The Commerce Department is beginning an anti-circumvention inquiry to determine whether all imports of disposable aluminum containers, pans, trays, and lids from Thailand and Vietnam that are made from Chinese aluminum foil are circumventing antidumping and countervailing duties on disposable aluminum containers from China (A-570-170/C-570-171), it said in a notice released July 10.
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices July 10 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:
Secretary of State Marco Rubio, as he attended the Association of Southeast Asian Nations conference in Malaysia, was asked by reporters how Thailand, Malaysia, Cambodia, Laos, Brunei, the Philippines, Vietnam and Myanmar received the U.S., given the high tariffs the U.S. announced it will be imposing on those countries in three weeks.
The Court of International Trade on July 8 dismissed importer PPG Industries' case against the International Trade Commission's affirmative injury determination on epoxy resins from China, India, South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand, for lack of prosecution. No complaint was filed within the statutorily prescribed period. Counsel for PPG didn't immediately respond to a request for comment (PPG Industries v. United States, CIT # 25-00101).
The following are short summaries of recent CBP NY rulings issued by the agency's National Commodity Specialist Division in New York:
Georgetown Law professor Jennifer Hillman, a former International Trade Commissioner and a former general counsel in the office of the U.S. Trade Representative, predicted that the Supreme Court may make a decision on the legality of reciprocal tariffs and other tariffs imposed via the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA. Hillman, who was speaking on a July 8 webinar about tariffs hosted by the Council on Foreign Relations, has been helping challengers to those tariffs, and she said there's "a very good chance that the legal challenges will at least temporarily derail the tariffs imposed under the [law]."
In the July 2 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 59, No. 27), CBP published proposals to revoke ruling letters concerning the tariff classification for certain wireless headphones and earphones and the country of origin of a brake hose.
The Court of International Trade on July 3 sustained CBP's finding that importers Newtrend USA, Starille and Nutrawave evaded the antidumping duty and countervailing duty orders on glycine from China via Indonesia-based exporter PT Newtrend Nutrition Ingredient. Judge Stephen Vaden said CBP adequately supported its finding that PT Newtrend's Indonesian factory couldn't produce all the glycine it shipped to the U.S. and that at least some of the exported glycine was sourced in China.
The Commerce Department published notices in the Federal Register July 7 on the following antidumping and countervailing duty (AD/CVD) proceedings (any notices that announce changes to AD/CVD rates, scope, affected firms or effective dates will be detailed in another ITT article):