Census Bureau emailed some tips "on how to address the most frequent messages that were generated in [the Automated Export System] for this month." Response code 166, which involves a missing transportation reference number, can be resolved by verifying the number, correcting the shipment and resubmitting, Census said. "A number referencing the transportation booking number must be declared on a vessel shipment," it said. Response code 8H1 involves issues with the "reported Schedule B/HTS Number, the Value of Goods/Quantity (1) ratio." Filers should "verify the Value of Goods, Quantity 1 and Schedule B/HTS Number, correct the shipment and resubmit (if necessary). If the line item is verified correct as reported, no action is necessary," Census said. "For a particular Schedule B/HTS Number declared, the value of the goods divided by the first quantity should fall within a certain parameter based on historical statistical averages for that commodity. Ratios outside this pre-determined parameter might indicate either a keying error or misclassification of the product."
The Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control updated its Specially Designated Nationals List with Venezuela-related designations, according to a March 19 notice. OFAC added one person and one entity to the list, and made changes to entries about seven existing people or entities on the list, the notice said. The agency also removed 12 people from its SDN list, but the names of people added to entries on the list of changes also appear in the list of those removed.
Venezuela is asking a World Trade Organization panel to intervene in U.S.-imposed sanctions on the country, including those imposed on Petroleos de Venezuela, the state-run oil company, according to a memo Venezuela sent to the WTO’s Dispute Settlement Body chairperson. The U.S. “refused” consultations with Venezuelan officials after the country requested consultations in December, prompting Venezuela to take the next step and request establishment of a WTO dispute resolution panel. In the memo, Venezuela describes the U.S. actions as “coercive and trade-restrictive measures” and an “attempt to isolate it economically.” Venezuela also called them “discriminatory.”
The State Department is increasing civil monetary penalties for violations of the Arms Export Control Act to account for inflation, it said in a notice published in the March 19 Federal Register. For violations of AECA Section 38(e) (control of arms exports and imports) the maximum penalty will rise to $1,163,217 (from $1,134,602). Penalties for incentive payments in offset agreement violations under Section 39A(c) will rise to the greater of $845,764 or five times the payment, up from $824,959 or five times the payment; and penalties for transactions with countries supporting acts of terrorism under Section 40(k) will rise to $1,006,699, from $981,935.
Export Compliance Daily is providing readers with some of the top stories for March 11-15 in case they were missed.
A no-deal Brexit on March 30 is still the current default outcome unless the United Kingdom can convince European Union leaders it has good reason for extending the deadline, said Michel Barnier, the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator during a March 19 press conference. “The House of Parliament voted against the withdrawal agreement” negotiated between the EU and the U.K. “and against a no-deal scenario,” he said. “But voting against no deal does not prevent it from happening. Every one should now finalize all preparations for a no-deal scenario,” he said.
The Permanent Technical Committee of the World Customs Organization unanimously re-elected Ian Saunders, assistant commissioner of International Affairs at CBP, as chairperson of the PTC, the WCO said in a news release. Gordana Vidanovic of Serbia was re-elected as vice-chairperson.
The World Customs Organization issued the following releases on commercial trade and related matters:
In the March 18 edition of the Official Journal of the European Union the following trade-related notices were posted:
The European Chemicals Agency reminded companies that they still “need to prepare for a UK withdrawal without a transition period, that is, one without an agreement ratified by both sides ensuring that the withdrawal happens in an orderly manner,” in a press release dated March 18. ECHA has published instructions for what actions companies need to take, such as transferring their REACH registrations from a U.K.-based registrant to a registrant based in an EU member state. “The Agency would like to emphasise that while UK companies can initiate a REACH asset transfer in ECHA’s IT tools at any time before the date of withdrawal, the successor company in the EU-27 should only accept the transfer after the actual date of the withdrawal,” it said.