last update: August 08, 2012    

Document Filing Instructions

The U.S. Department of Commerce’s Import Administration is required by law to protect business proprietary information submitted in an antidumping or countervailing duty proceeding. The Department may only disclose business proprietary information to:
  An individual authorized by the Department to have access to business proprietary information under the terms of an
    administrative protective order (APO);
  An employee of the Department of Commerce or the International Trade Commission directly involved in the proceeding
    in which the information is submitted;
  An employee of the Customs Service directly involved in conducting a fraud investigation relating to an antidumping or
    antidumping or countervailing duty proceeding;
  The U.S. Trade Representative as provided by 19 U.S.C. § 3571(i);
  Any person to whom the submitting person specifically authorizes disclosure in writing; and
  A charged party or counsel for the charged party under 19 CFR part 354.
The following factual information is generally regarded as business proprietary information, if it is so designated by the submitter:
  Business or trade secrets concerning the nature of a product or production process;
  Production costs (but not the identity of the production components unless a particular component is a trade secret);
  Distribution costs (but not channels of distribution);
  Terms of sale (but not terms of sale offered to the public);
  Prices of individual sales, likely sales, or other offers (but not components of prices, such as transportation, if based on
    published schedules, dates of sale, product description (other than business or trade secrets described above), or order
    numbers);
  Names of particular customers, distributors, or suppliers (but not destination of sale or designation of type of customer,
    distributor, or supplier, unless the destination or designation would reveal the name);
  In a AD proceeding, the exact amount of the dumping margin on individual sales;
  In a CVD proceeding, the exact amount of the benefit applied for or received by a person from each of the programs under
    investigation or review (but not descriptions of the operation of the programs, or the amount if included in official public
    statements or documents or publications, or the ad valorem countervailable subsidy rate calculated for each person under
    a program);
  The names of particular persons from whom business proprietary information was obtained;
  The position of a domestic producer or workers regarding a petition; and
  Any other specific business information the release of which to the public would cause substantial harm to the competitive
    position of the submitter.
Further Information and Filing Instructions
  See Commerce Department Regulation 19 CFR. § 351.105 (Revised 2/98).

  For filing instructions, see http://ia.ita.doc.gov/filing/index.html.



Note: For general information purposes only. When interpreting and applying the law, please refer to the Tariff Act of 1930,
as amended, (19 U.S.C. 1671-1671h, 1673-1673h) and the related regulations in Title 19 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
Counseling Assistance Hotline: (202) 482-1255 AD/CVD Petition Hotline (recorded update of recent filings): (202) 482-0430


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United States Department of Commerce . International Trade Administration . Import Administration . 1401 Constitution Ave. N.W. Washington DC 20230
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