ITC determination in the sunset review of the U.S
antidumping duty order covering imports of silicon metal from China.
should be reinstated back under the existing
antidumping duty order on competing product from India.
On January 23, 2013, the Department of Commerce ("Commerce") and the United States International Trade Commission ("ITC") issued an
antidumping duty order against the Republic of South Korea, on all large residential washers from LG Electronics, Inc., Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., and Daewoo Electronics Corporation.
Hartquist, a partner at Kelley Drye & Warren LLP said, "Maintaining the
antidumping duty order against activated carbon fromChina, and the market discipline the order provides, will allow the domestic producers to continue to compete in the US market without the presence of unfairly traded imports".
ITC said in a press release it determined that revoking the existing
antidumping duty order on magnesium from Russia would not "be likely to lead to continuation or recurrence of material injury within a reasonably foreseeable time." However, the commission found that revoking the Chinese order would be likely to lead to such injury.
The domestic industry's efforts to prevent dumping (or selling below fair market value) of imported processed mushrooms began in December 1998 when Commerce published the first
antidumping duty order on mushrooms from Chile.
As reported in the Federal Register late last week, the department determined that, "had the
antidumping duty order not been revoked in the 2002 Sunset Review, revocation of the
antidumping duty order on LNPP from Japan would have likely led to continuation or recurrence of dumping."
According to a DOC fact sheet, "If the ITC makes a final affirmative determination that imports were materially injuring or threatening to materially injure the domestic industry, the Department will issue an
antidumping duty order and will instruct Customs to collect cash deposits on imports of subject merchandise."
whether revocation of the countervailing or
antidumping duty order ...
Department of Commerce will issue antidumping and countervailing duty orders on imports of this product from Argentina and an
antidumping duty order on imports of this product from China.
Letter Ruling 9538001 concluded that the taxpayer may not claim a deduction for antidumping duties for the tax year in which the
antidumping duty order was issued.