Certain Frozen Warmwater Shrimp From India: Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review; 2023-2024
Published Date: 2/9/2026
Notice
Summary
The U.S. Department of Commerce found that some Indian shrimp sellers sold their frozen warmwater shrimp at unfairly low prices from February 2023 to January 2024. Because of this, certain importers will face updated antidumping duties starting February 9, 2026, which could affect prices and trade. This decision helps protect U.S. shrimp businesses from unfair competition.
Analyzed Economic Effects
5 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 4 costs, 1 mixed.
Final Dumping Margins Set
Commerce found certain Indian shrimp producers sold at less than fair value for February 1, 2023 through January 31, 2024 and set final weighted-average dumping margins of 2.71% for the Devi Group, 5.08% for Sandhya, and a review-specific rate of 3.76% for non-examined companies.
Updated Duties Applicable February 9
If you import the covered frozen warmwater shrimp from India, the final results apply starting February 9, 2026, and Commerce will direct U.S. Customs and Border Protection to assess antidumping duties on appropriate entries in line with those final results.
Cash Deposit Rules for Shipments
For shipments entered or withdrawn for consumption on or after the publication date, you must post cash deposits equal to the final weighted-average dumping margin for the company (unless the rate is under 0.50%, in which case the cash deposit rate is zero). Previously reviewed companies keep their most recent published rate; producers covered but exporters not listed use the producer's rate; all other producers/exporters remain at the 10.17% all-others rate.
Importer Reimbursement Certificate Requirement
If you are an importer, you must file a certificate about whether antidumping duties were reimbursed before liquidation of the relevant entries; failure to file can lead Commerce to presume reimbursement occurred and to assess doubled antidumping duties.
Automatic Assessment for Unreviewed Entries
Commerce's automatic assessment practice will apply for entries during the review period when the producer or exporter did not know the shipment was destined for the United States; in such cases, CBP will liquidate unreviewed entries at the all-others rate from the LTFV investigation if there is no rate for the intermediate company.
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