While Century Enka, Gujarat Polyfilms, and Oriilon India have filed an application for the initiation of anti-dumping investigation on the yarn; NOCIL Ltd has submitted a similar plea for TDQ.
According to two separate notifications of the DGTR, the directorate has initiated the probes “on the basis of the duly substantiated written application submitted” by the applicants.
If it is established that the dumping has caused material injury to domestic players, the DGTR would recommend the imposition of anti-dumping duty on these imports. The finance ministry takes the final decision to impose duties.
Anti-dumping probes are conducted by countries to determine whether domestic industries have been hurt because of a surge in cheap imports.
As a countermeasure, they impose these duties under the multilateral regime of the Geneva-based World Trade Organization (WTO). The duty is aimed at ensuring fair trading practices and creating a level-playing field for domestic producers vis-a-vis foreign producers and exporters. India has already imposed anti-dumping duty on several products to tackle cheap imports from various countries, including China. The directorate has initiated as many as 43 anti-dumping investigations in 2024 so far on different products. Of this, 34 are against China.
The countries against which these probes have been initiated included Russia, Taiwan, and Japan.