New Antidumping Duty Petitions on PET Sheet from Korea, Mexico, and Oman
12/07/2019 12:00
Advanced Extrusion, Inc., Ex-Tech Plastics, Inc., and Multi-Plastics Extrusions, Inc. (“petitioners”), on July 9, 2019, filed antidumping (AD) petitions on imports of certain polyethylene terephthalate sheet (“PET sheet”) from Korea, Mexico, and Oman.
The U.S. AD law imposes special tariffs to counteract imports that are sold in the United States at less than “normal value.” For AD duties to be imposed, the U.S. government must determine not only that dumping is occurring, but also that there is “material injury” (or threat thereof) by reason of the dumped imports. Importers are liable for any potential AD duties imposed. In addition, these investigations could impact purchasers by increasing prices and/or decreasing supply of certain PET sheet.
Scope
The merchandise covered by these petitions is raw, pretreated, or primed polyethylene terephthalate sheet, whether extruded or coextruded, in thicknesses of equal to or greater than 7 mil (0.007 inches or 177.8 μm) and not exceeding 45 mil (0.045 inches or 1143 μm) ("PET sheet"). The scope includes all PET sheet whether made from prime (virgin) inputs or recycled inputs, as well as any blends thereof. The scope includes all PET sheet meeting the above specifications regardless of color, surface treatment, coating, lamination, or other surface finish.
The merchandise subject to these investigations is properly classified under statistical reporting number 3920.62.0090 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS). Although the HTSUS statistical reporting number is provided for convenience and customs purposes, the written description of the merchandise is dispositive.
Alleged Dumping Margins
The petitioners allege the following dumping margins:
Korea: 44.45 percent to 52.39 percent
Mexico: 27.70 percent to 120.79 percent
Oman: 75.02 percent to 119.23 percent
Estimated Schedule of Investigations
July 9, 2019 – Petition is filed
July 29, 2019 – DOC initiates investigation
July 30, 2019 – ITC staff conference
August 23, 2019 – Deadline for ITC preliminary injury determinations
December 16, 2019 – Deadline for DOC preliminary AD determination, if not postponed
February 4, 2020 – Deadline for DOC preliminary AD determination, if fully postponed
June 18, 2020 – Deadline for DOC final AD determinations, if both preliminary and final determinations are fully postponed
August 3, 2020 – Deadline for ITC final injury determinations, assuming fully postponed DOC deadlines
Source: The National Law Review
The U.S. AD law imposes special tariffs to counteract imports that are sold in the United States at less than “normal value.” For AD duties to be imposed, the U.S. government must determine not only that dumping is occurring, but also that there is “material injury” (or threat thereof) by reason of the dumped imports. Importers are liable for any potential AD duties imposed. In addition, these investigations could impact purchasers by increasing prices and/or decreasing supply of certain PET sheet.
Scope
The merchandise covered by these petitions is raw, pretreated, or primed polyethylene terephthalate sheet, whether extruded or coextruded, in thicknesses of equal to or greater than 7 mil (0.007 inches or 177.8 μm) and not exceeding 45 mil (0.045 inches or 1143 μm) ("PET sheet"). The scope includes all PET sheet whether made from prime (virgin) inputs or recycled inputs, as well as any blends thereof. The scope includes all PET sheet meeting the above specifications regardless of color, surface treatment, coating, lamination, or other surface finish.
The merchandise subject to these investigations is properly classified under statistical reporting number 3920.62.0090 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS). Although the HTSUS statistical reporting number is provided for convenience and customs purposes, the written description of the merchandise is dispositive.
Alleged Dumping Margins
The petitioners allege the following dumping margins:
Korea: 44.45 percent to 52.39 percent
Mexico: 27.70 percent to 120.79 percent
Oman: 75.02 percent to 119.23 percent
Estimated Schedule of Investigations
July 9, 2019 – Petition is filed
July 29, 2019 – DOC initiates investigation
July 30, 2019 – ITC staff conference
August 23, 2019 – Deadline for ITC preliminary injury determinations
December 16, 2019 – Deadline for DOC preliminary AD determination, if not postponed
February 4, 2020 – Deadline for DOC preliminary AD determination, if fully postponed
June 18, 2020 – Deadline for DOC final AD determinations, if both preliminary and final determinations are fully postponed
August 3, 2020 – Deadline for ITC final injury determinations, assuming fully postponed DOC deadlines
Source: The National Law Review
Các tin khác
- MoIT tightens 'Made in Viet Nam' criteria to combat trade fraud (12/06/2026)
- Viet Nam receives AD petition against Chinese prestressed steel bars (12/06/2026)
- India’s anti-dumping shield on Asian aluminium foil to stay up through 2026 (12/06/2026)
- Amended Customs Law: Removing 'bottlenecks' to help businesses accelerate import and export (12/06/2026)
- Expanding export markets in the era of integration (12/06/2026)
About Us
