Miss. Senators Continue Push to Protect U.S. Steel Product from Unfair Imports

Wicker, Cochran Join Colleagues in Effort to Support Industry in Face of Surging Rebar Exports from Mexico, Turkey

September 17, 2014

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senators Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) and Thad Cochran (R-Miss.) today persisted in their efforts to ensure that U.S. steel producers in Mississippi and other states are protected from imported steel reinforcing bar or “rebar.”

Wicker and Cochran are encouraging Meredith Broadbent, chairman of the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC), to protect the U.S. rebar industry by supporting antidumping duties on imports unfairly supported with foreign government subsidies.  The ITC is in the final phase of antidumping and countervailing duty investigations on reinforcing rebar imported from Mexico and Turkey.

“American steel manufacturers should be safeguarded from imports that unfairly manipulate the market,” Wicker said. “I urge the ITC to continue to support global trade policies that level the playing field for Mississippi’s steel industry.”

“The imposition of antidumping duties is a matter of competitive fairness, particularly when imbalanced trade practices impact the livelihoods of workers in Mississippi and other steel producing states,” Cochran said.  “We are simply asking the ITC to support an American industry beset by government-subsidized foreign steel products.”

The Senators are among 36 Senators who have signed a letter to Broadbent that highlights the hardships experienced by the U.S. steel industry during the recession and the threat posed to its recovery by cut-rate foreign-made rebar dumped on the market.

Since 2010, these imports have flooded the U.S. market at the direct expense of U.S. producers, who have seen their share of the market drop dramatically.  Capacity utilization rates are at historically low levels -- near 60 percent -- and production levels have yet to recover from the recession,” the Senators wrote.

“On behalf of the U.S. rebar industry and the workers and their families who depend on full and fair enforcement of our trade laws for their survival, we urge you to give careful consideration to their arguments regarding investigations involving Turkey and Mexico.  It is essential that foreign subsidies and dumping be addressed in order to prevent further harm to the U.S. rebar industry and the unwarranted loss of American jobs,” they wrote.

The ITC began its review of the Steel Concrete Reinforcing Bar from Mexico and Turkey Inv. Nos. 701 TA-502 and 731-TA-1227-1228 (Final Phase) case in September 2013.  The primary petitioner is the Rebar Trade Action Coalition.  Nucor Corp., which has operations in Starkville and Flowood, is a member of the coalition.  The ITC petition indicates that the case affects nine producers with facilities in 23 states that employed 4,167 workers in 2012.

This past April, the Mississippi Senators signed correspondence to Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker to highlight unfair trade practices associated with Turkish and Mexican steel imports.  Rebar imports from those two countries have doubled since 2010 and continue to surge.

Last year, Wicker and Cochran were part of a similar case involving the extension of existing antidumping duties now imposed on rebar produced in China, Indonesia, Ukraine, Latvia, Belarus, Moldova and Poland.  They were among a dozen Senators who argued that extending the duties would be critical to protecting American-made rebar imports that are illegally undercutting the U.S. market.  As part of that effort, they pointed out that a November 2012 review by the U.S. Department of Commerce found that if the antidumping orders were not maintained, producers in these seven countries would resume dumping rebar into the United States at margins ranging from 16.99 percent to 232.86 percent.