Washington: The US today claimed that the WTO has rejected most of India's challenges against American trade remedy laws and determinations regarding imports of certain steel products from India.
According to US Trade Representative Michael Froman, the World Trade Organisation panel rejected India's challenges to key aspects of US countervailing duty laws and regulations, and most of the hundreds of challenges brought by India against case-specific Department of Commerce determinations in a countervailing duty proceeding covering hot-rolled carbon steel flat products from the country.
“This dispute is another example of the Administration's commitment to fight for American workers and industry by taking strong trade remedy measures against unfair subsidies and defending those actions when challenged by our trading partners,” US Trade Representative Froman said.
“The WTO panel's findings rejecting most of India's numerous challenges to our laws and determinations is a significant victory for the United States and for the workers and businesses making these steel products,” Froman said.
In its order, the WTO panel upheld key US countervailing duty laws and regulations regarding the application of “facts available” and the calculation of benefit.
The panel also rejected most of the challenges brought by India against Commerce's case-specific determinations, including challenges to over 300 instances of the use of “facts available”, challenges to Commerce's benchmark calculations and specificity determinations, findings that two Indian entities constituted “public bodies” and were thus subject to WTO subsidy disciplines and Commerce's inclusion of new subsidy programmes in countervailing duty review proceedings, Froman said.
With respect to the findings by the panel that US measures breach WTO rules in certain respects, the United States is studying those findings and will evaluate all options to ensure that US remedies against unfair subsidies remain strong and effective, he said.
In this dispute, India alleged that several US laws and regulations governing countervailing duty investigations, as well as specific countervailing duty measures imposed on imports of certain hot-rolled carbon steel flat products from India, were inconsistent with provisions of the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measure (SCM) and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994.
The WTO panel rejected most of India's claims against US laws and regulations “as such” under the SCM Agreement, Froman said.