CBP clarified that the Fish and Wildlife Service suspended both its ACE import and export pilots as of Jan. 12 (here). CBP also reiterated that FWS would take a new interim approach to tariff flagging. "Those tariff codes currently flagged as 'FW2' associated with government agency processing code EDS will remain flagged as FW2 and require the FWS 'EDS' Message Set in all cases," CBP said. "All other tariff codes currently flagged as 'FW2' will shift to 'FW1' with the ability to file a newly created disclaimer code 'E' that is specific to FWS or the EDS. FWS is working with CBP to program the inclusion of the FWS Designated Port Exception Permit. The timeline for implementation is dependent upon revision of the FWS Implementation Guide and CBP programming." FWS recently announced it would bring back its the designated port permitting to allow for entries at port without FWS staff present (see 1612140064).
CBP issued the following release on commercial trade and related matters:
CBP issued the following release on commercial trade and related matters:
International Trade Today is providing readers with some of the top stories for Jan. 9-13 in case they were missed.
CBP issued the following releases on commercial trade and related matters:
CBP will delay the changes to Post-Summary Corrections (see 1701060029) and the periodic monthly statements (see 1612090021) that were scheduled to take effect Jan. 14, it said in a notice (here). That notice and another (here) officially delay the major ACE deployments that were scheduled for Jan. 14. CBP previously announced the delay in the deployment (see 1701110039), which was to include liquidation, drawback, reconciliation, duty deferral, collections and statements (see 1612090030). The delay is based on an assessment of "stakeholder readiness for the mandatory transition of postrelease capabilities in ACE, including the modifications to the reconciliation test and the transition of reconciliation filings from [Automated Commercial System] to ACE," it said.
The Commerce Department is ending a requirement that importers of organic pasta from Italy submit an organic certification with their entry summary to qualify for an exemption from antidumping and countervailing duties, it said in the final results of a changed circumstances review on AD/CV duties on pasta from Italy (A-475-818/C-475-819) (here). Effective Jan. 13, importers only have to maintain the organic certificates in their records and provide them to CBP and Commerce to prove their eligibility upon request, Commerce said.
CBP issued the following releases on commercial trade and related matters:
CBP issued the following releases on commercial trade and related matters:
CBP postponed some major deployment plans for ACE originally set for Jan. 14, the agency said in a CSMS message (here). The scheduled deployment was to include liquidation, drawback, reconciliation, duty deferral, collections and statements (see 1612090030). "In consideration of stakeholder feedback and the complexity of the ongoing integration testing, CBP is providing additional time to prepare for the final core ACE deployment and ensure a smooth transition of liquidation, drawback, reconciliation, duty deferral, collections, statements and Automated Surety Interface capabilities in ACE," it said. "CBP will provide updated information and a new deployment date in the near future." Although it is postponing the ACE mandatory use date for drawback, most liquidation capabilities, reconciliation, duty deferral, collections, statements and the Automated Surety Interface, CBP will still move forward on Jan. 14 with posting notices of liquidation to its website as planned (see 1612090026).