Interested parties wishing to participate in the International Trade Commission’s countervailing duty injury investigation of frozen warmwater shrimp from China, Ecuador, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam must file entries of appearance by Jan. 11, said the ITC in its institution of the investigation. Petitions for countervailing duties on shrimp from the seven countries were filed at the ITC and International Trade Administration Dec. 28. Frozen warmwater shrimp from China, India, Thailand, and Vietnam are already subject to antidumping duty orders issued in 2005.
The International Trade Commission is publishing notices in the Jan. 2 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 Administration published notices in the Jan. 2 Federal Register on the following AD/CV 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 is giving advance notice that it and the International Trade Commission will consider revoking the antidumping duty order on sodium hexametaphosphate from China (A-570-908) in their automatic five-year sunset reviews scheduled to begin in February. Advance notice is given because automatic sunset reviews have short deadlines. An order will be revoked unless the ITA finds that revocation would lead to a continuation or recurrence of dumping and the ITC finds that revocation would result in continuation or recurrence of material injury to a U.S. industry. As a result, a negative determination by either the ITA or the ITC would result in the revocation of the order.
The International Trade Administration announced the opportunity to request administrative reviews by Jan. 31 for producers and exporters subject to 12 antidumping duty orders, three countervailing duty orders, and two antidumping suspension agreements with January anniversary dates. Affected products include wooden bedroom furniture, prestressed concrete steel wire strand, etc.
The International Trade Administration lowered Borusan’s1 antidumping duty rate to 3.55 percent, in an amended final results of the 2010-11 AD administrative review of circular welded carbon steel pipes and tubes from Turkey. The original final results, published Dec. 6, set Borusan’s AD rate at 6.05 percent, but the ITA found it had committed a ministerial error.
The International Trade Commission is publishing notices in the Dec. 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 International Trade Commission is asking for comments by Jan. 10 on Samsung’s Dec. 21 Section 337 patent complaint on certain wireless communication equipment and articles therein (D/N 2926). The complaint listed two Ericsson companies as respondents:
The International Trade Commission is asking for comments by Jan. 10 on Speculative Product Design’s Dec. 26 Section 337 patent complaint on certain cases for portable electronic devices. The complaint listed the following respondents:
The International Trade Administration published notices in the Dec. 31 Federal Register on the following AD/CV proceedings (any notices that announce changes to AD/CV duty rates, scope, affected firms, or effective dates will be detailed in another ITT article):