Sports drinks in legal sweat: Feds probe sneaky packaging tricks
Published Date: 12/18/2025
Notice
Summary
The U.S. International Trade Commission is taking a second look at a decision that found some electrolyte drinks and their labels broke the rules. Companies involved in making or selling these drinks in the U.S. should pay attention, as the Commission is asking for feedback on how to fix the problem and what penalties might apply. This review could affect how these drinks are labeled, sold, and possibly cost money or require bonds soon.
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 3 costs, 1 mixed.
Possible Import Ban for Drinks
The Commission may order an exclusion order that would stop the accused electrolyte beverages from entering the United States, or issue cease-and-desist orders requiring respondents to stop importing or selling them. These remedies are authorized under section 337 and were raised during the Commission's review (Commission vote December 15, 2025).
Bonding During 60‑Day USTR Review
If the Commission orders a remedy, the U.S. Trade Representative has 60 days to act, and during that 60-day review the subject articles would be entitled to enter the United States only under bond. The Commission will determine the bond amount and the Secretary of the Treasury will prescribe it.
Review of Texas Facility Investment Claims
The Commission is reviewing the initial decision's findings about the economic prong of the domestic industry requirement and asks parties to explain how investments related to the Texas manufacturing facility were with respect to the protected domestic industry articles on or before the date of the complaint (the investigation was instituted February 3, 2025).
Evidence of U.S. Operations Affects Remedy
The Commission requests evidence or allegations that the foreign defaulting respondents maintain commercially significant inventories or engage in significant commercial operations in the United States (Question 2). That evidence will be used to decide the form of remedy and the amount of any bond; initial submissions are due January 5, 2026 and replies by January 12, 2026.
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