Citric Acid and Certain Citrate Salts from China: Final Results of Antidumping Duty Order Review
AI-generated summary for informational purposes only. Not legal advice. See the original source for the authoritative text.
This notice confirms that the U.S. Department of Commerce decided not to revoke the antidumping duty on citric acid and certain citrate salts from China. The decision was reached because lifting the duty could lead to resumed dumping of these products in the U.S. market. Businesses importing these products will need to continue paying antidumping duties of up to 156.87%.
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Key Changes
- Antidumping duty on citric acid and certain citrate salts from China remains in place
- Potential dumping margins set up to 156.87%
- Continued compliance requirements for importers
Obligations
What this law requires
Businesses importing citric acid and certain citrate salts from China must continue paying antidumping duties of up to 156.87%.
Domestic interested parties must submit a timely and complete notice of intent to participate in the sunset review by the specified deadline.
Domestic interested parties must file a timely and adequate substantive response to the sunset review as per the regulations.
Parties subject to an Administrative Protective Order (APO) must ensure the return or destruction of proprietary information disclosed under the APO.
Parties subject to an Administrative Protective Order (APO) must return or destroy proprietary information disclosed under the APO in accordance with the regulations.