No New Duties on Spanish Chlorinated Chemicals
Published Date: 6/4/2026
Notice
Summary
The U.S. Department of Commerce checked if chlorinated isocyanurates from Spain were sold cheaper than normal in the U.S. from June 2023 to May 2024 and found they were not. This means no extra taxes (antidumping duties) will be added to these products. Importers and Spanish exporters can keep trading without new fees starting June 4, 2026.
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 1 costs, 1 mixed.
Unreviewed Entries Could Face 24.83% Duty
For entries produced by Ercros that entered the United States during the period and were unreviewed because Ercros did not know they were destined for the U.S., Commerce will instruct CBP to liquidate those unreviewed entries at the all-others rate of 24.83 percent if there is no rate for any intermediate company involved. That 24.83 percent all-others rate was established in the original investigation.
Cash Deposit Rules After Publication
For shipments of chlorinated isos from Spain entered or withdrawn for consumption on or after the publication date (June 4, 2026), the cash deposit rate for Ercros will equal the weighted-average dumping margin from this review unless that rate is less than 0.50 percent, in which case the cash deposit rate will be zero. Previously reviewed companies keep their last company-specific rate, exporters not covered but whose manufacturer is covered use the manufacturer's rate, and all other manufacturers/exporters remain subject to the 24.83 percent all-others rate.
Ercros Found No Dumping (0.00%)
Commerce found that sales of chlorinated isocyanurates from Spain by Ercros S.A. were not sold at less than normal value for June 1, 2023 through May 31, 2024, and assigned a weighted-average dumping margin of 0.00 percent for that period. As a result, no antidumping duties will be assessed on reviewed sales by Ercros for that period, effective June 4, 2026.
Zero/De Minimis Rates Means No Duties
Commerce will instruct U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to liquidate entries without assessing antidumping duties when an importer-specific ad valorem assessment rate is zero or de minimis under 19 CFR 351.106(c)(1). Commerce intends to issue assessment instructions to CBP no earlier than 35 days after publication (publication date June 4, 2026) and, if a timely summons is filed, will direct CBP not to liquidate relevant entries until the time for a statutory injunction has expired (within 90 days of publication).
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