United States and Mexico Sign Cement Agreement

United States and Mexico Sign Cement Agreement

The following press release was published by the U.S. Department of Commerce on March 6, 2006. It is reproduced in full below.

Senior U.S., Mexican Officials Sign Landmark Agreement on Cement WASHINGTON—U.S. Commerce Secretary Carlos M. Gutierrez today joined U.S. Trade Representative Rob Portman and Mexico’s Secretary of Economy Sergio Garcia de Alba to sign the U.S.-Mexico Agreement on Cement. The Agreement successfully resolves the 16-year dispute over the U.S. antidumping duty order on imports of gray portland cement from Mexico.

"This agreement addresses the concerns of producers and consumers on both sides of the border," Gutierrez said. "The Agreement contains provisions that will help increase access to the Mexican market for U.S. cement producers, and it also ensures that our Gulf Coast communities will have the resources necessary to rebuild. This Agreement demonstrates that we have the will and the means to resolve difficult disputes with our NAFTA partners." The Agreement settles all litigation regarding outstanding claims for duties before U.S. and international courts, and divides between the parties the deposits of estimated antidumping duties. It also establishes a limit of three million metric tons of imports of Mexican cement to enter the United States at an antidumping duty rate of $3 per metric ton, and allows for an increase in the event of disasters. The Agreement also includes elements for mutual trade liberalization, including provisions to help increase access for U.S. producers to the Mexican market. If the terms of the Agreement are adhered to over its three-year life, the Agreement will be terminated and the antidumping duty order revoked.

Background As a result of an antidumping petition filed by the Southern Tier Cement Committee in 1989 and a subsequent antidumping duty investigation conducted by the Commerce Department, Commerce found that Mexican producers sold cement at less than fair value in the U.S. market. On Aug. 30, 1990, an antidumping duty order on imports of gray portland cement from Mexico went into effect.

In 2004, Members of Congress, trade groups, and cement consumers called on the U.S. Department of Commerce to reduce or eliminate the antidumping duties so that cement could be imported from Mexico more cost-effectively. The rebuilding needs following the hurricanes in 2005 led to renewed calls for lowering or suspending duties on Mexican cement.

Major provisions of the Agreement include:

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce

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