The United States plans to impose substantial anti-dumping duties on Thailand's Charoen Pokphand Group and 23 shrimp exporters from Vietnam.

Published Jun 12, 2025

Tridge summary

Key Insight: The U.S. Department of Commerce is proposing to impose anti-dumping duties on multiple shrimp exporters from India, Vietnam, and Thailand, with 23 Vietnamese exporters facing a preliminary tax rate of 35.29%, Thailand's CP Foods receiving a preliminary tax rate as high as 57.64%, and Indian exporters facing rates ranging from 2.01% to 5.32%.

Original content

The new anti-dumping tax review period is from February 1, 2023, to January 31, 2024, and if U.S. importers purchase goods from these companies, they will need to pay corresponding margins. The anti-dumping tax rates are expected to be announced in December. According to the Southern Shrimp Alliance (SSA), the U.S. Department of Commerce selected the two largest exporters from India, Vietnam, and Thailand for individual reviews, and will allocate specific anti-dumping taxes to the remaining unselected companies based on these review results. Thai exporter Thai Union Group (Thai Wan Sheng) found no dumping during the review period, so its tax rate is 0%; CP Foods was imposed a 57.64% anti-dumping tax for refusing to provide the information requested by the Department of Commerce. In India, the U.S. Department of Commerce initially determined Devi Fisheries' anti-dumping tax at 2.01%, Sandhya Aqua Exports at 5.32%, with other exporters taxed at the average of these two rates, which ...
Source: Foodmate

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