A countervailing duty cash deposit requirement will take effect June 4 for imports of frozen warmwater shrimp from India (C-533-854), after the Commerce Department found illegal subsidization of Indian producers in its preliminary determination. The agency assigned CV duty cash deposit rates of 5.72 to 6.1 percent. Indian frozen shrimp has been subject to antidumping duties since 2005.
A countervailing duty cash deposit requirement will take effect June 4 for imports of frozen warmwater shrimp from Vietnam (C-552-815), after the Commerce Department found illegal subsidization of Vietnamese producers in its preliminary determination. The agency assigned CV duty cash deposit rates of 5.08 to 7.05 percent. Vietnamese frozen shrimp has been subject to antidumping duties since 2005. CBP will implement these CV cash deposit requirements soon.
A countervailing duty cash deposit requirement will take effect June 4 for imports of frozen warmwater shrimp from China (C-570-989), after the Commerce Department found illegal subsidization of Chinese producers in its preliminary determination. The agency assigned a CV duty cash deposit rate of 5.76 percent to all Chinese producers. Chinese frozen shrimp has been subject to antidumping duties since 2005. CBP will implement these CV cash deposit requirements soon.
The International Trade Commission is publishing notices in the May 31 Federal Register on the following AD/CV injury, Section 337 patent, and other trade proceedings (any notices that warrant a more detailed summary will appear in another ITT article):
The Commerce Department announced the opportunity to request administrative reviews by June 30 for producers and exporters subject to 12 antidumping duty orders and one countervailing duty orders with June anniversary dates.
The International Trade Commission is publishing notices in the May 30 Federal Register on the following AD/CV injury, Section 337 patent, and other trade proceedings (any notices that warrant a more detailed summary will appear in another ITT article):
The International Trade Commission is asking for comments by about June 8 on public interest factors arising from Nokia’s May 23 patent complaint on cellphones from HTC. Nokia seeks to block imports of infringing HTC cellphone models, including the HTC One S, One V, One X, Evo 4G LTE, Droid Incredible 4G LTE, Droid DNA, One X+, One VX, First, and One, through issuance of cease and desist and limited exclusion orders (see 13052923). It also requests the limited exclusion order block imports of components of the infringing cellphones, such as chipsets, to prevent evasion of any import ban.
The Commerce Department published notices in the May 30 Federal Register on the following AD/CV duty proceedings (any notices that announce changes to AD/CV duty rates, scope, affected firms, or effective dates will be detailed in another ITT article):
The International Trade Administration issued its quarterly list of (i) completed antidumping and countervailing duty scope rulings and (ii) anticircumvention determinations.
The Commerce Department announced its final determinations in its antidumping duty investigations on xanthan gum from Austria and China (A-433-811, A-570-985), in a fact sheet dated May 29. The agency found AD rates for Austrian companies of 29.98 percent, and AD rates for Chinese companies ranging from 15.09 to 154.07 percent. CP Kelco requested the investigation in June 2012 (see 12060621). The International Trade Commission is set to make its final injury determination July 12.