A pasta maker found ineligible for an acquired company’s antidumping duty exemption in a 2014 changed circumstances review cannot use that predecessor’s antidumping and countervailing duty rates for entries before the effective date of the final results of that review, CBP said in a recent ruling. Instead, the pasta maker must file at the all others rate for entries before the changed circumstances review took effect, CBP said in HQ H287183, issued March 26 and posted to CBP’s CROSS database June 3.
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.
Imports of corrosion-resistant steel from Malaysia are subject to antidumping and countervailing duty orders on corrosion-resistant steel from China and Taiwan, the Commerce Department said in final determinations from anti-circumvention inquiries covering the two countries (A-570-026/C-570-027, A-583-856). Commerce continued to find producers in Malaysia are taking hot-rolled steel and cold-rolled steel from China and Taiwan and turning it into corrosion-resistant steel before exporting it to the U.S., in circumvention of AD/CV duties.
The Commerce Department on May 20 released a final rule confirming its June 28 effective date for licensing requirements under its Aluminum Import Monitoring System (see 2103290041), but extending by six months, until June 28, 2022, the period during which filers can put “unknown” for data elements on where the aluminum was smelted.
Self-drilling anchor bolt system (SDABS) couplers imported by Midwest Diversified Technologies (MDT) are likely not subject to antidumping and countervailing duties on forged steel fittings from China (A-570-067/C-570-068), the Commerce Department said in a preliminary scope ruling issued May 17. While the scope of the order says it covers all fittings, it also indicates that low-pressure fittings are exempt, and MDT’s fittings, intended to connect hollow bars, are not able to convey liquids and gases at high pressure, Commerce said.
A flooring system for pig farrowing made of a galvanized steel tribar truss floor is subject to antidumping and countervailing duties on steel grating from China (A-570-947/C-570-948), even when the flooring is imported as part of a pig farrowing crate system, the Commerce Department said in a scope ruling issued May 14.
The International Trade Commission published a new report detailing its recommended changes to the 2022 Harmonized Tariff Schedule, mostly to implement upcoming changes in the new year to the World Customs Organization’s Harmonized System nomenclature. Changes adopted as a result of these final recommendations will take effect Jan. 1, 2022.
The Commerce Department recently issued two scope rulings that found wheels and wheel components purportedly imported for passenger vehicle use are not subject to antidumping and countervailing duties on steel wheels 12 to 16.5 inches in diameter from China (A-570-090/C-570-091). In scope rulings issued April 30 and May 3, the agency found that the wheels and wheel components are not intended for use on trailers.
The Court of International Trade will allow a customs broker test-taker to proceed with a challenge to his failing grade, denying a motion to dismiss from the government that argued his case didn’t meet procedural requirements. Byungmin Chae’s delay in appealing to the trade court was caused in part by CBP’s own misleading statements, and his early missteps in the case before hiring a lawyer should not bar him from a hearing in court, CIT said in a decision May 7.
The Agricultural Marketing Service is in the process of writing a final rule to require electronic filing of certificates for organic products at entry, among other provisions intended to strengthen organic enforcement, said Jennifer Tucker, AMS deputy administrator, at the National Customs Brokers & Forwarders Association of America annual conference May 5.
The Agricultural Marketing Service has secured funding for its Section 8(e) partner government agency (PGA) message set for imports of specialty crops, and now awaits CBP programming before it can move forward with full implementation, said Brian Barber of Wilson International during a panel discussion at the National Customs Brokers & Forwarders Association of America annual conference May 3.