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  5. CSMS 3004301
CSMS 3004301·Trade policy·January 4, 2013·View on csms.cbp.gov ↗

Liquidation instructions for Citric Acid and Certain Citrate Salts from the People's Republic of China exported by RZBC Imp & Exp Co., Ltd. for the period 5/1/2010 through 4/30/2011 (A-570-937)

Plain-English explanation

CSMS 3004301 is a U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Cargo Systems Messaging Service bulletin (trade policy), published on January 4, 2013. It carries the official CBP guidance brokers and importers must follow for the topic — "Liquidation instructions for Citric Acid and Certain Citrate Salts from the People's Republic of China exported by RZBC Imp & Exp Co., Ltd. for the period 5/1/2010 through 4/30/2011 (A-570-937)". It links to 1 AD/CVD case in Tandom's catalog. CSMS messages are the operational layer between Commerce determinations and at-the-border collections: when Commerce publishes a new rate, scope ruling, or instruction, CBP turns it into a CSMS that ACE/ACS systems and brokers act on.

Linked AD/CVD cases(1)

Cases referenced or affected by this CSMS message

A-570-937

Message body

Full text as published by U.S. Customs and Border Protection

1. For all shipments of citric acid and certain citrate salts from the People's Republic of China (“PRC”) exported by RZBC Imp & Exp Co., Ltd., imported by or sold to (as indicated on the commercial invoice or Customs documentation) RZBC Imp & Exp Co., Ltd., and entered, or withdrawn from warehouse, for consumption during the period 5/1/2010 through 4/30/2011, assess an antidumping liability of 0 percent of the entered value. Exporter: RZBC Imp & Exp Co., Ltd. Case Number: A-570-937-018 Importer or Customer: RZBC Imp & Exp Co., Ltd. Final Rate: 0.00 Entries may have come in under A-570-937-013, A-570-937-014, A-570-937-015, or A-570-937-000 during the period, as the case number assigned to RZBC Imp & Exp Co., Ltd. (A-570-937-018) was not in place during the period of review. 2. For all shipments of citric acid and certain citrate salts from the PRC exported by RZBC Imp & Exp Co., Ltd. entered, or withdrawn from warehouse, for consumption during the period 5/1/2010 through 4/30/2011 and not covered by paragraph 1, assess antidumping duties at the cash deposit rate or per-unit amount in effect on the date of the entry. 3. Notice of the lifting of suspension of liquidation of entries of subject merchandise covered by paragraphs 1 and 2 occurred with the publication of the final results of administrative review (77 FR 74171, 12/13/2012). Unless instructed otherwise, for all other shipments of citric acid and certain citrate salts from the PRC you shall continue to collect cash deposits of estimated antidumping duties for the merchandise at the current rates or per-unit amounts. 4. There are no injunctions applicable to the entries covered by this instruction. 5. The assessment of antidumping duties by CBP on shipments or entries of this merchandise is subject to the provisions of section 778 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended. Section 778 requires that CBP pay interest on overpayments or assess interest on underpayments of the required amounts deposited as estimated antidumping duties. The interest provisions are not applicable to cash or bonds posted as estimated antidumping duties before the date of publication of the antidumping duty order. Interest shall be calculated from the date payment of estimated antidumping duties is required through the date of liquidation. The rate at which such interest is payable is the rate in effect under section 6621 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 for such period. 6. Upon assessment of antidumping duties, CBP shall require that the importer provide a reimbursement statement, as described in section 351.402(f)(2) of Commerce's regulations. The importer should provide the reimbursement statement prior to liquidation of the entry. If the importer certifies that it has an agreement with the manufacturer, producer, seller, or exporter, to be reimbursed antidumping and/or countervailing duties, CBP shall double the antidumping duty and/or increase the antidumping duty by the amount of the countervailing duties in accordance with the above-referenced regulation. Additionally, if the importer does not provide the reimbursement statement prior to liquidation, reimbursement shall be presumed and CBP shall double the antidumping duties due. If an importer timely files a protest challenging the presumption of reimbursement and doubling of duties, consistent with CBP's protest process, CBP may accept the reimbursement statement filed with the protest to rebut the presumption of reimbursement. 7. If there are any questions by the importing public regarding this message, please contact the Call Center for the Office of AD/CVD Operations, Import Administration, International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce at (202) 482-0984. CBP ports should submit their inquiries through authorized CBP channels only. (This message was generated by O4:KH). 8. There are no restrictions on the release of this information. Michael B. Walsh

Frequently asked questions

What is CSMS 3004301?

CSMS 3004301 is a U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Cargo Systems Messaging Service bulletin titled "Liquidation instructions for Citric Acid and Certain Citrate Salts from the People's Republic of China exported by RZBC Imp & Exp Co., Ltd. for the period 5/1/2010 through 4/30/2011 (A-570-937)". CSMS bulletins are the operational instructions CBP issues to brokers, importers, and ACE filers covering rate changes, system updates, scope guidance, and other day-to-day customs-operations changes.

When was CSMS 3004301 published?

CBP published CSMS 3004301 on January 4, 2013. The bulletin's instructions are typically operative as of the publication date unless the body specifies a different effective date.

Which AD/CVD cases does CSMS 3004301 affect?

CSMS 3004301 references 1 AD/CVD case (A-570-937). The links on this page take you to each linked order with its current scope, rates, and history.

Is the CBP CSMS the legally binding instruction?

Yes — for at-the-border filing and entry collection. CSMS messages translate Commerce's Federal Register determinations into operational CBP instructions that ACE/ACS systems and brokers execute. The Federal Register notice is the underlying legal authority; the CSMS is the operational implementation. Both should be read together when reconciling a rate or scope change.

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