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- Chapter Eight
-
- Emergency Action
-
-
-
- Article 801: Bilateral Actions
-
- 1. Subject to paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 and Annex 801, and during
- the transition period only, if a good originating in the
- territory of a Party, as a result of the reduction or elimination
- of a duty provided for in this Agreement, is being imported into
- the territory of another Party in such increased quantities, in
- absolute terms, and under such conditions so that the imports of
- such good from that Party alone constitute a substantial cause of
- serious injury, or threat thereof, to a domestic industry
- producing a like or directly competitive good, the Party into
- whose territory the good is being imported may, to the minimum
- extent necessary to remedy or prevent the injury:
-
- (a) suspend the further reduction of any rate of duty
- provided for under this Agreement on such good;
-
- (b) increase the rate of duty on such good to a level not
- to exceed the lesser of
-
- (i) the most-favored-nation (MFN) applied rate of duty
- in effect at the time the action is taken, or
-
- (ii) the MFN applied rate of duty in effect on the day
- immediately preceding the date of entry into force
- of this Agreement; or
-
- (c) in the case of a duty applied to a good on a seasonal
- basis, increase the rate of duty to a level not to
- exceed the MFN applied rate of duty that was in effect
- on such good for the corresponding season immediately
- preceding the date of entry into force of this
- Agreement.
-
- 2. The following conditions and limitations shall apply to a
- proceeding that may result in emergency action under paragraph 1:
-
- (a) a Party shall, without delay, deliver to any Party that
- may be affected written notice of, and a request for
- consultations regarding, the institution of a
- proceeding that could result in emergency action
- against a good originating in the territory of a Party;
-
- (b) any such action shall commence not later than one year
- from the date of institution of the proceeding;
-
- (c) no action shall be maintained
-
- (i) for a period exceeding three years, except where
- the good against which the action is taken is
- provided for in the items in staging category C+
- of the Tariff Schedule of the Party taking the
- action, and that Party determines that the
- affected industry has undertaken adjustment and
- requires an extension of the period of relief, in
- which case the period of relief may be extended
- for one year provided that the duty applied during
- the initial period of relief is substantially
- reduced at the commencement of the extension
- period, or
-
- (ii) beyond the expiration of the transition period,
- except with the consent of the Party against whose
- good the action is taken;
-
- (d) no action shall be taken by a Party against any
- particular good originating in the territory of another
- Party more than once during the transition period; and
-
- (e) upon the termination of the action, the rate of duty
- shall be the rate that, according to the original
- Schedule for the staged elimination of the tariff,
- would have been in effect a year after the commencement
- of the action, and commencing January 1 of the year
- following the termination of the action, at the option
- of the Party that has taken the action
-
- (i) the rate of duty shall conform to the schedule in
- the Tariff Schedule of the Party, or
-
- (ii) the tariff shall be eliminated in equal annual
- stages ending on the date set forth in the Tariff
- Schedule of the Party for the elimination of the
- tariff.
-
- 3. A Party may take a bilateral emergency action after the
- expiration of the transition period to deal with cases of
- serious injury, or threat thereof, to a domestic industry arising
- from the operation of this Agreement only with the consent of the
- Party against whose good the action would be taken.
-
- 4. The Party taking an action pursuant to this Article shall
- provide to the Party against whose good the action is taken
- mutually agreed trade liberalizing compensation in the form of
- concessions having substantially equivalent trade effects to the
- other Party, or equivalent to the value of the additional duties
- expected to result from the action. If the Parties are unable to
- agree upon compensation, the Party against whose good the action
- is taken may take tariff action having trade effects
- substantially equivalent to the action taken under paragraph 1.
- The Party taking such tariff action shall apply the action only
- for the minimum period necessary to achieve such substantially
- equivalent effects.
-
- 5. This Article does not apply to emergency actions respecting
- goods covered by Annex 300-B (Textile and Apparel Goods).
-
-
- Article 802: Global Actions
-
- 1. Each Party shall retain its rights and obligations under
- Article XIX of the GATT or any safeguard agreement pursuant
- thereto except those regarding compensation or retaliation and
- exclusion from an action to the extent that such rights or
- obligations are inconsistent with this Article. Any Party taking
- an emergency action under Article XIX or any such agreement shall
- exclude imports of a good from each other Party from such action
- unless:
-
- (a) imports from a Party, considered individually, account
- for a substantial share of total imports; and
-
- (b) imports from a Party, considered individually, or in
- exceptional circumstances imports from Parties
- considered collectively, contribute importantly to the
- serious injury, or threat thereof, caused by imports.
-
- 2. In determining whether:
-
- (a) imports from a Party, considered individually, account
- for a substantial share of total imports, such imports
- normally shall not be considered to account for a
- substantial share of total imports if such Party is not
- among the top five suppliers of the good subject to the
- proceeding, measured in terms of import share during
- the most recent three-year period; and
-
- (b) imports from a Party or Parties contribute importantly
- to the serious injury, or threat thereof, the competent
- investigating authority shall consider such factors as
- the change in the import share of each Party, and the
- level and change in the level of imports of each Party.
- In this regard, imports from a Party normally shall not
- be deemed to contribute importantly to serious injury,
- or the threat thereof, if the growth rate of imports
- from a Party during the period in which the injurious
- surge in imports occurred is appreciably lower than the
- growth rate of total imports from all sources over the
- same period.
-
- 3. A Party taking such action, from which a good from another
- Party or Parties is initially excluded pursuant to paragraph 1,
- shall have the right subsequently to include that good of the
- other Party or Parties in the action in the event that the
- competent investigating authority determines that a surge in
- imports of such good of the other Party or Parties undermines the
- effectiveness of such action.
-
- 4. A Party shall, without delay, deliver written notice to the
- other Parties of the institution of a proceeding that may result
- in emergency action under paragraph 1 or 3.
-
- 5. In no case shall a Party impose restrictions on a good in an
- action under paragraph 1 or 3:
-
- (a) without delivery of prior written notice to the
- Commission, and without adequate opportunity for
- consultation with the Party or Parties against whose
- good the action is proposed to be taken, as far in
- advance of taking the action as practicable; and
-
- (b) that would have the effect of reducing imports of such
- good from a Party below the trend of imports of such
- good from that Party over a recent representative base
- period with allowance for reasonable growth.
-
- 6. The Party taking an action pursuant to this Article shall
- provide to the Party or Parties against whose good the action is
- taken mutually agreed trade liberalizing compensation in the form
- of concessions having substantially equivalent trade effects to
- that Party or Parties or equivalent to the value of the
- additional duties expected to result from the action. If such
- Parties are unable to agree upon compensation, the Party against
- whose good the action is taken may take action having trade
- effects substantially equivalent to the action taken under
- paragraph 1 or 3.
-
-
- Article 803: Administration of Emergency Action Proceedings
-
- 1. Each Party shall ensure the consistent, impartial and
- reasonable administration of its respective laws, regulations,
- decisions and rulings governing all emergency action proceedings.
-
- 2. Each Party shall entrust determinations of serious injury,
- or threat thereof, in emergency action proceedings to a competent
- investigating authority, subject to review by judicial or
- administrative tribunals, to the extent provided by domestic law.
- Negative injury determinations shall not be subject to
- modification, except by such review. The competent investigating
- authority empowered under domestic law to conduct such
- proceedings should be provided with the necessary resources to
- enable it to fulfill its duties.
-
- 3. Each Party shall adopt or maintain equitable, timely,
- transparent and effective procedures for emergency action
- proceedings, in accordance with the requirements set out in Annex
- 803.
-
- 4. This Article does not apply to emergency actions respecting
- goods covered by Annex 300-B (Textile and Apparel Goods).
-
-
- Article 804: Dispute Settlement in Emergency Action Matters
-
- No party may request the establishment of an arbitral panel
- under Article 2008 regarding any proposed emergency action.
-
-
- Article 805: Definitions
-
- For purposes of this Chapter:
-
- competent investigating authority means the "competent
- investigating authority" of a Party as defined in Annex 804;
-
- contribute importantly means an important cause, but not
- necessarily the most important cause;
-
- critical circumstances means circumstances where delay would
- cause damage that would be difficult to repair;
-
- domestic industry means the producers as a whole of the like or
- directly competitive good operating within the territory of a
- Party;
-
- emergency action means any emergency action proceeding instituted
- after the date of entry into force of this Agreement;
-
- serious injury means a significant overall impairment of a
- domestic industry;
-
- surge means a significant increase in imports over the trend for
- a recent representative base period;
-
- threat of serious injury means serious injury that, on the basis
- of facts and not merely on allegation, conjecture or remote
- possibility, is clearly imminent; and
-
- transition period means the 10-year period commencing on the date
- of the entry into force of this Agreement, except where the good
- against which the action is taken is provided for in the items in
- staging category C+ of the Tariff Schedule of the Party taking
- the action, in which case the transition period shall be the
- period of staged tariff elimination for that good.
-
- =============================================================================
- ANNEX 801
-
- Bilateral Actions
-
-
- Notwithstanding Article 801, bilateral emergency actions
- between Canada and the United States on goods originating in the
- territory of either Party shall be governed in accordance with
- the terms of Article 1101 of the Canada-U.S. Free Trade
- Agreement, which is hereby incorporated into and made a part of
- this Agreement for such purpose.
-
- =============================================================================
- ANNEX 803
-
- Administration of Emergency Action Proceedings
-
-
- 1. Institution of a Proceeding:
-
- (a) An emergency action proceeding may be instituted by a
- petition or complaint by entities specified in domestic
- law. The entity filing the petition or complaint shall
- demonstrate that it is representative of the domestic
- industry producing a good like or directly competitive
- with the imported good.
-
- (b) A Party may institute a proceeding on its own motion or
- request the competent investigating authority to
- conduct a proceeding.
-
- 2. Contents of a petition or complaint. When the basis for an
- investigation is a petition or complaint filed by an entity
- representative of a domestic industry, the petitioning
- entity shall, in its petition or complaint, provide the
- following information to the extent that such information is
- publicly available from governmental and other sources, and
- best estimates and the basis therefore if such information
- is not available:
-
- (a) Product description. The name and description of the
- imported good concerned, the tariff subheading under
- which such good is classified, its current tariff
- treatment, and the name and description of the like or
- directly competitive domestic good concerned,
-
- (b) Representativeness:
-
- (i) The names and addresses of the entities filing the
- petition or complaint, and the locations of the
- establishments in which they produce the domestic
- good,
-
- (ii) the percentage of domestic production of the like
- or directly competitive good that such entities
- account for and the basis for claiming that they
- are representative of an industry, and
-
- (iii) the names and locations of all other domestic
- establishments in which the like or directly
- competitive good is produced;
-
- (c) Import data. Import data for each of the five most
- recent full years that form the basis of the claim that
- the good concerned is being imported in increased
- quantities, either in absolute terms or relative to
- domestic production;
-
- (d) Domestic production data. Data on total domestic
- production of the like or directly competitive good for
- each of the five most recent full years;
-
- (e) Data showing injury. Quantitative and objective data
- indicating the nature and extent of injury to the
- concerned industry, such as data showing changes in the
- level of sales, prices, production, productivity,
- capacity utilization, market share, profits and losses,
- and employment;
-
- (f) Cause of injury. An enumeration and description of the
- alleged causes of the injury, or threat thereof, and a
- summary of the basis for the assertion that increased
- imports, either actual or relative to domestic
- production, of the imported good are causing or
- threatening to cause serious injury, supported by
- pertinent data; and
-
- (g) Criteria for inclusion. Quantitative and objective
- data indicating the share of imports accounted for by
- imports from the territory of each other Party and the
- petitioner's views on the extent to which such imports
- are contributing importantly to the serious injury, or
- threat thereof, caused by imports of that good.
-
- 3. Petitions or complaints, except to the extent they contain
- confidential business information, shall promptly be made
- available for public inspection upon being filed.
-
- 4. With respect to an emergency action proceeding instituted on
- the basis of a petition or complaint filed by an entity asserting
- that it is representative of the domestic industry, the competent
- investigating authority shall not publish the notice required by
- paragraph 6 without first assessing carefully that the petition
- or complaint meets the requirements of paragraph 4, including
- representativeness.
-
- 5. Notice requirement. Upon instituting an emergency action
- proceeding, the competent investigating authority shall publish
- notice of the institution of the proceeding in the official
- journal of the Party. The notice shall identify: the petitioner
- or other requester; the imported good that is the subject of the
- proceeding and its tariff subheading; the nature and timing of
- the determination to be made; the time and place of the public
- hearing; dates of deadlines for filing briefs, statements, and
- other documents; the place at which the petition and any other
- documents filed in the course of the proceeding may be inspected;
- and the name, address and telephone number of the office to be
- contacted for more information.
-
- 6. Public hearing. In the course of each such proceeding,
- the competent investigating authority shall:
-
- (a) hold a public hearing, after providing reasonable
- notice, to allow all interested parties, and any
- association whose purpose is to represent the interests
- of consumers in the territory of the Party instituting
- the proceeding, to appear in person or by counsel, to
- present evidence, and to be heard on the questions of
- serious injury, or threat thereof, and the appropriate
- remedy; and
-
- (b) provide an opportunity to all interested parties and
- any such association appearing at the hearing to
- cross-question interested parties making presentations
- at that hearing.
-
- 7. Confidential information. The competent investigating
- authority shall adopt or maintain procedures for the treatment of
- confidential information, protected under domestic law, that is
- provided in the course of a proceeding, including a requirement
- that interested parties and consumer associations providing such
- information furnish non-confidential written summaries thereof,
- or if they indicate that such information cannot be summarized,
- the reasons why a summary cannot be provided.
-
- 8. Evidence of injury and causation:
-
- (a) In conducting its proceeding the competent
- investigating authority shall gather, to the best of
- its ability, all relevant information appropriate to
- the determination it must make. It shall evaluate all
- relevant factors of an objective and quantifiable
- nature having a bearing on the situation of that
- industry, in particular, the rate and amount of the
- increase in imports of the good concerned, in absolute
- and relative terms, the share of the domestic market
- taken by increased imports, and changes in the level of
- sales, production, productivity, capacity utilization,
- profits and losses, and employment. In making its
- determination, the competent investigating authority
- may also consider other economic factors, such as
- changes in prices and inventories, and the ability of
- firms in the industry to generate capital;
-
- (b) The competent investigating authority shall not make an
- affirmative injury determination unless its
- investigation demonstrates, on the basis of objective
- evidence, the existence of a clear causal link between
- increased imports of the good concerned and serious
- injury, or threat thereof. When factors other than
- increased imports are causing injury to the domestic
- industry at the same time, such injury shall not be
- attributed to increased imports;
-
- 9. Time period for deliberation. Except in critical
- circumstances and in global actions involving perishable
- agricultural products, the competent investigating authority,
- before making an affirmative determination in an emergency action
- proceeding, shall allow sufficient time to gather and consider
- the relevant information, hold a public hearing, and provide an
- opportunity for all interested parties and consumer associations
- to prepare and submit their views.
-
- 10. The competent investigating authority shall publish promptly
- a report, including a summary thereof, in the official journal of
- the Party setting forth its findings and reasoned conclusions on
- all pertinent issues of law and fact. The report shall describe
- the imported good and its tariff item number, the standard
- applied and the finding made. The statement of reasons shall set
- forth the basis for the determination, including a description
- of: the domestic industry seriously injured or threatened with
- serious injury; information supporting a finding that imports are
- increasing, the domestic industry is seriously injured or
- threatened with serious injury, and increasing imports are
- causing or threatening serious injury; and, if provided for by
- domestic law, any finding or recommendation regarding the
- appropriate remedy and the basis therefor. In its report, the
- competent investigating authority shall not disclose any
- confidential information provided pursuant to any undertakings
- concerning confidential information that may have been made in
- the course of the proceedings.
-
- =============================================================================
- ANNEX 804
-
- Country-Specific Definitions
-
-
- For purposes of this Chapter:
-
- competent investigating authority means:
-
- (a) in the case of Canada, the Canadian International Trade
- Tribunal, or its successor;
-
- (b) in the case of the Mexico, the designated authority
- within the Ministry of Trade and Industrial Development
- ("SecretarÃa de Comercio y Fomento Industrial"), or its
- successor; and
-
- (c) in the case of the United States, the U.S.
- International Trade Commission, or its successor.
-
-