GCC Initiates Anti-Dumping 'Sunset Review' on Electric Accumulators from Republic of Korea

RIYADH-  The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) has initiated an anti-dumping sunset review  investigation on imports of Electric accumulators from the Republic of Korea, which was initially imposed back in 2017 for five years.

RIYADH -  The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) has initiated an anti-dumping sunset review  investigation on imports of Electric accumulators from the Republic of Korea, which was initially imposed back in 2017 for five years. 
The investigation was initiated following a sunset review application by the The Middle East Battery Company, supported by "Reem Batteries & Power Appliances Co., the National Batteries Co. Ltd., and Al-Shabib Battery Factory W.L.L (Q-Power Battery). 
The GCC industries claim they claim that that the termination of the previously imposed measures would likely to result in a continuation or recurrence of dumping. The subject product is defined under GCC's harmonized System as Electric lead-acid accumulators of capacity of 35 up to 115 Amperes, whether or not rectangular (including square) of a kind used for starting piston engines (Automotive Batteries, classified under GCC-Unified Tariff Code No. 85071000. 
The authority invited all Interested to participate in the investigation including governments of exporting countries and the exporting companies. Also, in the initiation notice; the authority asked exporters to make themselves known and to provide information on their GCC export sales and their local sales for the year 2021 to verify whether or not exporting companies were selling their product to the GCC below its normal value in the country of origin. 
Anti-dumping measures in the GCC are governed by the Unified Law on Anti-Dumping, Countervailing, and Safeguards Measures, applied by all GCC countries.
The central authority investigating anti-dumping petitions is the Bureau of the Technical Secretariat to Combat Harmful Practices in International Trade, located in Al Riyadh the capital of Saudi Arabia. 




Copyright © 2022, Al Armouti Lawyers & Consultants. All Rights Reserved.  
RIYADH -  The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) has initiated an anti-dumping sunset review  investigation on imports of Electric accumulators from the Republic of Korea, which was initially imposed back in 2017 for five years. 
The investigation was initiated following a sunset review application by the The Middle East Battery Company, supported by "Reem Batteries & Power Appliances Co., the National Batteries Co. Ltd., and Al-Shabib Battery Factory W.L.L (Q-Power Battery). 
The GCC industries claim they claim that that the termination of the previously imposed measures would likely to result in a continuation or recurrence of dumping. The subject product is defined under GCC's harmonized System as Electric lead-acid accumulators of capacity of 35 up to 115 Amperes, whether or not rectangular (including square) of a kind used for starting piston engines (Automotive Batteries, classified under GCC-Unified Tariff Code No. 85071000. 
The authority invited all Interested to participate in the investigation including governments of exporting countries and the exporting companies. Also, in the initiation notice; the authority asked exporters to make themselves known and to provide information on their GCC export sales and their local sales for the year 2021 to verify whether or not exporting companies were selling their product to the GCC below its normal value in the country of origin. 
Anti-dumping measures in the GCC are governed by the Unified Law on Anti-Dumping, Countervailing, and Safeguards Measures, applied by all GCC countries.
The central authority investigating anti-dumping petitions is the Bureau of the Technical Secretariat to Combat Harmful Practices in International Trade, located in Al Riyadh the capital of Saudi Arabia. 




Copyright © 2022, Al Armouti Lawyers & Consultants. All Rights Reserved.  
RIYADH -  The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) has initiated an anti-dumping sunset review  investigation on imports of Electric accumulators from the Republic of Korea, which was initially imposed back in 2017 for five years. 
The investigation was initiated following a sunset review application by the The Middle East Battery Company, supported by "Reem Batteries & Power Appliances Co., the National Batteries Co. Ltd., and Al-Shabib Battery Factory W.L.L (Q-Power Battery). 
The GCC industries claim they claim that that the termination of the previously imposed measures would likely to result in a continuation or recurrence of dumping. The subject product is defined under GCC's harmonized System as Electric lead-acid accumulators of capacity of 35 up to 115 Amperes, whether or not rectangular (including square) of a kind used for starting piston engines (Automotive Batteries, classified under GCC-Unified Tariff Code No. 85071000. 
The authority invited all Interested to participate in the investigation including governments of exporting countries and the exporting companies. Also, in the initiation notice; the authority asked exporters to make themselves known and to provide information on their GCC export sales and their local sales for the year 2021 to verify whether or not exporting companies were selling their product to the GCC below its normal value in the country of origin. 
Anti-dumping measures in the GCC are governed by the Unified Law on Anti-Dumping, Countervailing, and Safeguards Measures, applied by all GCC countries.
The central authority investigating anti-dumping petitions is the Bureau of the Technical Secretariat to Combat Harmful Practices in International Trade, located in Al Riyadh the capital of Saudi Arabia. 




Copyright © 2022, Al Armouti Lawyers & Consultants. All Rights Reserved.  

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