FDA has issued its Enforcement Report for Jan. 5, listing the status of recalls and field corrections for food, cosmetics, tobacco products, drugs, biologics and devices. The report covers both domestic and foreign firms.
Brian Feito
Brian Feito is Managing Editor of International Trade Today, Export Compliance Daily and Trade Law Daily. A licensed customs broker who spent time at the Department of Commerce calculating antidumping and countervailing duties, Brian covers a wide range of subjects including customs and trade-facing product regulation, the courts, antidumping and countervailing duties and Mexico and the European Union. Brian is a graduate of the University of Florida and George Mason University. He joined the staff of Warren Communications News in 2012.
The International Trade Commission posted the 2022 Preliminary Edition of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule. The new HTS does not include the five-year World Customs Organization Harmonized System update, which will take effect toward the end of January at the end of a 30-day period following their proclamation Dec. 27 (see 2112270032). It does, however, implement annual changes to 10-digit "statistical" provisions of the tariff schedule, as well as the removal of Ethiopia, Mali and Guinea from the African Growth and Opportunity Act preferences program and a new tariff-rate quota system for iron and steel and aluminum from the EU. These changes took effect Jan. 1.
FDA has issued its Enforcement Report for Dec. 29, listing the status of recalls and field corrections for food, cosmetics, tobacco products, drugs, biologics and devices. The report covers both domestic and foreign firms.
New tariff-rate quotas on EU aluminum and steel agreed to in lieu of Section 232 tariffs will open Jan. 3 at 12:01 a.m., CBP said in a pair of quota bulletins Dec. 29. Entries submitted prior to 8:30 a.m. EST on that date will be counted “in the first opening” at 8:30, with entries being prorated if totals for any tariff number grouping exceed the limit. Entries submitted prior to 12:01 a.m. Jan. 3 won't be counted toward the opening.
CBP will suspend liquidation for entries of solar cells subject to Section 201 safeguard duties over the past 10-15 months, following to a Court of International Trade decision that invalidated a Trump-era increase in safeguard duty rates on solar cells and the withdrawal of an exemption for bifacial cells (see 2111170038), CBP said in a CSMS message Dec. 28.
The presidential proclamation amending the Harmonized Tariff Schedule to implement a hefty five-year update will likely be published in the coming days, which would set an effective date in late January for the lengthy list of changes. The White House released the proclamation Dec. 23 (see 2112230012), though a publication date in the Federal Register had not yet been scheduled as of press time. The date of publication triggers a 30-day countdown before the changes take effect.
CBP “understands” that the five-year Harmonized Tariff Schedule update to implement changes to the World Customs Organization’s Harmonized System will not take effect Jan. 1, 2022, it said in a CSMS message. “CBP is awaiting formal direction for this update, which will be implemented by Presidential Proclamation and published in the Federal Register. In the interim, CBP will continue to use the current harmonized tariff schedule and encourages the trade community to do the same until further guidance is provided.”
FDA has issued its Enforcement Report for Dec. 15, listing the status of recalls and field corrections for food, cosmetics, tobacco products, drugs, biologics and devices. The report covers both domestic and foreign firms.
The International Trade Commission is recommending a four-year extension of Section 201 solar safeguard tariffs, with the rate of duty on solar modules and out-of-quota solar cells decreasing by 0.25% per year from its current level of 15% until it reaches 14% in the year prior to expiration in February 2026, the ITC said in a report sent to President Joe Biden, according to a notice released Dec. 13.
The Environmental Protection Agency will initially use the ACE Document Image System (DIS) to collect a new data element required for imports of hydrofluorocarbons under a recent EPA final rule (see 2109230054), it said during a webinar Dec. 9. Though most data elements collected under the agency’s new 14-day pre-arrival filing requirement are already transmitted in ACE, CBP needs more time to build the new Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) number data element into its electronic filing system, EPA’s Roy Chaudet said.