The Aluminum Association, Arlington, Virginia, says it is pleased that the Senate Committee on Appropriations has included funding for a new aluminum import monitoring (AIM) system in its fiscal year 2021 Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies appropriations bill. The AIM system has been a longtime policy priority for the Aluminum Association.
In the proposed bill, the committee allocated $1.3 million to fund the program, which the Commerce Department listed as a priority in its FY21 budget request earlier this year. The committee also encouraged the department to consult with the aluminum industry on implanting the program. The AIM system will enable government officials and the industry to better identify trends in trade flows and address misclassification, transshipment and evasion of duties, the Aluminum Association says.
“We are grateful for the committee’s leadership on this high-priority issue for the U.S. aluminum industry, and we look forward to Congress taking action soon to enact this important provision in FY21 appropriations,” says Aluminum Association President and CEO Tom Dobbins. “Getting bipartisan support in Congress is a crucial step to ensuring strong trade enforcement and a level-playing field for U.S. aluminum companies and the nearly 660,000 American workers they support. We look forward to working closely with the Commerce Department to launch a successful system that benefits the full aluminum value chain here in the U.S. As massive structural subsidies and overcapacity in China continue to drive the unfair trade of aluminum worldwide, it’s all the more important that the U.S. government is able to adequately track metal flows.”
The House and Senate Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies appropriations bills for FY21 include funding for aluminum import monitoring, which the Aluminum Association says echoes support from the bipartisan Congressional Aluminum Caucus. The Aluminum Association has called for a strong commitment to trade enforcement in North America as part of the recently approved U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.
Last year, Canada announced an expansion of its import monitoring system to include aluminum and aluminum products. Mexico made a similar commitment to “prevent the importation of aluminum and steel that is unfairly subsidized and/or sold at dumped prices” and “establish an agreed-upon process for monitoring aluminum and steel trade between them” but has not yet acted to formally monitor aluminum imports into Mexico, a step the Aluminum Association says it would strongly support. Imports of aluminum sheet and plate from China into Mexico have increased by nearly 150 percent in the past year and more than 1,700 percent since 2014, the association adds.
“It is vital that we have strong trade enforcement to support a robust aluminum trade in North America. An integrated import monitoring system within the USMCA region is a critical step in this direction,” Dobbins says.
Like the House version of the bill, the Senate bill also includes additional funding for the Department to implement its Section 232 exclusion review process. The association says it submitted a number of recommendations to the Commerce Department earlier this year in response to a public inquiry about potential changes to the Section 232 exclusion program.
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