Argentina, Brazil and Canada recently announced antidumping and countervailing duty actions and decisions on certain products from mainland China, the Hong Kong Trade Development Council reported June 8.
The Canada Border Services Agency floated amendments to its valuation for duty regulations which would effectively shift its customs valuation approach to a "last sale one," potentially increasing the declared value for duty of imported goods, lawyers at Baker McKenzie said in a blog post. Canada's customs valuation regulations set the value of goods as the price paid in the sale for export of the goods to a buyer in Canada.
Mexico recently revised its list of imports subject to duty-free treatment, the Hong Kong Trade Development Council reported June 2. The imports now include certain frozen fish and a range of other items and exclude certain wheat and meslin. The measures will apply through the end of this year, and certain items may continue to benefit from duty-free treatment through April 2024.
Argentina and Brazil recently announced antidumping duty actions and decisions on certain products from mainland China, the Hong Kong Trade Development Council reported June 2. Argentina began an AD investigation on certain Chinese slide fasteners and strips and suspended through Sept. 28 its current AD measures on certain Chinese sodium benzoate. Brazil began an AD anti-circumvention inquiry on certain automotive safety glass and also is considering a request to apply its currently suspended AD measure on certain polyester textured yarn “not put up for retail sale." Brazil also recently rejected separate administrative challenges to its current AD measures on certain Chinese footwear and disposable syringes.
Mexico, Canada and the U.S. will hold a USMCA Labor Council virtual public session on implementation of the treaty's labor chapter on June 29. The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative is inviting comments ahead of the meeting, and asking for registration to participate in the two-and-a-half-hour virtual meeting that begins at 1 p.m. EDT. Registration details will be available on the USTR and Department of Labor websites starting June 1. Comments should be sent to ILAB-Outreach@DOL.gov and MBX.USTR.USMCAhotline@ustr.eop.gov with the subject line USMCA Labor Council Meeting.
The U.S. and Mexican governments have reportedly made progress toward better aligning their Authorized Economic Operation programs, according to a "mid-year review" fact sheet on the U.S.-Mexico High-Level Economic Dialogue, released April 19. In the last six months, CBP provided training for the Mexican AEO team and in February, the Customs-Trade Partnership Against Terrorism and AEO Mexico representatives worked together to modify the Minimum-Security Criteria requirements for Mexico’s AEO program, which Mexico anticipates will be published in April after its legal review and approval by the Mexican Secretariat for Home Affairs, the fact sheet said.
Colombia “ignored its own Essential Facts report” when it extended by five years its countervailing duty on U.S. ethanol imports, the USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service said in an April 10 report. Colombia issued an essential facts report in January on its expiry review of the duties, which “argued that there is evidence of continued subsidies for U.S. ethanol, but no clear evidence that the current CVD improved the local ethanol industry’s economic performance,” USDA said. The report calculated a recommended CVD of .035¢/kg, lower than the original .066¢/kg, but Colombia “ignored its own report and issued a final ruling," USDA said, and extended the original investigation duty of .066¢/kg on U.S. ethanol for five years.
Mexico and Colombia recently announced antidumping duty actions on certain products from mainland China, the Hong Kong Trade Development Council reported April 4. Mexico renewed an AD order on certain aluminum cookware for five years, while Colombia began an AD sunset review on steel sinks.
The Canada Border Services Agency in October plans to implement the second phase of a multiyear project to improve certain customs filings and activities, the USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service said in a recent report. The next phase of CBSA’s Assessment and Revenue Management (CARM) project will “expand the functionality” of its client portal to include “electronic commercial accounting declarations with ability for corrections and adjustments,” new requirements involving Canada’s Release Prior to Payment program, harmonized billing cycles, new offsetting options, and an electronic management of appeals and compliance actions. The project is meant to “facilitate the collection of duties and taxes for goods imported” into Canada, the report said, and is aimed at simplifying “the overall importing process.”
Brazil recently added 937 items and removed 67 items from its list of foreign capital goods and information technology and telecommunications goods subject to duty-free treatment under its Ex-Tarifario regime, the Hong Kong Trade Development Council reported March 24. The 794 added capital goods are classified in Harmonized System chapters 84, 85, 86, 89, 90 and 94. The 143 added IT and telecom goods are classified in chapters 84, 85 and 90. Duty-free treatment lasts through Dec. 31, 2025. The country also established or renewed tariff‑rate quotas on several goods, including certain steel and aluminum sheets, air traffic control antennas and blood pressure measuring devices.