Commerce Pushes Back Steel Dumping Probes from 10 Nations
Published Date: 1/28/2025
Notice
Summary
The U.S. Department of Commerce is taking a little extra time to decide if certain corrosion-resistant steel from 10 countries is being sold unfairly cheap in the U.S. This delay pushes back the first big decision from February 12, 2025, giving everyone more time to get their facts straight. Steel makers and importers from Australia, Brazil, Canada, Mexico, the Netherlands, South Africa, Taiwan, Türkiye, the UAE, and Vietnam should stay tuned for updates that could affect prices and trade rules.
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 0 costs, 2 mixed.
Preliminary Decision Delayed to April 3, 2025
If you are a steel maker or an importer involved with certain corrosion-resistant steel (from Australia, Brazil, Canada, Mexico, the Netherlands, South Africa, Taiwan, Türkiye, the UAE, or Vietnam), the Department of Commerce postponed the preliminary less‑than‑fair‑value determination by 50 days to no later than April 3, 2025. The preliminary determination was originally due February 12, 2025, and the investigations were initiated on September 25, 2024.
Final Determinations Remain Tied to Preliminary Date
Commerce will set the deadline for the final determinations at 75 days after the preliminary determinations, unless Commerce later postpones that deadline. That means the final decision date will move in lockstep with the new preliminary date (no later than 75 days after the preliminary determinations).
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Key Dates
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