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Canada welded pipe AD review: Pipe & Piling dumping findings

The U.S. Department of Commerce issued final results for the antidumping duty administrative review of large diameter welded pipe from Canada covering May 2023–April 2024. Pipe & Piling Supplies Ltd. was found to have made sales below normal value; Evraz Inc. NA had no reviewable shipments during the period. Importers of Canadian welded pipe should verify the dumping margins applied to their suppliers and adjust landed costs accordingly.

Photo: SINOSTEEL STAINLESS STEEL PIPE / Pexels

US Commerce issues final antidumping findings for Canadian welded pipe

On May 1, 2026, the U.S. Department of Commerce published final results of its administrative review of antidumping duties on large diameter welded pipe from Canada for the period May 1, 2023, through April 30, 2024.

Commerce determines that the sole producer/exporter subject to this administrative review, Pipe & Piling Supplies Ltd. (Pipe & Piling), made sales of the subject merchandise at less than normal value during the period of review (POR) May 1, 2023, through April 30, 2024. Further, we determine that Evraz Inc. NA (Evraz) had no reviewable shipments of subject merchandise during the POR.

Scope and affected companies

The review covers large diameter welded pipe—HS chapter 73 merchandise—imported from Canada. Two companies were under review: Pipe & Piling Supplies Ltd., which was found to have engaged in dumping, and Evraz Inc. NA, which had no reviewable sales during the review period.

The finding that Pipe & Piling made sales below normal value triggers continued antidumping duty liability on their shipments. Evraz's status as having no reviewable shipments may affect how duties apply to their future transactions, pending separate determinations.

What this means for shippers

Importers receiving large diameter welded pipe from Pipe & Piling Supplies Ltd. must apply the determined dumping margin to landed-cost calculations for the review period and monitor Commerce for any updated duty rates. Confirm your Canadian supplier's status and recalculate duties if shipments involve either respondent. Review your invoices and bills of lading against the final determination notice—Commerce typically publishes specific company-level margins separately. Adjust your landed-cost models now to reflect actual duty exposure and file accurate entries with CBP.

/anti_dumping

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