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Malaysia imposes anti-dumping duties on Chinese, Indian steel and iron

The provisional duties, which took effect on January 11, also targeted iron and steel products from Japan and South Korea

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Malaysia has imposed provisional anti-dumping duties on some exports of flat-rolled iron products or non-alloy steel from China, India, Japan and South Korea, the trade ministry said.

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The duties, which took effect from January 11 and initially run for up to 120 days on products with a width of more than 600mm (24 inches), range from 2.52 per cent to 36.80 per cent, the ministry said on Monday.

A final determination on the provisional anti-dumping duties would be made by May 10, while feedback on the preliminary determination could be submitted by January 20, the ministry added in its statement.

The decision followed an investigation begun in August into the products from China, India, Japan and South Korea that started after a petition from a domestic producer.

The petitioner had alleged the imports were being sold well below the domestic price in the four countries and had caused material injury to Malaysian industry, the ministry added.

Workers pour molten steel at a factory in Binzhou, in China’s eastern Shandong Province, on December 10, 2024. Photo: AFP
Workers pour molten steel at a factory in Binzhou, in China’s eastern Shandong Province, on December 10, 2024. Photo: AFP

Separately, India’s finished steel exports are unlikely to be affected by the anti-dumping duty as its export volumes to the Southeast Asian nation are very low, a senior government official with direct knowledge of the matter said.

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