- India has imposed anti-dumping duty on certain steel shipments from Vietnam
- The duty targets some hot-rolled flat products of alloy or non-alloy steel
- The move follows a year-long probe into steel imports from Vietnam
India, the world's second-biggest producer of crude steel, has imposed anti-dumping duty on some steel shipments from Vietnam, the Ministry of Commerce and Industry said.
This comes a year after the ministry initiated a probe on some steel imports from the Southeast Asian country to analyse threats and consequential injury to India's steel sector.
The duty is on some hot-rolled flat products of alloy or non-alloy steel, the ministry said in a notification dated Wednesday.
"Domestic steel industry has suffered injury as a result of dumped imports," it said. "The injury margin is positive and significant."
The ministry flagged further threats to local mills if anti-dumping duties are not levied on other select goods from Vietnam.
In April, India imposed a 12% temporary tariff on some steel imports, locally known as a safeguard duty, to curb a surge in cheap shipments primarily from China.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)