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US antidumping review: glycine from India faces new duties

The U.S. Department of Commerce has concluded its 2023–2024 administrative review of glycine imports from India, finding that producers and exporters sold subject merchandise below normal value during the review period (June 1, 2023 – May 31, 2024). This triggers antidumping duty assessments on affected Indian glycine suppliers. Exporters and importers of glycine from India must verify their supplier status and expect revised duty rates or cash-deposit requirements.

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U.S. Concludes Antidumping Review of Indian Glycine

The U.S. Department of Commerce announced final results of its administrative review of antidumping duties on glycine from India on June 12, 2026, covering the period June 1, 2023, through May 31, 2024. Commerce determined that "producers and/or exporters subject to this administrative review made sales of subject merchandise below normal value during the period of review."

Administrative reviews occur annually after the initial antidumping duty order takes effect. During such reviews, Commerce recalculates dumping margins for named companies and determines whether the dumping margin for new shippers or other exporters not named in prior reviews. The findings trigger duty-assessment adjustments and potentially higher cash-deposit requirements on future shipments.

Who Is Affected

Glycine is classified under HS Chapter 29 (organic chemicals). Indian producers and exporters of glycine are directly affected by the final determination of below-normal-value sales. U.S. importers purchasing glycine from India must monitor their suppliers' status in Commerce's administrative review determination—named respondents may face company-specific duty rates, while other exporters fall under a residual (all-others) rate.

Because Commerce found dumping occurred, existing antidumping duties on Indian glycine remain in place or may increase. Importers should expect revised entry documentation and potential retroactive duty assessments on shipments made during the review period but entered after the determination date.

What this means for shippers

Verify immediately whether your glycine suppliers are named respondents in this 2023–2024 administrative review or are subject to the all-others rate. Request updated landed-cost estimates from your freight forwarder, as antidumping duties on Chapter 29 chemicals can range 15–50% depending on the supplier and Commerce's final margin calculation. File any duty-suspension requests or requests for duty-refund eligibility before the appeal period closes. Check the Federal Register document for the complete list of company-specific rates and the all-others margin to recalculate your cost of goods sold and pricing strategy.

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