

Trade Representative published in the Federal Register 84 FR 54245, a Notice of Determination and Action Pursuant to Section 301: Enforcement of U.S. As of May 20, 2019, Section 232 duty requirements for steel products are effective for all countries of origin except Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Mexico and South Korea.ħ Section 301 duty requirements were effective July 6, 2018.Ĩ Section 301 duty requirements for certain products of the EU were effective October 9, 2019. As of June 1, 2018, Section 232 duty requirements for steel products are effective for all countries of origin except Argentina, Australia, Brazil, and South Korea. As of May 20, 2019, Section 232 duty requirements for aluminum products are effective for all countries of origin except Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Mexico and South Korea.Ħ Section 232 duty requirements for steel products were effective March 23, 2018, for most countries. As of June 1, 2018, Section 232 duty requirements for aluminum products are effective for all countries of origin except Argentina and Australia. Number of importers requesting extended deadlinesĢ Section 201 tariff-rate quotas for washing machines were effective February 7, 2018, for all countries except Canada and most Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) beneficiary countries (except Thailand).ģ Section 201 tariff rate quotas for washing machine parts were effective February 7, 2018, for all countries except Canada and most Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) beneficiary countries (except Thailand).Ĥ Section 201 duty requirements for solar cells and modules were effective February 7, 2018, for all countries except most Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) beneficiary countries (except Thailand and the Philippines).ĥ Section 232 duty requirements for aluminum products were effective March 23, 2018, for most countries. * Trade Remedy duties assessed = Estimated Trade Remedy duties, determined by the trade community, and final Trade Remedy duties, ascertained by CBP, including adjustments for refunds TEMPORARY DEFERMENT OF DUTIES AND FEES FOR CERTAIN IMPORTERS DURING THE NATIONAL EMERGENCY CONCERNING THE COVID-19 OUTBREAK 9, 10Īmount of estimated payments under extended deadlines

*Amount includes Estimated and final duties, taxes, and fees paid by the trade community, including adjustments for refunds

Total Section 321 BOL's and Mail (de minimis)** It summarizes CBP's revenue collection efforts implementation of the recent trade remedies taken pursuant to Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 and Sections 201 and 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 and trade enforcement actions.įor more information, please visit the Trade section of CBP.gov. The below data is only a snapshot of CBP's critical trade mission. To accomplish comprehensive, agile, and uniform enforcement, CBP employs a national trade enforcement program that offers a framework for national collaboration within CBP and among other government agencies and multinational partners.

and international trade laws and when CBP detects a discrepancy, actions are taken to address the violation and deter future non-compliance. CBP expertly applies an increasing number of complex U.S. In the post-release environment, CBP utilizes a sophisticated system of reviews and audits to verify import compliance and accurate revenue collection. To enforce trade laws effectively and minimize the unnecessary slowing of trade, CBP leverages its expertise to identify the highest-risk imports prior to release. Among other critical mission sets, CBP is charged with balancing the facilitation of legitimate trade that supports economic growth with the duty to shield the American public and businesses from unsafe products, intellectual property theft, and unfair trade practices. ports of entry, once merchandise arrives at our ports, and even after merchandise is released into the U.S. trade laws prior to merchandise arriving at U.S. CBP has the critical responsibility to enforce U.S.
