US probe finds material injury from European ESBR imports
5 Jan 2022
Share:
Investigation looks into imports from Czechia, Italy and Russia
Washington D.C. – A US investigation has found that the “there is a reasonable indication” that the local industry is materially injured by the imports of emulsion styrene-butadiene rubber (ESBR) from Czechia, Italy and Russia
The International Trade Commission (ITC) investigation was carried out upon a petition filed by Texas-based Lion Elastomers in November 2021, which alleged that there was a “clear pattern of unfair pricing” of ESBR from these countries.
As a result of the affirmative determination, the US department of commerce will probe the imports and deliver its preliminary anti-dumping duty determinations by 25 April, said the ITC in a 29 Dec 2021 statement.
Lion Elastomer’s petition covers grades of ESBR included in the IISRP 1500 and 1700 series of synthetic rubbers sold in all solid forms, including, but not limited to, bales, granules, crumbs, pellets, powders, plates, sheets and strip.
Excluded from the list are ESBR grades that are manufactured by blending ESBR with other polymers, high styrene resin masterbatch, carbon black masterbatch (1600 and 1800 grades) and latex.
ESBR is used primarily in tire applications as well as in conveyor belts, shoe soles, hose, roller coverings and flooring.
According to the petition, Lion is claiming a dumping margin of 35.87% for ESBR imported from the Czech Republic, 44.51% from Italy and 67.87% from Russia.
This article is only available to subscribers - subscribe today
Subscribe for unlimited access. A subscription to European Rubber Journal includes:
Every issue of European Rubber Journal (6 issues) including Special Reports & Maps.
Unlimited access to ERJ articles online
Daily email newsletter – the latest news direct to your inbox