The Foreign-Trade Zones Board issued the following notice for March 13:
The Foreign-Trade Zones Board issued the following notice for March 11:
The Foreign-Trade Zones Board issued the following notice for March 7:
The Bureau of Industry and Security seeks comments by April 22 on its recently initiated Section 232 investigation into possible import restrictions on titanium sponge. Comments should address national security implications of imported titanium sponge, including the quantities imported, domestic capacity to meet national defense requirements, availability of resources and facilities to produce titanium sponge, and the impact of foreign competition on the U.S. titanium sponge industry. Rebuttal comments will be due May 22. The Section 232 investigation was begun at the request of a domestic titanium sponge producer, Titanium Metals Corporation (TIMET) (see 1903050030).
The Commerce Department published notice in the March 6 Federal Register on the following AD/CV duty proceedings (any notices that announce changes to AD/CV duty rates, scope, affected firms or effective dates will be detailed in another ITT article):
The Foreign-Trade Zones Board issued the following notice for March 5:
The Foreign-Trade Zones Board issued the following notice for March 1:
The Foreign-Trade Zones Board issued the following notice for Feb. 27:
The Foreign-Trade Zones Board issued the following notice for Feb. 26:
The National Marine Fisheries Service seeks comments on a petition to ban imports of fish and fish products from New Zealand that are caught using methods that result in the incidental death of the Maui dolphin. The petition says 11 fish species are caught using set nets, trawls or gillnets in the Maui dolphin range off the west coast of New Zealand’s North Island, and those fishing methods have caused the population of the Maui dolphin to fall from about 2,000 in 1981 to 55 in 2011. As it considers the request for the import ban, NMFS seeks input on the adequacy of New Zealand’s current conservation measures, whether they are comparable to U.S. programs, whether the decline is directly related to the fishing methods and which specific fisheries are harming the Maui dolphin. Comments are due March 27.