The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Sept. 30 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Sept. 29 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Sept. 28 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Sept. 27 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Sept. 24 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Sept. 23 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
More than 190 solar companies sent a letter Sept. 22 to Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo urging the rejection of requests to begin anti-circumvention inquiries on solar cells and panels from Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam. “Steep duties proposed by an anonymous group of petitioners would devastate thousands of U.S. solar companies and cause the industry to miss out on 18 gigawatts (GW) of solar deployment by 2023,” the Solar Energy Industries Association said in a press release.
The Commerce Department’s recent change in the scope of its antidumping and countervailing duty investigations on pentafluoroethane (R-125) from China to address administrability concerns was unnecessary, and the original scope was no different than the scopes of other orders that rely on the word of importers to determine whether merchandise is subject to AD/CV duties, said Honeywell International, petitioner in the investigation, in a brief filed Sept. 14.
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Sept. 21 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
An anti-circumvention inquiry requested by a U.S. industry coalition amounts to an attempt to impose new antidumping and countervailing duties on solar cells from Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam without the strictures of real AD/CVD investigations, rather than serving as valid allegations of circumvention of Chinese solar cells duties, two U.S. importers said in a brief filed Sept. 15 asking the Commerce Department not to initiate the inquiries.