A listing of recent Commerce Department antidumping and countervailing duty messages posted to CBP's website July 17, along with the case number(s) and CBP message number, is provided below. The messages are available by searching for the listed CBP message number at CBP's ADCVD Search page.
The Court of International Trade remanded parts and sustained parts of the Commerce Department's countervailing duty investigation of phosphate fertilizers from Russia. CIT Judge Jane Restani in a July 11 opinion upheld Commerce's tier-three benchmark calculation for natural gas, which included the import-specific 20% value-added tax and 5% import duty, along with the agency's decision to countervail phosphate rock mining licenses issued by the Russian government to exporters EuroChem and PhosAgro. Restani remanded Commerce's decision to use a "profit before tax" figure to account for exported phosphate rock prices when calculating PhosAgro's profit ratio, as well as Commerce's reliance on PhosAgro's cost information and its explanation for why it found EuroChem's cost information supported.
The Court of International Trade in a July 11 opinion remanded parts and sustained parts of the Commerce Department's countervailing duty investigation of phosphate fertilizers from Russia. Judge Jane Restani upheld Commerce's tier-three benchmark calculation for natural gas, which included the import-specific 20% value-added tax and 5% import duty, along with the agency's decision to countervail phosphate rock mining licenses issued by the Russian government to exporters EuroChem and PhosAgro. Restani sent back Commerce's decision to use a "Profit Before Tax" figure to account for exported phosphate rock prices when calculating PhosAGro's profit ratio. The judge also remanded Commerce's reliance on PhosAgro's cost information and its explanation for why it found EuroChem's cost information supported.
Sixteen trade groups, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers, PhRMA and BIO, asked U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai to press Mexico to comply with its USMCA commitments during her trip to Mexico for the Free Trade Commission meeting.
Many export restrictions on food, feed and fertilizers remain in place despite "substantially more trade-facilitating than trade-restrictive measures" that were introduced on goods from October to May, the World Trade Organization said in its Trade Monitoring Report on G-20 trade measures. Sixty-three export restrictions remained on food, feed and fertilizers, down from the 1,010 that had been imposed since the start of the war in Ukraine. The report, issued July 4, said the war in Ukraine, post-COVID-19 effects, extreme weather, and high food and energy prices are causing continued uncertainty in global trade.
Many export restrictions on food, feed and fertilizers remain in place despite "substantially more trade-facilitating than trade-restrictive measures" that were introduced on goods from October to May, the World Trade Organization said in its Trade Monitoring Report on G-20 trade measures. Sixty-three export restrictions remained on food, feed and fertilizers, down from the 1,010 that had been imposed since the start of the war in Ukraine. The report, issued July 4, said the war in Ukraine, post-COVID-19 effects, extreme weather, and high food and energy prices are causing continued uncertainty in global trade.
Sixteen trade groups, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers, PhRMA and BIO, asked U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai to press Mexico to comply with its USMCA commitments during her trip to Mexico for the Free Trade Commission meeting.
The following are short summaries of recent CBP NY rulings issued by the agency's National Commodity Specialist Division in New York:
Just after the administration asked the International Trade Commission to examine the emissions intensity of the steel and aluminum sectors, a bipartisan bill was introduced in the Senate to tell the Energy Department to conduct a comprehensive study of the emissions from the production of aluminum, cement, iron and steel, plastic, and products made from all those materials, fertilizer, glass, lithium-ion batteries, paper and pulp, solar panels and cells, wind turbines, crude oil, refined oil products, natural gas, hydrogen, refined critical minerals and uranium.
A listing of recent Commerce Department antidumping and countervailing duty messages posted to CBP's website June 9, along with the case number(s) and CBP message number, is provided below. The messages are available by searching for the listed CBP message number at CBP's ADCVD Search page.