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News Releases


No. 30/06
May 1, 2006
EU IMPOSES REVISED MEASURES IN RESPONSE TO CONTINUED US BYRD AMENDMENT PAYMENTS
The European Union has today imposed adjusted
counter-balancing measures in response to the
continuation of payments by the US Government to US
companies under the terms of the
Byrd Amendment (Continued Dumping and
Subsidy Offset Act of 2000), which
has been ruled by the WTO as incompatible with WTO
rules.
The annual adjustment is required by the WTO, because
the duties are tied to the annual disbursement by the US
Government. Since the amount paid to US companies from
duties collected on EC products has increased in 2005,
the level of retaliation will also increase. From today,
1 May 2006, measures will be set at $36.91 million,
an increase on the $27.81 million applied in 2005.
Eight new products will consequently be added to the list of
products subject to the 15% additional import duty.
These products are different type of blankets, paper
products, photocopying apparatus and drills. These
products are taken from an agreed list.
While the Byrd Amendment issue has been a long-running
irritant in the
US-EU trade relationship, it is
important to note that the huge bulk of EU-US trade is
trouble-free. The EU has always worked hard to ensure
that the Byrd issue does not unnecessarily affect the
highly successful wider EU-US trading relationship.
The repeal of the Byrd Amendment contains a transition
clause that allows the US government to continue paying
anti-dumping and countervailing duties collected on
imports made before 1 October 2007 to US companies.
In the US, such duties are often collected several years
after the import took place. This means, in turn, that
the Byrd Amendment will remain in operation for a number
of years even after October 2007, even if it has
technically been repealed.
Following a complaint by the EU and ten other WTO
members, payments made under the Byrd Amendment have
been ruled by the WTO to be injurious to non-US
companies. While they continue, the EU and other
co-complainants have strong grounds to continue to take
counter-balancing measures.
As long as distributions continue, the United States
will not be in compliance with WTO rules. Because our
counterbalancing measures are tied directly and
exclusively to the Byrd payments, they will cease
immediately when the payments cease.
This is not just a question of principle. The US
Administration has estimated that it will distribute
more than two billion US dollars in payments in the next
two years.
Background
Since 1 May 2005, an additional import duty of 15% has
been applied on paper products, textiles, machinery and
sweet-corn originating in the United States (selected
from the list notified to the WTO in November 2004).
The WTO award determined that the level of retaliation
we may apply is 72% of the amount disbursed to US
companies from duties collected on EC products in the
most recent distribution. We consequently have a WTO
obligation to adjust annually our retaliatory measures,
whose level will mirror the fluctuations of the
disbursements under the Byrd Amendment.
Council
Regulation (EC) No 673/2005, which imposed retaliation in
the first place on 1 May 2005, delegated competence to
the Commission to implement this obligation of annual
adjustment.
On 8 February 2006, the United States enacted the
Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, which among other
provisions repeals the Byrd Amendment but allows for a
transition period of two years or more.
The repeal will not affect distribution of the
anti-dumping and countervailing duties collected on
imports made before 1 October 2007. Under US practice,
collection of duties does not take place at the time of
imports since the duty rate may be revised every year
and the revised rate is applied retrospectively to the
imports of the previous year. It is only after
completion of this so-called administrative review that
collection will take place. Collection may also be
suspended as a result of ongoing litigation.
Anti-dumping and countervailing duties are therefore
usually collected several years after the import, which
means, in turn, that distribution under the Byrd
Amendment may continue for several years after 1 October
2007.
The effect for the immediate future can already be
quantified. The Budget of the United States Government
for the Fiscal Year 2007 forecasts the next two
distributions at $249 million (in October 2006) and
$1.93 billion (in October 2007) respectively.

Further Contact Information
Press and Public Diplomacy
Delegation of the European Commission
2300 M Street, NW
Washington, DC 20037
http://www.eurunion.org/PressRoom
Tel: 202-862-9552
Fax: 202-429-1766
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