International Trade Today is a Warren News publication.

USDA Adjusts Dairy Licensing Appendices for the 2011 TRQ Year

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has issued a final rule, effective October 13, 2011, that revises the appendices to its Dairy Tariff-Rate Import Quota Licensing Regulation for the 2011 tariff-rate quota year to reflect the cumulative annual transfers from Appendix 1 to Appendix 2 for certain dairy product import licenses permanently surrendered by licensees or revoked by the Foreign Agricultural Service.

Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article

If your job depends on informed compliance, you need International Trade Today. Delivered every business day and available any time online, only International Trade Today helps you stay current on the increasingly complex international trade regulatory environment.

(The dairy TRQ licensing regulation provides for the issuance of licenses to import certain dairy articles under TRQs as set forth in the Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS). These dairy articles may only be entered into the U.S. at the low-tier tariff by or for the account of a person or firm to whom such licenses have been issued and only in accordance with the terms and conditions of the regulation. Licenses are issued on a calendar year basis, and each license authorizes the license holder to import a specified quantity and type of dairy article from a specified country of origin.)

Rule’s Appendices List Historical, Non-Historical and Designated Licenses

The revised Appendices in the final rule include:

Appendix 1-- Historical licenses. These licenses are renewable. A person with a historical license in one year may ask for a license for the same product from the same country for the next year. A new license will be issued as long as that person has met the requirements of the regulation.

Appendix 2 -- Non-historical licenses. These licenses cannot be renewed. A person may reapply for an identical non-historical license for the next year, but the application may or may not be granted because these licenses are issued through a lottery.

Appendix 3-- Designated licenses. These cheese import licenses are issued to importers who have met the regulations' qualification standards and have been designated by the government of the exporting country to receive a license. Not all exporting countries participate in the designation process. USDA sources have previously stated that Appendix 3 license quantities only change pursuant to negotiations on a multilateral basis.

When Historical Licenses are Surrendered, Etc. Amount is Transferred to Appendix 2

USDA states that whenever a historical license (in Appendix 1) is not issued to an applicant pursuant to the provisions of 7 CFR 6.23, is permanently surrendered, or is revoked, the amount of such license is transferred to the non-historical licenses (of Appendix 2).

(See ITT’s Online Archives 10120761 for summary of a December 2010 final rule suspending the historical license reduction provisions of the dairy TRQ import licensing program based on surrenders of unused quantities, until 2016.)

Revised Appendices List Cheese, Non-Cheese Dairy Products & Quantities for 2011 TRQ Year

The revised Appendices for the 2011 TRQ year list subject cheese and non-cheese dairy articles and their HTS Chapter 4 Additional U.S. Note (AUSN) number. In addition, the quantities (if any) for each TRQ are listed, as well as the sublevels for specified countries or country groups.

(According to a USDA fact sheet, for dairy products subject to this TRQ licensing system, an import license from USDA's FAS is generally required to bring in items at the low-tier tariff rate. No license is required to import subject products at the high-tier rate; to import dairy products for an agency of the U.S. Government; or to bring in products for personal use, as long as net weight does not exceed 5 kilograms (approximately 11 pounds) in any one shipment.

USDA further explains that certain dairy products may be imported without a license, such as soft-ripened cow's-milk cheeses, such as Brie, or products from 100% sheep's or goat's milk (except for blue cheese made from or containing sheep's or goat's milk).

Certain dairy products may also be imported without a license under a "first-come, first-served" system. This means these products may be brought in at the low-tier tariff rate until a specified TRQ is filled. The USDA states that the items covered under the "first-come, first-served" system include: dairy products imported under a free trade agreement (FTA), certain cheddar cheese from Canada, fluid milk or cream (fresh or sour), milk or cream (condensed or evaporated and in airtight containers), and dried buttermilk or whey, etc.)

(See ITT's Online Archives 11092947 for summary of FAS announcing a fee of $170 to be charged for the 2012 calendar year for each TRQ license issued to a person or firm authorizing the importation of certain dairy articles.)

USDA contact -- Abdelsalam El-Farra (202) 720-9439 or abdelsalam.elfarra@fas.usda.gov