2026-07464NoticeWallet

Global Steel Makers Still Face U.S. Duty Wall

Published Date: 4/16/2026

Notice

Summary

The U.S. Department of Commerce decided to keep the antidumping duties on non-oriented electrical steel from Sweden, Germany, China, Korea, Taiwan, and Japan. This means importers will still pay extra fees to protect U.S. steel makers from unfairly low prices. These rules stay in effect starting April 16, 2026, helping American producers stay competitive.

Analyzed Economic Effects

2 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.

Antidumping Duties Continue; Importer Costs Rise

If you import non-oriented electrical steel (NOES) from these countries, you will continue to pay antidumping duties starting April 16, 2026. The Department of Commerce found likely dumping margins up to 126.72% for Sweden, 98.84% for Germany, 407.52% for China, 6.88% for Korea, 52.23% for Taiwan, and 204.79% for Japan.

U.S. Steelmakers Protected by Continued Orders

The decision keeps protections for U.S. producers of NOES and is intended to help them stay competitive. The domestic interested parties identified in the reviews are Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. and United States Steel Corporation, and the orders remain in effect starting April 16, 2026.

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Key Dates

Published Date
4/16/2026

Department and Agencies

Department
Independent Agency
Agency
Commerce Department
International Trade Administration
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