U.S. Department of Commerce Amends Antidumping Duty on Granular PTFE Resin from India
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The U.S. Department of Commerce has made changes to an earlier decision about the antidumping duty on Granular Polytetrafluoroethylene Resin (Granular PTFE) from India. This change was made to correct a mistake. The review period is from March 1, 2023, to February 29, 2024. The amended final results are applicable starting April 2, 2026.
The mistake was found by Gujarat Fluorochemicals Limited (GFCL), the main company involved in the review. GFCL said the error was in calculating the U.S. Net price for export price sales. The Department of Commerce agreed with GFCL, saying that an unintentional mistake happened during the calculations.
The Department of Commerce has fixed this mistake. Now, the new dumping margin is set at 1.80% for Gujarat Fluorochemicals Limited. This percentage shows how much less than the fair value the company has been selling the product in the United States.
For all the entries of the product between March 1, 2023, and February 29, 2024, the new margins will be used to calculate antidumping duties. The duties will mainly apply to entries of Granular PTFE that GFCL exported to the United States.
The Department will pass instructions to U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) about these amended rates. If CBP finds any entries with a zero or very small margin, they might not charge any dumping duties.
Additionally, new cash deposit requirements are being set up. These deposits need to be made for any future imports of the product. The rates will be based on different situations about who exported the product and when. The new deposit rates are meant to ensure fair competition.
Lastly, importers have been reminded that they need to file some paperwork with CBP. This paperwork is about whether they got back any antidumping duties. Not filing it could lead to paying extra duties. This notice also reminds companies about their responsibility to protect secret business information.
The decision and changes were made official by Christopher Abbott, who currently serves as the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy and Negotiations.
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