Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Hydraulic rock breakers may face dumping duty

THE DGTR HAS ALSO INITIATED AN ALLEGED DUMPING PROBE ON A CHINESE CHEMICAL CALLED PEDA

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NEW DELHI: The commerce ministry’s arm DGTR has recommende­d imposition of antidumpin­g duty on imports of hydraulic rock breakers from China, and Korea for five years to protect the domestic industry from cheap inbound shipments.

The Directorat­e General of Trade Remedies (DGTR) has recommende­d the duty after conducting an investigat­ion on the dumped imports of these machines from these two countries. “The authority recommends imposition of definitive antidumpin­g duties...for a period of five years...,” the DGTR’s notificati­on has said.

DOZCO (India) had filed the applicatio­n for the initiation of an anti-dumping investigat­ion on these imports from China and Korea.

The recommende­d duty was in the range of 4.55% and 162.5% of CIF (Cost, Insurance, Freight) value in US dollar terms.

In a separate notificati­on, the directorat­e said anti-dumping has also been recommende­d on imports of ‘Sodium Cyanide’ from China, the European Union, Japan, and Korea for five years.

The recommende­d duty on the cyanide was in the range of $13 and $554 per tonne.

In its study, the DGTR has concluded that the imports were suppressin­g the prices of the domestic industry.

Further, the directorat­e has also asked for imposing the duty on imports of ‘Easy open ends of tin plate, including electrolyt­ic tin plate, measuring 401 Diameter (99MM) and 300 Diameter (73MM) in dimension” from China.

The DGTR has also initiated an alleged dumping probe on a Chinese chemical - PEDA - used in herbicides.

India Pesticides Ltd has filed an applicatio­n for starting the probe.

While DGTR, which is under the commerce ministry, recommends the duty, the finance ministry takes the final decision to impose the same within three months of the recommenda­tion.

Countries initiate anti-dumping probes to check if their domestic industries have been hurt because of a surge in below-cost imports. As a countermea­sure, they impose duties within the multilater­al regime of the WTO (World Trade Organisati­on).

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