ARLINGTON, VA, March 16, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Aluminum Association Common Alloy Aluminum Sheet Trade Enforcement Working Group recently requested that the U.S. Department of Commerce initiate a circumvention inquiry and find that U.S. imports of common alloy aluminum sheet (CAAS) manufactured by Chinese producer Henan Mingtai Aluminium Industry Co., Ltd. (“Mingtai”), and further processed in Korea by Mingtai’s affiliate Gwangyang Aluminum Industries Co., Ltd., are subject to antidumping (AD) and countervailing duties (CVD) under the unfair trade orders on CAAS from China. In its submission, the Working Group maintains these imports are inappropriately avoiding the payment of antidumping and countervailing duties on imports of CAAS from China, pursuant to unfair trade orders published by the Commerce Department in February 2019.
“We urge the Commerce Department to take action promptly to enforce our trade laws against efforts by a Chinese producer and its Korean affiliate to evade the unfair trade orders on common alloy aluminum sheet from China,” said Charles Johnson, president and CEO of the Aluminum Association. “The Aluminum Association and its members will not stand by while foreign producers seek to evade unfair trade duties.”
As a result of today’s filing, the Commerce Department will reach a decision on whether to initiate the circumvention proceeding requested by the Aluminum Association and its member companies within 45 days. Assuming the agency initiates the requested proceeding, it will then collect information from the relevant foreign producers, provide opportunities for interested parties to submit information relevant to the agency’s proceedings, and issue a preliminary determination, potentially as soon as mid-September 2023. The proceeding is expected to take approximately one year to complete.
The common alloy aluminum sheet at issue in this proceeding includes is a flat-rolled aluminum product having a thickness of 6.3 mm or less, but greater than 0.2 mm, in coils or cut-to-length, regardless of width, and is manufactured from a 1XXX-, 3XXX-, or 5XXX-series alloy. The aluminum sheet at issue includes both unclad aluminum sheet, as well as multi-alloy, clad aluminum sheet. Common uses for the product under investigation include gutters and downspouts, building facades, street signs and license plates, electrical boxes, kitchen appliances and tractor-trailers for trucks. Excluded from the scope of the investigations is aluminum can stock that is suitable for use in the manufacture of aluminum beverage cans, lids, or tabs.
In February 2019, the Commerce Department published antidumping and countervailing (AD/CVD) orders on imports of CAAS from China following an action by the Aluminum Association’s Common Alloy Aluminum Sheet Trade Enforcement Working Group. The final combined dumping and subsidy rates ranged from 96 to 176%. Since those orders were published, U.S. imports of aluminum sheet from China have declined substantially.
Nevertheless, U.S. imports of CAAS from Korea that have been further processed using Chinese flat-rolled aluminum have increased substantially, as a Chinese producer and its Korean affiliate have sought to “work around” the AD/CVD duties assessed on CAAS exported directly from China to the United States.
The Aluminum Association Trade Enforcement Working Group is represented in these inquiries by John M. Herrmann, Paul C. Rosenthal, and Joshua R. Morey of the law firm Kelley Drye & Warren LLP.
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About The Aluminum Association
The Aluminum Association represents aluminum production and jobs in the United States, ranging from primary production to value added products to recycling, as well as suppliers to the industry. The association is the industry’s leading voice, representing companies that make 70% of the aluminum and aluminum products shipped in North America. The association develops global standards, business intelligence, sustainability research and industry expertise for member companies, policymakers and the general public. The aluminum industry helps manufacturers produce sustainable and innovative products, including more fuel-efficient vehicles, recyclable packaging, greener buildings and modern electronics. In the U.S., the aluminum industry supports $176 billion in economic activity and more than 634,000 jobs. For more information visit https://www.aluminum.org or find us on Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook or Instagram.