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China to review anti-dumping tariffs on US distillers grains


A process operator holding a handful of dried distillers grains, a protein animal feed that can be fed to livestock, at the GreenField Ethanol plant in Chatham, Canada	— Reuters A process operator holding a handful of dried distillers grains, a protein animal feed that can be fed to livestock, at the GreenField Ethanol plant in Chatham, Canada — Reuters

China's Ministry of Commerce is set to review its anti-dumping tariffs on imports from the United States (US) of distillers grains (DDGS), an animal feed ingredient, according to a document issued by the China Alcoholic Drinks Association, reports Reuters.

The document - dated April 8 and issued to member companies and reviewed by Reuters - said the US Grains Council had asked the commerce ministry to terminate their anti-dumping and anti-subsidy tariffs on American DDGS.

The commerce ministry did not respond to a fax seeking confirmation of the review. It is not clear what the outcome of the review will be.

DDGS are a byproduct of ethanol production and have become a key contributor to profits for makers of the biofuel. After the tariffs were implemented in 2016, imports by China fell sharply.

China bought 3 million tonnes of DDGS in 2016, mainly from the United States and worth $684 million in total, according to Chinese customs data. The imports that year were down 55 per cent from 2015. The US industry request comes amid trade talks between Beijing and Washington as both sides try to secure a pact to end a tit-for-tat tariff battle that has roiled global markets.

Beijing has pledged during these talks to increase its imports of American farm goods.

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