News
05/02/26
Brazil flags sharp US PE dumping duties
Sao Paulo, 5 February (Argus) — Brazil has issued a recommendation that could
nearly triple provisional anti-dumping duties on US polyethylene (PE) imports,
effectively shutting out most shipments, according to a department of trade
defense Decom report into US and Canadian exports. The report, issued on 2
February and seen by Argus , outlines the key findings of the investigation into
PE imports under NCM codes 3901.10.30, 3901.20.29 and 3901.40.00. Decom — part
of trade ministry Mdic — calculated a dumping margin of $734.32/metric tonne
(t), equivalent to 79.3pc, for US exporters. The authority determined dumping
margins for Canada of $264.99/t (26.9pc) for one producer-exporter and $232/t
(26.3pc) for another. Dumped imports are causing material injury to Brazil's
domestic resin industry, and a causal link exists between the injury and the
imports under investigation, Decom said. Brazil currently enforces provisional
anti-dumping duties of $199.04/t on US-origin PE and $238.49/t on
Canadian-origin material. These provisional duties were imposed in August 2025
and remain in effect through 28 February as the investigation moves into its
final phase. Interested parties have a 20-day window to file final comments
following the report's publication. Once that period ends, Decom will prepare
its final determination and forward it to foreign trade chamber, Camex. The
Camex executive management committee (Gecex) is expected to make a final
decision by 14 May, the legal deadline for concluding the probe. The outcome of
the case is expected to have significant implications for regional PE trade
flows. Market participants await Decom's final findings, which will determine
whether the provisional duties are upheld, revised, or lifted entirely. Limited
effect The provisional duties had a limited effect on Brazil's imports last
year, as the US remained Brazil's top supplier even as it lost market share,
official Comexstat data show. Brazil's PE import values totaled $1.61bn last
year, a 1.7pc decrease from $1.63bn in 2024. Import volumes increased by 2.2pc
to 1.46mn t in 2025 from 1.42mn t the prior year. The US was Brazil's main
exporter, accounting for around 961,890t last year, with its share of total
volume falling to 66pc from 71pc in 2024. Argentina was the second-largest
exporter to Brazil, shipping nearly 218,380t last year and boosting its share to
15pc from 11pc. Saudi Arabia rose to third place with approximately 56,445t,
representing 4pc of Brazil's total imports last year. Canada's deliveries fell
by 40pc to 49,810t in 2025, with its share falling to 3.4pc from 6pc in 2024.
Egypt dropped to fifth place with around 47,795t, accounting for 3.3pc of the
total volume. By Fred Fernandes Send comments and request more information at
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