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US launches expedited anti-dumping review on preserved mushrooms

The US International Trade Commission scheduled expedited five-year reviews on 19 May 2026 to assess whether existing antidumping duty orders on preserved mushrooms from Chile, China, India, and Indonesia should remain in force. These reviews will determine if revoking the orders would likely cause material injury to domestic producers. Shippers importing preserved mushrooms from these countries should monitor the review timeline and be prepared for potential duty changes if orders are revoked or modified.

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US Anti-Dumping Review on Preserved Mushrooms Initiated

On 19 May 2026, the US International Trade Commission announced the scheduling of expedited five-year reviews under the Tariff Act of 1930 for antidumping duty orders covering certain preserved mushrooms originating from Chile, China, India, and Indonesia. These expedited reviews will determine whether revoking the existing antidumping orders would likely result in continuation or recurrence of material injury to the US domestic mushroom industry within a reasonably foreseeable time.

Who Is Affected

Importers, distributors, and e-commerce merchants sourcing preserved mushrooms from Chile, China, India, or Indonesia are directly affected. The review process applies to merchandise falling under the scope of the existing antidumping orders—specifically preserved mushrooms from the four named countries.

"The Commission hereby gives notice of the scheduling of expedited reviews pursuant to the Tariff Act of 1930 to determine whether revocation of the antidumping duty orders on certain preserved mushrooms from Chile, China, India, and Indonesia would be likely to lead to continuation or recurrence of material injury within a reasonably foreseeable time."

Expedited reviews typically compress the standard five-year cycle, meaning decisions and potential tariff adjustments will arrive sooner. Shippers must track the proceeding schedule published by the Commission to understand key deadlines for submitting comments or factual records.

What This Means for Shippers

Expeditied five-year reviews can result in duty orders being revoked, continued, or modified—any outcome affects your landed cost calculations. If the Commission determines that revoking orders would harm domestic producers, duties remain; if not, tariffs may drop. Monitor the Federal Register for the official review schedule and any public-comment deadlines. Obtain HS classification confirmation (mushroom preservation method matters: HS 2001.90 covers most preserved varieties) and current duty rates now, because tariff exposure will shift once the Commission issues its determination. Act before the review concludes to lock in pricing with suppliers and adjust customer forecasts accordingly. /hs-codes/search

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