The International Trade Commission published notices in the June 12 Federal Register on the following AD/CVD injury, Section 337 patent or other trade proceedings (any notices that warrant a more detailed summary will be in another ITT article):
The Commerce Department published notices in the Federal Register June 12 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 Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices June 12 on AD/CVD proceedings:
The Commerce Department issued antidumping duty orders last week on boltless steel shelving units prepackaged for sale from Malaysia (A-557-824), Taiwan (A-583-871), Thailand (A-549-846) and Vietnam (A-552-835). The orders detail a “gap period” of May 27 - June 5, 2024, of no AD duty liability.
A domestic producer of glycine brought a motion for judgment against the U.S. on June 6 regarding a negative scope ruling that calcium glycinate was too far removed a precursor of glycine to be covered by antidumping and countervailing duty orders on glycine (Deer Park Glycine, LLC v. U.S., CIT # 23-00238).
The nearly 700 companies that the Bureau of Industry and Security has flagged for potentially sending export controlled goods to Russia include foreign suppliers in China, Turkey, India and others across Asia, Europe, Africa and the Middle East, according to a list obtained by Export Compliance Daily.
The Commerce Department published notices in the Federal Register June 7 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):
Recently launched antidumping and countervailing duty investigations on solar cells from Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam will continue, after the ITC found a "reasonable indication" of injury to U.S. industry in a preliminary injury determination announced June 7. The ITC preliminarily found actual injury in its AD/CVD investigations on Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam, as well as its AD investigation on Cambodia. On the other hand, it preliminarily found a threat of injury for its CVD investigation on Cambodia. If that threat finding is continued in the final determination, the ITC will also decide whether to refund any CVD cash deposits collected on Cambodian cells prior to the issuance of the ITC's final injury determination.
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices June 7 on AD/CVD proceedings:
The following are short summaries of recent CBP NY rulings issued by the agency's National Commodity Specialist Division in New York: