US Keeps Tariffs on China's Brown Aluminum Oxide Grit
Published Date: 7/8/2025
Notice
Summary
The U.S. International Trade Commission decided to keep extra taxes on refined brown aluminum oxide from China because removing them could hurt American businesses. This means companies in the U.S. that make or use this material stay protected from unfairly cheap imports. The decision was finalized in July 2025 and signals ongoing costs for importers from China.
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
U.S. Producers Kept Protected
On July 3, 2025, the U.S. International Trade Commission decided to keep the antidumping duty order on refined brown aluminum oxide from China. This means U.S. companies that make or use this material remain protected from what the Commission found would be unfairly cheap imports.
Importers Face Continued Duties
Because the antidumping order was continued as of July 3, 2025, importers bringing refined brown aluminum oxide from China will continue to face antidumping duties. The decision signals ongoing costs for firms that import this material from China.
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