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WTO panel rejects U.S. appeal in steel case
GENEVA, JULY 25. Rejecting a U.S. appeal, a World trade
organisation panel upheld a ruling that the U.S. had acted
illegally in increasing duties on Japanese steel imports.
Even as the appeal panel's report was released, two other
complaints - from India, the European Union and other countries -
about united states "antidumping" procedures for steel Came
before the WTO.
In the Japanese case, the appeals panel agreed with almost all
the findings of an earlier decision by WTO experts. That ruling,
issued in February, held that the U.S. Department of Commerce was
wrong in refusing to consider information from three Japanese
steel companies because their submissions had arrived late.
The increased duties were put in place in June 1999 after U.S.
steel companies and steelworkers associations complained that
Japanese hot-rolled steel was being "dumped" at below-market
prices, making it impossible for U.S. producers to compete.
Panel to take up Indian complaint
Meanwhile, the WTO today agreed to appoint a panel to look into
antidumping measures on steel plate from India imposed in
February 2000.
India said that, among other things, the Department of Commerce
had not considered information submitted by the Indian company
involved, Steel Authority of India Ltd., and had failed to take
into account the special situation of developing countries.
The panel will have six months to make its ruling.
The U.S. now is obligated to reach an agreement with Japan on a
reasonable period of time to change its measures to conform with
WTO rules.
In the third case before the WTO today, the U.S. used its right
temporarily to block an investigation into a law that pays fines
collected in antidumping cases to the U.S. companies that brought
the case.
But the WTO will almost certainly appoint a panel when the issue
is considered again in September, as Washington can only block
once. The complaint was brought by the European Union and eight
other countries - the largest number of complainants in a WTO
case.
The law known as the Byrd amendment was written with the steel
industry in mind, and almost half the cases covered by it are in
the steel industry.
The EU and the other complainants - Australia, Brazil, Chile,
India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea and Thailand - claim that the law
punishes exporters to the U.S. twice because first they are fined
and then those fines are handed to their competitors.
- AP
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