Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Industry group protests US tariff on Vietnam tra fish

Industry group protests US tariff on Vietnam tra fishThe Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers said Thursday it opposed the preliminary anti-dumping tariffs which the US imposed on Vietnamese frozen tra fish fillets.

According to the association, the US Department of Commerce’s decision unreasonably based the tariffs on production prices in the Philippines--a country with an exceptionally small tra fish industry. The tariffs amount to more than 100 percent of the sales price.

Production prices in the Philippines are always higher than in Vietnam, which has the largest tra fish sector in the world with an output of more than 1.2 million tons a year, the seafood association said.

The association demanded that the US Department of Commerce consider lowering the tariffs and use Bengladeshi prices as a point of comparison.

Vietnamese tra fish products rank in the top ten favorite commodities in the US. Vietnam exported around 41,000 tons of tra fish worth US$134 million to the US last year. The sales accounted 6.75 percent of its total tra exports around the world.

Previously, the US Department of Commerce applied low anti-dumping tariffs of up to 0.52 percent on Vietnamese tra.

Related Articles

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Tariff increase violates free trade agreement

Tariff increase violates free trade agreement

The Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP) has
confirmed that the US Department of Commerce (DOC) increase in its
antidumping tariff on Vietnam’s tra (Pangasius) fish runs counter to the
letter and spirit of the free trade agreements between Vietnam and the
US.


In an open letter sent to the Vietnamese
Government and the US Ambassador in Vietnam on Sept. 16, VASEP expressed
indignation and concern over DOC’s preliminary antidumping duty rates
in the sixth administrative review applied to Vietnam’s tra frozen
fillets exported to the US.


The duty rates are
in excess of 100 percent, far exceeding any prior rates in this unfair
dumping case lasting more than eight years, and clearly amounting to a
punitive tariff on Vietnamese fish fillet exports, said the association.


According to VASEP, the calculated dumping rates cannot be supported by the evidence and data submitted for this review.


VASEP expressed its particular concern at DOC’s unjustified change in
the surrogate country used to value raw material inputs, sudden
switching from Bangladesh to the Philippines after consistently
rejecting the Philippines in all prior administrative reviews due to the
poor quality of the pricing data, the lack of publicly available data,
the extremely small size of the Philippine catfish industry, and the
fact that the Philippines has not exported products of this fish
species.


VASEP said it believed the results are
politically motivated, coming after significant recent lobbying efforts
by the Catfish Farmers of America (CFA).


VASEP
and individual fish processors/exporters requested the Vietnamese
Government undertake a comprehensive review of the harmful impacts of
DOC’s determination and urge DOC and the administration of the US
to carefully reassess this decision, not allowing it to have a bad
influence on the well-developing bilateral relations between the two
nations.


At a press briefing in Hanoi on Sept.
17, VASEP Vice President Nguyen Huu Dung said the association and
Vietnam’s tra fish businesses will protect the industry by taking
essential legal action to request DOC to change the results of the sixth
administrative review which are expected to be issued in March 2011 in
accordance with the US law and the WTO agreement.


VASEP and businesses are striving to complete practical data on tra
fish prices and evidence proving Vietnam did not dump its tra fish in
the US market in order to send this information to the US next
month.


Both sides are expected to discuss the issue at a meeting slated for November this year.


VASEP has also sent two of the biggest tra fish exporters – Vinh Hoan
and Hung Vuong – to the US to meet US lawyers for consultation on
this disputed determination.


According to VASEP,
Vietnam’s tra fish export value is estimated at 1 billion
USD in the first nine months of the year and 1.5 billion USD for the
whole year, with the US being the second biggest tra fish consumer,
after the EU./.

Related Articles

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Seafood body blasts preliminary DOC duties on tra fish

HCMC – The Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP) has formally objected to the U.S. Department of Commerce’s about-face, saying it is unfair to switch from Bangladesh to the Philippines as a surrogate country to determine dumping margins for tra fish fillet imports from Vietnam.

In its sixth antidumping duty preliminary administrative review on certain fish fillets from Vietnam, the DOC selected the Philippines as a surrogate country to calculate the anti-dumping tariffs, so five Vietnamese exporters might be slapped prohibitive tariffs of over 100%. 

The DOC preliminarily determined the dumping margin for fish imports from Vinh Hoan, Agifish, ESS LLC and South Vina was US$4.2 per kg, and the remaining firm, Vinh Quang, US$2.44, during the review period, August 1, 2008 through July 31, 2009. Another firm, Anvifish, might be subject to a Vietnam-wide rate of US$2.11 per kg.

In the DOC’s preliminary results, the antidumping margins would rise to more than 100%.

VASEP asserted the use of data in the Philippines as a surrogate market economy country to determine the antidumping margins for fish imports from Vietnam was nonsensical.

Vietnam’s catfish farming industry is the world’s largest with an annual processing volume of over 1.2 million tons while the Philippine fish farming sector remains small and lacks a synchronous processing system, so its production cost is certainly higher than in Vietnam, according to a statement of VASEP.

The statement says VASEP will join hands with tra fish exporters to take necessary legal action to prove the legitimacy of the Vietnamese tra farming and processing sector so as to request the DOC to change its preliminary determination in March 2011.

Nguyen Ngoc Vi Tam, deputy general director of the Dong Thap Province-based Vinh Hoan Corporation, told the Daily on Thursday that if the DOC stuck to its preliminary review results in the next six months, Vinh Hoan would take the issue to an international court.

Vinh Hoan said about two weeks ago that it might file a case against the DOC if its tra exports to the U.S. incur anti-dumping duties.

Vinh Hoan ships US$30 million worth of tra fish fillets to the U.S. market a year, around 30% of its total export. Tam noted the company was searching for new markets in preparation for the worst.

The Can Tho City-based company South Vina has described the DOC’s preliminary determination as absurd. This action has resulted from the pressure of the Catfish Farmers of America (CFA), said Duong Viet Thang, deputy general director of the company. 

But Thang said the impact on his firm would be insignificant as its annual exports to America totaled about US$1 million, so it would be able to shift to other markets.

The agriculture ministry said this week that the Government would take action to prevent the higher antidumping duties from materializing as this would affect tra exports to other markets.

Related Articles

Friday, November 12, 2010

Vietnam says to head off U.S. tra anti-dumping tariffs

Tra fish harvested at a farm in the Mekong Delta. Vietnam is trying to prevent the possible U.S. anti-dumping levy on tra imports from Vietnam, which might reach 136% - Photo: Le Toan
HCMC – The agriculture ministry has said the Government would take action if the U.S. imposes new anti-dumping tariffs on tra fish imports from Vietnam, which could amount to 136%.

Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Luong Le Phuong told reporters in HCMC on Tuesaday that the Government would do something to prevent this; otherwise, it would affect tra exports to other markets.

“Though tra exporters are not totally dependent on America, the levy may set a negative precedent by encouraging other markets like the EU and Middle East to follow suit. That’s why we must make concerted effort to cope with the matter,” Phuong said.

The United States Department of Commerce (DOC) has said unofficially that the anti-dumping tariffs for products of certain Vietnamese seafood exporters might reach 136%. In a review of the tariffs, DOC used the Philippines as the third-country market to determine dumping margins for Vietnamese tra fish, instead of Bangladesh, thus leading the tariffs to rise.

If the new prohibitively high tariffs are imposed in March next year, many tra fish exporters will certainly leave this market.

Andrew B. Schroth, advocate of the Grunfeld, Desiderio, Lebowitz, Silverman & Klestadt LLP who has advised tra fish exporters on the anti-dumping case, said that if DOC took this decision, it could be seen punitive rather than variable from the last time.

“Though the final rates will not be released until six months later, related sides must work very hard in order to divert the decision,” Schroth told the press conference at the Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers office in HCMC.

The possible measures which Vietnam should take, he said, include using all available channels in the Philippines, both legal and political, to prove that the choice of the Philippines as a third country to consider as the benchmark is not at all appropriate.

The Philippines is, in many aspects, far different from Vietnam. Labor, business management cost and even the raw material price are higher than in Vietnam, but they were used for the calculation of dumping margins of Vietnam’s tra fish.

A source from the agriculture ministry, who requested anonymity, said earlier that it was due to the growing popularity of the fish on the American market that had resulted in the Catfish Farmers of America (CFA) lobbying against Vietnamese tra fish.

Last week, John Connelly, president of the U.S. National Fisheries Institute, said during his visit to Vietnam that Vietnamese tra had for the first time become one of the most favorite fish in the U.S.

This explains why DOC suddenly shifted to the Philippines as a third country to calculate dumping margins, the ministry source said.

In the previous anti-dumping review, a majority of Vietnamese exporters enjoyed the lowest tariff of 0.52% and some were even recognized as not dumping the fish on the American market.

The anti-dumping tariffs for Vietnamese tra exports to the U.S. have impacted on the local industry since 2003. Last year tra exports to this market totaled US$134 million, about 10% of the total export.

Related Articles

Vietnam says to head off U.S. tra anti-dumping tariffs

Tra fish harvested at a farm in the Mekong Delta. Vietnam is trying to prevent the possible U.S. anti-dumping levy on tra imports from Vietnam, which might reach 136% - Photo: Le Toan
HCMC – The agriculture ministry has said the Government would take action if the U.S. imposes new anti-dumping tariffs on tra fish imports from Vietnam, which could amount to 136%.

Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Luong Le Phuong told reporters in HCMC on Tuesaday that the Government would do something to prevent this; otherwise, it would affect tra exports to other markets.

“Though tra exporters are not totally dependent on America, the levy may set a negative precedent by encouraging other markets like the EU and Middle East to follow suit. That’s why we must make concerted effort to cope with the matter,” Phuong said.

The United States Department of Commerce (DOC) has said unofficially that the anti-dumping tariffs for products of certain Vietnamese seafood exporters might reach 136%. In a review of the tariffs, DOC used the Philippines as the third-country market to determine dumping margins for Vietnamese tra fish, instead of Bangladesh, thus leading the tariffs to rise.

If the new prohibitively high tariffs are imposed in March next year, many tra fish exporters will certainly leave this market.

Andrew B. Schroth, advocate of the Grunfeld, Desiderio, Lebowitz, Silverman & Klestadt LLP who has advised tra fish exporters on the anti-dumping case, said that if DOC took this decision, it could be seen punitive rather than variable from the last time.

“Though the final rates will not be released until six months later, related sides must work very hard in order to divert the decision,” Schroth told the press conference at the Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers office in HCMC.

The possible measures which Vietnam should take, he said, include using all available channels in the Philippines, both legal and political, to prove that the choice of the Philippines as a third country to consider as the benchmark is not at all appropriate.

The Philippines is, in many aspects, far different from Vietnam. Labor, business management cost and even the raw material price are higher than in Vietnam, but they were used for the calculation of dumping margins of Vietnam’s tra fish.

A source from the agriculture ministry, who requested anonymity, said earlier that it was due to the growing popularity of the fish on the American market that had resulted in the Catfish Farmers of America (CFA) lobbying against Vietnamese tra fish.

Last week, John Connelly, president of the U.S. National Fisheries Institute, said during his visit to Vietnam that Vietnamese tra had for the first time become one of the most favorite fish in the U.S.

This explains why DOC suddenly shifted to the Philippines as a third country to calculate dumping margins, the ministry source said.

In the previous anti-dumping review, a majority of Vietnamese exporters enjoyed the lowest tariff of 0.52% and some were even recognized as not dumping the fish on the American market.

The anti-dumping tariffs for Vietnamese tra exports to the U.S. have impacted on the local industry since 2003. Last year tra exports to this market totaled US$134 million, about 10% of the total export.

Related Articles

Sunday, November 7, 2010

VASEP decries tariffs on tra fish

catfish
Photo: Tuoi Tre

The anti-dumping tariffs imposed on tra fish exported from Vietnam to the American market from August 2008 to July 2009 were not reasonable, said the Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP).

In accordance with the US Department of Commerce (DOC)'s preliminary decision, Vietnamese businesses paid US$4.22 per kilo in taxes, while tra fish's market price in the US was lower than the Vietnamese product's after-tax prices, said Nguyen Huu Dung, VASEP vice chairman.

The domestic firms incurred huge losses due to high anti-dumping tariffs, Dung said. He said that the association was now coordinating with relevant agencies and businesses to ask the DOC to reconsider its anti-dumping taxes on tra fish imported from Vietnam.

The DOC makes an annual decision on whether to increase or reduce anti-dumping taxes on Vietnamese commodities.

Anti-dumping tariffs, which were between 0.1 and 0.52 percent, had been imposed on Vietnam's tra fish in the past, which helped to facilitate the flow of tra fish into the American market.

The US National Fisheries Institute (NFI) said there were untapped opportunities in the US market for Vietnamese seafood exporters because the fish was listed in the top 10 of the most consumed seafood products in the US in 2009.

Several Vietnamese fish farms have received Global GAP (Good Agricultural Practice) certifications, which has created a foundation for Vietnamese seafood exporters to expand their outlets.

The statement was made by an NFI representative during a meeting with the representatives from the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development in Ho Chi Minh City late last week.

Related Articles

Saturday, November 6, 2010

VASEP decries tariffs on tra fish

The anti-dumping tariffs imposed on tra fish exported from Vietnam to
the American market from August 2008 to July 2009 were not reasonable,
said the Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP)
vice chairman, Nguyen Huu Dung.


In accordance with the US Department of Commerce (DOC)'s preliminary
decision, Vietnamese businesses paid 4.22 USD per kilo in taxes, while
tra fish's market price in the US was lower than the Vietnamese
product's after-tax prices.


The domestic firms
incurred huge losses due to high anti-dumping tariffs, Dung said. He
said that the association was now co-ordinating with relevant agencies
and businesses to ask the DOC to reconsider its anti-dumping taxes on
tra fish imported from Vietnam.


The DOC makes an
annual decision on whether to increase or reduce anti-dumping taxes on
Vietnamese commodities. Anti-dumping tariffs, which were between 0.1 and
0.52 percent, had been imposed on Vietnam's tra fish in the past, which
helped to facilitate the flow of tra fish into the American market.


The US National Fisheries Institute (NFI) said there was untapped
opportunities in the US market for Vietnamese seafood exporters because
fish was listed in the top 10 of the most consumed seafood products in
the US in 2009.


Several Vietnamese fish farms have
received Global GAP (Good Agricultural Practice) certifications, which
has created a foundation for Vietnamese seafood exporters to expand
their outlets. The statement was made by an NFI representative during a
meeting with the representatives from the Ministry of Agriculture and
Rural Development in HCM City late last week./.

Related Articles

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Tra fish among US’s top ten popular seafood products

Tra fish among US’s top ten popular seafood products

Tra fish has become one of the US’s top ten popular seafood products in
2009 for the first time, according to the Vietnamese Association of
Seafood Exporters and Processors (VASEP).


n its annual list of the 10 most popular seafood’s, released by the US’s
National Fisheries Institute on September 9, tra fish ranked 10 th .


Luong Le Phuong, the Deputy Minister of Agriculture
and Rural Development said that as tra fish is one of Vietnam’s major
exports, the ministry has introduced measures to strictly control its
quality throughout the stages from farming to processing and marketing.


According to VASEP, in the first seven months of
this year, Vietnamese seafood exports to the US reached 435 million USD,
of which tra fish accounted for 80.8 million USD, up 14 percent from
the same period last year, with the volume reaching over 26,000 tonnes.


However, the US’s Department of Commerce has made a
decision on anti-dumping tax based on the administrative review of tra
fish imports from Vietnam between August 2008 and July 2009, resulting
in Vietnamese seafood exporters facing higher tariffs.


Nguyen Huu Dung, the Deputy Chairman of VASEP said that the
unreasonable tariffs have made many Vietnamese businesses suffer heavy
losses and tra fish exports to the US will find it harder in the near
future./.

Related Articles