The US imposes significant trade penalties on food containers from China and Vietnam after ITC ruling on unfair pricing, impacting local manufacturers.
The Trump administration has announced sweeping trade penalties on disposable food containers from China and Vietnam after the US International Trade Commission (ITC) ruled that the American industry was injured by cheap imports, reports Fox News.
The ITC found that thermoformed molded fiber products, including bowls, plates, and takeaway containers, were being dumped at unfairly low prices. The US Commerce Department will now issue final antidumping and countervailing duty orders.
Duties will reach up to 540 percent on some Chinese producers, including more than 477 percent for dumping alone, and more than 260 percent on Vietnamese producers. The ITC also authorized retroactive duties on Vietnamese imports.
Attorney Yohai Baisburd, counsel to the American Molded Fiber Coalition, stated that the penalties would level the playing field for US manufacturers. He added that the duties would allow companies to reinvest in workers, operations, and technology.
The duty orders are legally binding enforcement measures, separate from tariffs, and will apply for at least five years. They are based on investigative findings by the Commerce Department and ITC and enforced by Border Patrol.
Other administrations have used similar measures, but analysts noted that the Trump administration has broadened enforcement tools, including customs actions, a DOJ trade fraud task force, and scrutiny of supply chain shifts.
Health concerns have also been raised. An ITC report in 2024 found that some containers from China and Vietnam contained 'forever chemicals' despite claims they were PFAs-free, while US products were generally free of such substances.
