CBP issued the following releases on commercial trade and related matters:
CBP posted a new chapter of the CBP and Trade Automated Interface Requirements (CATAIR) for drawback entry summary. The new CATAIR chapter (here) "is intended to provide the conventional trade interface information for the ACE-version of a Drawback Entry Summary filing," it said.
CBP posted more ahead of Advisory Committee on Commercial Operations of Customs and Border Protection (COAC) meeting on Jan. 13. The documents include issue papers on the Border Interagency Executive Council (here), international trade engagement (here), and Automated Commercial Environment (here). There's also executive summaries from the Trade Modernization (here) and One U.S. Government at the Border (here) COAC subcommittees. The agency posted other materials for the meeting earlier this week (see 1601070026 and 1601060028).
Import data for goods regulated by the Federal Communications Commission can be filed through CBP's Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) until July 1, when a waiver of FCC Form 740 requirements takes effect, the commission said Jan. 6 (here). The FCC issued the notice as a clarification of its plans to waive the requirements when the Automated Commercial System (ACS) is shut down and the use of ACE is required for electronic filing (see 1510190056), it said. "The Commission’s characterization in the Order of CBP’s ACS as the current system used for filing Form 740 information has been misinterpreted by some affected parties."
CBP issued the following releases on commercial trade and related matters:
International Trade Today is providing readers with some of the top stories for Dec. 28 - Dec. 31 in case they were missed.
International Trade Today is providing readers with some of the top stories for 2015 in case they were missed.
The Food and Drug Administration considers its Automated Commercial Environment filing requirements to be “outlined,” according to a list of questions and answers posted by Integration Point following a Dec. 10 webinar (see 1512110027). Responding to a question on whether the agency’s required data elements are “locked down,” FDA said “any additional updates are refinements or clarifications, until such a time that new regulatory requirements indicate the need for further changes,” according to Integration Point, which hosted the webinar. The Q&A also includes information on the FDA ACE pilot, DUNS numbers, FDA’s “lockdown” policy of no changes to entry data within five days of arrival, and foreign-trade zones, among other topics.
The National Marine Fisheries Service issued a proposed rule (here) on Dec. 29 that would consolidate existing import, export and re-export permits for filing in CBP’s Automated Commercial Environment. Under the proposal, currently separate permits and documentation for Antarctic Marine Living Resources (AMLR) and Highly Migratory Species International Trade Permit (HMS ITP) program would be filed in ACE under a single International Fisheries Trade Permit, via both data elements and scanned images. NMFS is also proposing to set new permit requirements for seafood products regulated under the Tuna Tracking and Verification Program (TTVP), also under the consolidated International Fisheries Trade Permit procedures. Comments on the proposal are due Feb. 29.
CBP issued the following releases on commercial trade and related matters: