ETDETA ETDETA
notice Published 2026-04-08

Fatty Acids From Indonesia and Malaysia; Determinations

Origins: MY,ID
📌 ETDETA brief — importer impact summary (educational)

Brief takeaway: The ITC has issued determinations in trade proceedings involving fatty acids from Indonesia and Malaysia, which may affect duties on these products.

What changed: According to the notice, the International Trade Commission has reached determinations concerning fatty acids imported from Indonesia and Malaysia. The notice itself does not spell out the detailed findings, rates, or outcomes in the text provided, so importers should consult the full Federal Register document and any related Commerce Department orders for specifics.

Who's affected: The notice names fatty acids as the product at issue and cites Indonesia and Malaysia as the countries of origin. Specific HTS codes are not stated in the text provided; importers of fatty acids sourced from these two countries may find this proceeding relevant.

What to review:
- Review whether your imported products are classified as fatty acids potentially within the scope described in the full determination.
- Confirm with your customs broker whether goods from Indonesia or Malaysia are covered and what duties, if any, may result.
- Check the full Federal Register notice and any associated antidumping or countervailing duty orders for scope language, rates, and effective dates.
- Review your sourcing and country-of-origin records for shipments from these origins.

This is general information, not legal advice and not a compliance determination — confirm specifics with a licensed customs broker or trade counsel.

Official notice

Fatty Acids From Indonesia and Malaysia; Determinations
Source: Federal Register · International Trade Commission · Read the official notice ↗

Check how this affects your product

Need help moving this shipment?

ETDETA coordinates the logistics side of your U.S. import — booking, ocean freight, inland transportation, and customs-clearance coordination through licensed customs brokers.

Get a Full Freight Quote →

Related updates

This update is a general educational summary based on public CBP CSMS / Federal Register information. It is not legal advice, customs broker advice, a final classification, duty determination, entry instruction, or compliance determination. Importers should confirm applicability, effective dates, HTSUS/Chapter 99 reporting, rates, refunds, PSC procedures, and filing instructions with their licensed customs broker, trade counsel, and/or CBP.