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		U.S. imposes duties on structural steel from China, Mexico
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		 [September 05, 2019]WASHINGTON 
		(Reuters) - The U.S. Commerce Department said on Wednesday it imposed 
		duties on Chinese and Mexican structural steel after making a 
		preliminary determination that producers in both countries had dumped 
		fabricated structural steel on the U.S. market at prices below fair 
		market value. 
 The department said it imposed duties of up to 141% on Chinese 
		structural steel and up to 31% on Mexican structural steel and will 
		begin collecting cash deposits for imports based on those rates.
 
 Commerce said it had found that imports of Canadian fabricated 
		structural steel did not violate U.S. anti-dumping laws.
 
 Most Chinese steel products have largely been excluded from the U.S. 
		market by prior Commerce Department anti-dumping duties and President 
		Donald Trump's 25% punitive tariffs. The latest order seeks to prevent 
		Chinese downstream structural steel assemblies from skirting those 
		duties and entering the United States.
 
		
		 
		
 Commerce found that one Chinese producer, Modern Heavy Industries (Taicang) 
		Co Ltd, did not dump product into the United States, but it imposed 
		dumping rates of 52% on Wison (Nanton) Heavy Industry Co Ltd and 57.86% 
		on Jinhuan Construction Group Co Ltd. It also assigned a preliminary 
		dumping rate of 141% for all other Chinese fabricators.
 
 Wison (Nantong) Heavy Industry did immediately respond to a request for 
		comment by Reuters.
 
 Reuters was unable to contact anyone at Jinhuan Construction who could 
		comment on the duties.
 
 FINAL REPORT
 
 The Commerce Department is scheduled to release final anti-dumping 
		duties in its fabricated structural steel investigation on or about Jan. 
		24, 2020. The U.S. International Trade Commission needs to find that 
		American steel fabricators suffered injury from Chinese and Mexican 
		imports for the duties to be locked in place for a five-year period.
 
		
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			Workers install steel beams to a new apartment building on New York 
			City's lower East Side in Manhattan, January 11, 2016. REUTERS/Mike 
			Segar 
             
Mexico's Economy Ministry said the duties imposed on some Mexican structural 
steel are part of a "normal investigation ... when an industry feels it is being 
affected by imports that use unfair practices, such as dumping or subsidies."
 The Economy Ministry said it would continue to support the affected Mexican 
firms.
 
 It also underscored that the new duties have no relation to 25% tariffs on 
imported steel and 10% tariffs on imported aluminum that Trump imposed in March 
2018 based on national security grounds. Mexico was exempted from those tariffs 
in May.
 
 In 2018, U.S. imports of fabricated structural steel were valued at from $722.5 
million from Canada, $897.5 million from China, and $622.4 million from Mexico, 
Commerce said.
 
 The products covered by the investigation are prefabricated from beams, girders, 
columns plates and flanges for erection or assembly into structures, such as 
buildings, parking decks, hospitals, arenas and ports. The investigation 
excludes concrete reinforcing bar structures, steel bridge sections, 
pre-fabricated steel buildings and steel utility poles, among other products.
 
 (Reporting by Eric Beech and David Lawder, additional reporting by Min Zhang in 
Beijing; Editing by Mohammad Zargham and Leslie Adler)
 
				 
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