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US finds dumping in Indian glycine; rescission for 27 exporters

The US Department of Commerce preliminarily determined that Indian producers and exporters of glycine sold merchandise below normal value during June 2024–May 2025, triggering antidumping duties. Commerce simultaneously rescinded the review for 27 companies, likely those with no shipments or de minimis sales. Parties may now comment on preliminary findings; final determination is pending. This affects HS 2922 (organic amino-compounds including glycine) importers sourcing from India.

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US Finds Dumping in Indian Glycine; 27 Exporters Rescinded

On May 14, 2026, the U.S. Department of Commerce published preliminary results of an antidumping duty administrative review of glycine from India covering the period June 1, 2024, through May 31, 2025.

The U.S. Department of Commerce (Commerce) preliminarily determines that producers and/or exporters subject to this administrative review made sales of subject merchandise at less than normal value (NV) during the period of review (POR), June 1, 2024, through May 31, 2025.

Commerce has also rescinded the review with respect to 27 companies. Rescission typically occurs when a respondent has no reportable shipments, sales, or production during the period of review, or when dumping margins are de minimis (below 0.5% for most cases).

Who is affected

US importers and distributors of glycine (HS 2922) sourcing from India are directly impacted. Any Indian exporter of glycine—whether named in the original investigation or covered under the all-others rate—may face revised antidumping duties depending on final determination. The 27 rescinded companies are released from duties for this administrative review period.

What happens next

Interested parties—including Indian exporters, US importers, and trade associations—have a defined comment period to submit factual and legal arguments on these preliminary results. Commerce will consider comments before issuing final results. Once final, new or revised duty rates will apply to entries of glycine from India on or after the effective date of the final determination.

Importers currently holding or planning to clear Indian glycine should prepare for potential duty adjustments and may request a liquidation review if prior entries are affected.

What this means for shippers

If you import glycine from India, monitor Commerce's final determination expected within 90 days of this May 14, 2026 notice. Confirm the names and duty rates of any rescinded exporters on your supplier roster—they will not pay the antidumping duty. For all other Indian suppliers of glycine (HS 2922), budget for revised cash-deposit rates and reconcile in-transit inventory before final rates take effect. Review landed-cost models now and reconcile any entries made during June 2024–May 2025 to prepare for potential refunds or assessments. Use the landed-cost tool to recalculate duties and landed prices under the preliminary and final margins.

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