The International Trade Commission published notices in the June 3 Federal Register on the following AD/CV injury, Section 337 patent and other trade proceedings (any notices that warrant a more detailed summary will be in another ITT article):
Russia export controls and sanctions
The use of export controls and sanctions on Russia has surged since the country's invasion of Crimea in 2014, and especially its invasion of Ukraine in in February 2022. Similar export controls and sanctions have been imposed by U.S. allies, including the EU, U.K. and Japan. The following is a listing of recent articles in Export Compliance Daily on export controls and sanctions imposed on Russia:
A listing of recent antidumping and countervailing duty messages from the Commerce Department posted to CBP's website May 26 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 ADD CVD Search page.
The administration plans to restrict the import of equipment used for bulk-power system substations, control rooms, or power generating stations, including reactors, capacitors, substation transformers, current coupling capacitors, large generators, backup generators, substation voltage regulators, shunt capacitor equipment, automatic circuit reclosers, instrument transformers, coupling capacity voltage transformers, protective relaying, metering equipment, high voltage circuit breakers, generation turbines, industrial control systems, distributed control systems, and safety instrumented systems, the White House announced May 1.
The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative says that Amazon's foreign websites are “Notorious Markets,” the government's term for sites that “reportedly engage in or facilitate substantial piracy or counterfeiting.” USTR says its goal in naming and shaming through the Notorious Markets List “is to motivate appropriate action by the private sector and governments to reduce piracy and counterfeiting.” Specificially, the agency mentioned Amazon's websites in Canada, the United Kingdom, India, Germany, and France.
The State Department updated its list of countries certified to have a regulatory program for protection of sea turtles that is comparable to that of the U.S., or to fish in conditions that pose no risk to sea turtles, and therefore eligible to export shrimp to the U.S. without a certification from a government official on State Form DS-2031. The list includes 37 countries and Hong Kong. State removed China and Venezuela from this year's edition of list, after finding China using methods of harvesting shrimp that may harm sea turtles, and Venezuela was unable to confirm whether its methods harm sea turtles. As a result, like other countries not on State's list, shrimp from China and Venezuela may only be imported if harvested from aquaculture. The notice takes effect April 30.
A listing of recent antidumping and countervailing duty messages from the Commerce Department posted to CBP's website March 27 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 ADD CVD Search page.
A listing of recent antidumping and countervailing duty messages from the Commerce Department posted to CBP's website Feb. 26 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 ADD CVD Search page:
The following lawsuits were filed at the Court of International Trade during the week of Feb. 3-9:
The Commerce Department issued the final results of its antidumping duty administrative review on hot-rolled flat-rolled carbon-quality steel products from Russia (A-821-809). The agency determined that the only three companies under review -- Novolipetsk Steel (NLMK), Severstal PAO and Severstal Export GmbH -- had no exports of subject merchandise to the U.S. during the period under review. As a result, subject merchandise from NLMK, Severstal PAO and Severstal Export will continue to enter at the AD rate set in the most recent previous review, and any entries filed with their case numbers entered Dec. 1, 2017, through Nov. 30, 2018, will be liquidated at the “all others” rate.
The International Trade Commission published notices in the Dec. 10 Federal Register on the following AD/CV injury, Section 337 patent and other trade proceedings (any notices that warrant a more detailed summary will be in another ITT article):