A lead author of the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act is seeking to pass a law mandating the same treatment for goods containing cobalt refined in China. China’s Odious and Brutally Atrocious Labor Trafficking Supply Chain Act, or the Cobalt Supply Chain Act, would tell CBP that all cobalt refined in China should be banned from import, under the assumption it was mined wholly or in part with forced labor or child labor.
Entries will "likely continue to be detained" under the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act during a government shutdown, and UFLPA detentions likely will continue to be reviewed, albeit at a much slower pace, said customs lawyer Ted Murphy in a blog post on Nov. 13. But it's still unclear exactly what "impact a government shutdown would have on UFLPA related activities, given that the law was not enacted during the last shutdown in December 2018-January 2019," Murphy said. Funding for the federal government expires on Nov. 17 (see 2311080006).
The CBP executive who manages forced labor enforcement said that CBP is working on evaluating "commercially available services that may assist the agency and importers with establishing standardizing programs for origin testing and other types of innovations."
Laura Murphy, director of the forced labor lab at Sheffield Hallam University that identified many of the goods now targeted under the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, has joined DHS as a policy adviser to Robert Silvers, undersecretary for strategy, policy and plans.
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden and the top Republican on the panel, Sen. Mike Crapo, are asking CBP to explain how it uses AI in both trade enforcement and trade facilitation, with detailed questions on where it's used, how it's validated and whether the agency allows importers and exporters to challenge a decision that is based on AI.
NEW YORK -- Importers' service providers said CBP's inconsistency and lack of communication about why supply chain documentation was not enough -- or even was enough -- to prove that there was no connection to Xinjiang are the biggest headaches of the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act.
Lumber Liquidators reported decreased profits in the third quarter of 2023 as a result of CBP detentions of vinyl flooring products under the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, the company said in a quarterly report released Nov. 8. The detentions took $1.6 million off profit margins at the company, and, when combined with payments of antidumping and countervailing duties, turned profit growth negative for the quarter.
NEW YORK -- The chair of the committee that puts together the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act entity list told an audience from the apparel industry that the process is no "rubber stamp," and is instead a "meaningful process" involving investigations by agencies on the Forced Labor Enforcement Task Force.
Raja Krishnamoorthi, the top Democrat on the House Select Committee on China, said that policymaking around economic competition with China is "messy."
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