The Commerce Department is beginning an investigation based on a petition that initially redacted the name of one of the companies that filed it, though the petitioners have since publicly disclosed the company’s name in an amended petition. The identities of several employees of the petitioners in the complaint, however, remain confidential.
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Nov. 26 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Nov. 24 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Nov. 23 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Nov. 22 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Nov. 19 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
The Commerce Department improperly rejected a first-in-first-out (FIFO) methodology used by an Indonesian mattress exporter to determine which of the exporter’s U.S. inventory to examine in an antidumping duty investigation on mattresses from Indonesia, the exporter said in a brief filed with the Court of International Trade Nov. 9.
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Nov. 18 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Nov. 17 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
A coalition of anonymous solar companies is “evaluating all options” following the denial of its requests to apply antidumping and countervailing duties on Chinese solar cells to imports from Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam, it said Nov. 15. The American Solar Manufacturers Against Chinese Circumvention (A-SMACC) said it “strongly” disagrees with the Commerce Department’s rejection of its request for an anti-circumvention inquiry, on the basis that the coalition’s members could not remain anonymous.