International Trade Today is a Warren News publication.

China Pea Protein: New AD/CVD Investigations Deadlines & Scope

The Commerce Department issued notices in the Federal Register on its recently initiated antidumping and countervailing duty investigations on pea protein from China (A-570-154/C-570-155). The CVD investigation covers entries Jan. 1 - Dec. 31, 2022. The AD investigation covers entries Jan. 1 - June 30, 2023.

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 International Trade Commission will conduct a concurrent investigation to determine whether imports of dumped and illegally subsidized pea protein from China are injuring U.S. industry. If the ITC finds no injury in its preliminary injury determination, due Aug. 28, the investigations will immediately end. If Commerce finds dumping or illegal subsidization in the preliminary determinations of these investigations, due in October for CVD and December for AD, it will set AD and/or CVD cash deposit requirements for imports of merchandise subject to the investigation. If both Commerce and the ITC reach affirmative final determinations, Commerce will issue an AD and/or CVD order making duties permanent and beginning a process of annual administrative reviews to set final assessments of AD/CVD on importers and potentially change AD/CVD cash deposit rates.

If duties are imposed, Chinese producers and exporters that do not demonstrate independence from government control and request eligibility for a “separate rate” will be assigned the antidumping duty “China-wide rate,” which can reach more than 200% for some products. Separate rate applications from Chinese producers and exporters will be available here. Commerce's notice does not specify a due date for separate rate applications, but they are usually due 30 days after the initiation notice is published, i.e., Sept. 6.

AD/CVD Respondent Selection

For both its AD and CVD investigations, Commerce will send quantity and value questionnaires to each potential respondent, and will base respondent selection on the responses it receives. Exporters that don't get a quantity and value questionnaire can submit one using the forms provided by Commerce for the antidumping and countervailing duty investigations. Responses are due Aug. 15.

Scope of the AD/CVD Investigations

The product within the scope of this investigation is high protein content (HPC) pea protein, which is a protein derived from peas (including, but not limited to, yellow field peas and green field peas) and which contains at least 65 percent protein on a dry weight basis. HPC pea protein may also be identified as, for example, pea protein concentrate, pea protein isolate, hydrolyzed pea protein, pea peptides, and fermented pea protein. Pea protein, including HPC pea protein, has the Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) registry number 222400–29–5.

The scope covers HPC pea protein in all physical forms, including all liquid ( e.g., solution) and solid ( e.g., powder) forms, regardless of packaging or the inclusion of additives ( e.g., flavoring, suspension agents, preservatives).

The scope also includes HPC pea protein described above that is blended, combined, or mixed with non-subject pea protein or with other ingredients ( e.g., proteins derived from other sources, fibers, carbohydrates, sweeteners, and fats) to make products such as protein powders, dry beverage blends, and protein fortified beverages. For any such blended, combined, or mixed products, only the HPC pea protein component is covered by the scope of this investigation. HPC pea protein that has been blended, combined, or mixed with other products is included within the scope, regardless of whether the blending, combining, or mixing occurs in third countries.

HPC pea protein that is otherwise within the scope is covered when commingled ( i.e., blended, combined, or mixed) with HPC pea protein from sources not subject to this investigation. Only the subject component of the commingled product is covered by the scope.

A blend, combination, or mixture is excluded from the scope if the total HPC pea protein content of the blend, combination, or mixture (regardless of the source or sources) comprises less than 5 percent of the blend, combination, or mixture on a dry weight basis.

All products that meet the written physical description are within the scope of the investigation unless specifically excluded. The following products, by way of example, are outside and/or specifically excluded from the scope of the investigation:

  • burgers, snack bars, bakery products, sugar and gum confectionary products, milk, cheese, baby food, sauces and seasonings, and pet food, even when such products are made with HPC pea protein.
  • HPC pea protein that has gone through an extrusion process to alter the HPC pea protein at the structural and functional level, resulting in a product with a fibrous structure which resembles muscle meat upon hydration. These products are commonly described as textured pea protein or texturized pea protein.
  • HPC pea protein that has been further processed to create a small crunchy nugget commonly described as a pea protein crisp.
  • protein derived from chickpeas.

The merchandise covered by the scope is currently classified under Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS) categories 3504.00.1000, 3504.00.5000, and 2106.10.0000. Such merchandise may also enter the U.S. market under HTSUS category 2308.00.9890. Although HTSUS categories and the CAS registry number are provided for convenience and customs purposes, the written description of the scope of the investigation is dispositive.

Comments on the scope of these investigations are due by Aug. 21.

Investigations Timetable

EventAD DutyCV Duty
Petitions filed07/12/2307/12/23
DOC initiation date08/01/2308/01/23
ITC prelim determinations08/28/2308/28/23
DOC prelim determinations12/19/2310/05/23
DOC final determinations03/04/2412/19/23
ITC final determinations04/18/2402/02/24
Issuance of orders04/25/2402/09/24

These deadlines may, and usually are, extended. The Commerce Department fact sheet on the initiation of these investigations is (here). See (2307140039) for a summary of the petition requesting these investigations.