is one that might be challenged at the WTO by the U.S. However since it is GoI spending that money
(some $20 billion), they are not about to hand it over to any Tom, Dick & Harry no matter what the WTO rules. They will simply change the nature of the requirement forcing the Americans & the Chinese to change or will simply end the project at that point leaving the Americans with a Pyrrhic victory. However unlike with the Chinese, the Americans have their own leverages & a negotiated settlement will probably be reached.
Against Chinese imports, India can do any of the following.
# Increase tariffs in any sector that the Chinese are dominating where there are Indian or India manufactured competitors available. Alternatively
(depending on volume), do as the Chinese do & insist that certain products be manufactured in the country including by the Chinese manufacturers in the face of punitive tariffs.
# Levy anti-dumping duty against Chinese goods. This will affect only the Chinese imports & not those of other countries. The Chinese can go to the WTO but that is a process that will consume substantial time by which time facts on the ground would have changed. India would have the option to issue fresh levies if there is an adverse ruling or continue the old one irrespective of any WTO ruling
(unlikely) since all that will allow the Chinese to do is to levy equivalent duties
(value) on Indian exports. That works if the U.S. or Europe threatens but as the Chinese have been pointing out,
"they don't want to buy anything from India" in the first place. In such a case, leverage is very poor.
# Simply disallow Chinese products/companies from sectors/geographical areas citing security concerns. That will bottle up all Chinese technological, infrastructure companies immediately.
# Raise quality and safety issues. The Chinese are especially vulnerable since perception already exists that Chinese products don't comply with the same standards as other countries.
a report of its own technical arm, the Central Electricity Authority (CEA), reveals that part of this capacity, based on Chinese equipment, has come up in violation of operational and safety norms.
The 41-page report by a committee under CEA Chairman A S Bakshi was recently given to the power ministry. It lambasts Chinese power gear on all key operational parameters - operating load factor, heat rate, auxiliary consumption, frequency of forced outages, breakdowns, etc - and safety mechanisms, putting in the dock around 12 per cent, or 25,000 Mw, of India's installed capacity.
Many private power generators, such as Reliance Power, Sterlite, Lanco and Adani, besides some state-government ones, have bought equipment from Chinese firms. "Chinese turbines do not have safety functions like turbine stress evaluator and auto turbine run-up systems. The level of automation or control systems of Chinese turbines is not in line with present-day turbine designs and technology... leading to the possibility of compromised safety and mal-operation," the report said. Total outages for Chinese units based on domestic coal are substantially higher than the ones from Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd (BHEL).
The main idea here is not to hurt Chinese imports but to nudge them to take into account and address India's concerns. Trade is both desirable & necessary and trade war are not the best ways to resolve these issues. These are options which are best threatened but not used.