Inside Trade

September 21, 2025

ITC

Quartz countertop makers seek Section 201 safeguard relief

A coalition of U.S. producers is seeking quotas and tariffs on all imports of quartz surface products, saying a series of U.S. antidumping and countervailing duties on those goods have been undermined by extensive evasion. The Quartz Manufacturing Alliance of America requested relief under Sections 201 and 202 of the Trade Act of 1974 in a Sept. 15 petition to the U.S. International Trade Commission. “This is not the first time that the domestic industry has sought relief from the...

Cambodia asks CIT to bar AD/CVD probes for ‘transnational’ subsidies

The government of Cambodia and some solar-cell makers say a Biden-era rule allowing the Commerce Department to include transnational subsidies in its antidumping and countervailing duty probes violates federal law, as part of new litigation over AD/CVD rates on solar components from four countries based on Commerce’s first-ever transnational subsidy finding. At the same time, a coalition of U.S. solar companies is seeking to not only keep Commerce’s AV/CVD orders in place but declare them illegally weak, setting up a...

ITC issues 'material retardation’ finding in Chinese tungsten shot case

Imports of Chinese tungsten shot, a type of ammunition made from tungsten alloy, have hindered the development of a domestic industry, the U.S. International Trade Commission said this week in a ruling that could have implications for other nascent U.S. critical mineral industries seeking relief from underpriced and subsidized imports. In a 3-0 vote on Wednesday, the ITC affirmed that “the establishment of a U.S. industry is materially retarded by reason of imports of tungsten shot from China," it said...

Stakeholders launch wave of litigation over solar cell AD/CVD orders

The Trump administration is facing a sprawling legal fight over its new antidumping and countervailing duties on certain solar-power components from Malaysia, Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand, as not only countries and producers subject to the remedies but even the U.S. firms that successfully sought them are now suing over the final orders at the Court of International Trade. CIT’s online docket shows 15 pending cases that have been filed since July 24 over the Commerce Department’s final orders on crystalline...

Commerce sets 93.5 percent antidumping duty on Chinese ‘active anode’ exports

The Commerce Department is imposing a 93.5 percent antidumping duty on Chinese active anode materials -- a category of minerals that includes graphite used in electric vehicle batteries -- based on a preliminary determination that exporters are acting under government control to sell their goods in the U.S. at less than fair value. On July 17, Commerce quietly posted online its preliminary decision memorandum for a U.S. International Trade Commission probe of active anode material exports that began in January...

ITC: Professional services companies using AI, other tech to improve competitiveness

Professional services suppliers are adopting new technologies, including artificial intelligence, to improve their competitiveness as demand grows amid increased digitization, the U.S. International Trade Commission said in its annual services trade report. The ITC’s “ Recent Trends in U.S. Services Trade ” for 2025, released on Wednesday, is focused on “trade in professional services, including accounting and auditing, advertising, architecture and engineering, education, legal, and management consulting services,” according to an accompanying statement . Professional services accounted for 38 percent...

ITC: USMCA auto rules impacted auto industry, not broader economy

The economic effects of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement’s rules of origin for automotive vehicles have been limited to the auto sector, the U.S. International Trade Commission says in a new report, finding that they benefitted auto parts makers while causing light vehicle producers to fare slightly worse. The ITC on Tuesday released its second report on the economic impact of the USMCA auto rules. The study, mandated under the deal’s implementing legislation, follows on a 2023 report that similarly found the...

ITC turns down solar producers’ request to close duty-collection ‘gap’

The U.S. International Trade Commission on Wednesday said it can’t meet a request by a coalition of domestic solar producers to expedite publication of its recent affirmative determination in a major trade remedy case – a decision that the producers say opens a window for importers to quickly move subject goods into the U.S. free of antidumping or countervailing duties. The ITC earlier this month determined in a unanimous vote that the U.S. industry was harmed by imports of crystalline...

ITC launches USTR-requested study on nonfat milk solids

The U.S. International Trade Commission has launched a factfinding investigation into the global nonfat milk solids market following a request by U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer that highlights Canada’s obligations under the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement. The study, requested by USTR under Section 332 of the Tariff Act of 1930, will examine the global market for nonfat milk solids – used to make products like skim milk powder, milk protein concentrates and infant formula – and the “export competitiveness” of nonfat milk...

Commerce issues final AD/CVD rates in solar probes 

The Commerce Department on Monday announced final duty determinations in a set of antidumping and countervailing duty probes into solar imports from four Southeast Asian countries, with rates for some companies running above 3,000 percent. Commerce last year launched the probes into imports of crystalline silicon photovoltaic cells and modules from Cambodia, Malaysia, Vietnam and Thailand following petitions by a group of domestic producers. According to the petitioners, Chinese-based companies have set up facilities in those countries to evade U.S...

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