The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission began five-year sunset reviews of the antidumping and countervailing duty orders on sodium gluconate, gluconic acid and derivative products from China (A-570-071/C-570-072) and the AD order on xanthan gum from China (A-570-985), Commerce said in a notice.
The Commerce Department is giving advance notice that in automatic five-year sunset reviews scheduled to begin in November it will consider revoking the antidumping duty orders on clad steel plate from Japan (A-588-838); silicomanganese from China (A-570-828) and Ukraine (A-823-805); and steel concrete reinforcing bars from Belarus (A-822-804), China (A-570-860), Indonesia (A-560-811), Latvia (A-449-804), Moldova (A-841-804), Poland (A-455-803) and Ukraine (A-823-809). These orders will be revoked, or the investigation terminated, unless Commerce finds that revocation would lead to dumping and the International Trade Commission finds that revocation would result in injury to U.S. industry, Commerce said.
In the Sept. 13 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 57, No. 33), CBP published a proposal to revoke and modify ruling letters concerning a playing cards and to modify another regarding a pet bowl mat.
CBP has released its Sept. 20 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 57, No. 34), which includes the following ruling actions:
In the Sept. 13 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 57, No. 33), CBP published a proposal to revoke ruling letters concerning processed brewer's saved grains and a wooden box from China.
In the Sept. 13 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 57, No. 33), CBP published a proposal to revoke a ruling letter concerning a plastic playmat and to modify another on steel wire cartridges.
In the Sept. 13 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 57, No. 33), CBP published a proposal to revoke a ruling letter concerning a car cleaner and modify another concerning bumper energy absorbers.
CBP has released its Sept. 13 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 57, No. 33), which includes the following ruling actions:
The Commerce Department finalized its addition of a new exemption for gun safes from its antidumping and countervailing duty orders on metal lockers from China (A-570-133/C-570-134), it said in the final results of a changed circumstances review. The exemption is effective for all gun safes that meet the exemption's requirement back to the date the AD/CVD orders became effective on Aug. 20, 2021, Commerce said.
CBP posted a new “Version 2.0” of its Customs Broker Guidance for the Trade Community on Sept. 8, adding new information on qualifying licensed individual brokers, recordkeeping requirements for broker separation from a client, filer code suspensions and CBP standards for responsible supervision and control, among other things.