Canadian trade tribunal sets margins for fabricated industrial steel component imports

Tuesday, 30 May 2017 23:40:56 (GMT+3)   |   San Diego
       

The Canadian International Trade Tribunal's (CITT) ruled last week that dumped fabricated industrial steel components (FISC) from China, Korea, and Spain, and subsidized FISC from China, have caused injury to the domestic FISC industry.
 
Duties against FISC from the three countries range up to 45.8 percent. Subsidized margins against China range up to 70 percent. All margins will remain in force for the next five years.
 
FISC includes fabricated steel for industrial facilities, including oil and gas, mining, and power generation facilities.

Similar articles

Canadian steel association applauds trade remedy changes in 2022 budget

08 Apr | Steel News

CITT launches inquiry into exclusion requests on steel imports subject to safeguards

16 May | Steel News

Canada’s USW urges government to reconsider steel safeguard decision

29 Apr | Steel News

CITT rules that corrosion-resistant flat steel products cause injury to Canadian industries

26 Apr | Steel News

Canadian Coalition for Construction Steel welcomes CITT recommendation to reject safeguards

12 Apr | Steel News

Canada to update retaliatory tariff list against US as Section 232 tariffs continue

09 Apr | Steel News

Canada expects exemption from Section 232 in “the next few weeks”

21 Feb | Steel News

Ontario and Quebec governments urge Canada to “surrender” trade war with US

04 Feb | Steel News

Canada collects $839 million in steel and aluminum tariffs as of December

28 Jan | Steel News

Canadian branch of USW calls for continued safeguards on imported steel

15 Jan | Steel News