US conducting anti-dumping, countervailing duties probe on South Korea steel pipes
17/08/2020 12:00
The United States is conducting an anti-dumping, countervailing duties investigation into South Korean steel pipe products, following complaints by a local company, an international traders organization said Saturday.
The investigation on seamless carbon and alloy steel standard, line and pressure pipes was officially launched July 28 by the U.S. Department of Commerce, according to the Korea International Trade Association (KITA).
It said Texas-based steelmaker Vallourec Star, claiming unfair price cutting, requested a review of products imported from South Korea, Russia, Ukraine and the Czech Republic.
The specially made pipes are widely used in chemical plants, nuclear power generation facilities, airplanes and vehicles.
The U.S. company argued that cheap imports were damaging local industries and specifically requested the authorities to check if South Korean and Russian products were receiving state subsidies. It also demanded dumping margins of 119.07 percent to 132.16 percent to be imposed on imported steel pipes.
Anti-dumping actions are taken if companies sell products below the cost of making them, while countervailing duties are imposed if a government gives subsidies to companies manufacturing certain goods cheaply. Both activities can disrupt the market and hurt fair competition.
KITA said that Iljin Steel, Hanse Steel and Husteel were subject to the investigation, and said the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) will carry out the actual investigation and make its recommendations to the commerce department around March 2021.
If the ITC finds unfair price-cutting practices, it will ask Washington to impose punitive duties on such imports.
The investigation on seamless carbon and alloy steel standard, line and pressure pipes was officially launched July 28 by the U.S. Department of Commerce, according to the Korea International Trade Association (KITA).
It said Texas-based steelmaker Vallourec Star, claiming unfair price cutting, requested a review of products imported from South Korea, Russia, Ukraine and the Czech Republic.
The specially made pipes are widely used in chemical plants, nuclear power generation facilities, airplanes and vehicles.
The U.S. company argued that cheap imports were damaging local industries and specifically requested the authorities to check if South Korean and Russian products were receiving state subsidies. It also demanded dumping margins of 119.07 percent to 132.16 percent to be imposed on imported steel pipes.
Anti-dumping actions are taken if companies sell products below the cost of making them, while countervailing duties are imposed if a government gives subsidies to companies manufacturing certain goods cheaply. Both activities can disrupt the market and hurt fair competition.
KITA said that Iljin Steel, Hanse Steel and Husteel were subject to the investigation, and said the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) will carry out the actual investigation and make its recommendations to the commerce department around March 2021.
If the ITC finds unfair price-cutting practices, it will ask Washington to impose punitive duties on such imports.
Source: Korea Times
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