WTO Agricultural Quantity-Based Safeguard Trigger Levels, 48978-48980 [2021-18817]

Download as PDF khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES 48978 Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 167 / Wednesday, September 1, 2021 / Notices provided restricted access to the application. Level 2 users have managed access within the application. The NDL system accomplishes this functionality by requiring that a specific role be assigned to each user. Sponsoring organizations have eAuthentication level 1 clearance allowing them to view individuals’ names, other legal names, state, termination date, disqualified status, whether a debt is owed, and pending status. For institutions, they may view institutions’ names and previous names, full address, termination date, disqualified status, whether a debt is owed, and pending status. State agency and FNS users have eAuthentication level 2 clearance, which allows them to view the information listed above, in addition to date of birth and individuals’ full addresses. Currently, all States and four territories have access to the NDL with eAuthentication level 2 clearance. Once identified, the system uses the existing functionality within the FNS General Support System platform to selectively control permissions by role. As mentioned, controls for eAuthentication level 1 users include restricting information view privileges by removing dates of birth and individuals’ full addresses from view. eAuthentication level 2 can view all the data. NDL Application software roles: Users with eAuthentication level 2 credentials are assigned roles which determine the level of access they have within NDL. Server to Server and Client to/from Server communications encryption: Secure Socket Layer (SSL) with 128-bit encryption has been applied to all the application servers, which are only available through FNS Intranet connection. In addition, all communications between servers will be encrypted. Vulnerabilities and anti-virus: Known vulnerabilities are regularly identified and resolved. Many tools, such as Tenable and Splunk are used scan resources. The sources for these scan services include vendors and the National Vulnerability Database. Industry best practices are followed to resolution. Users on client machines do not have local administrative rights, which maintain low vulnerability. Users have the ability to intentionally or accidentally download and install malicious code. This risk is mitigated using a multi-layered approach. First, anti-virus applications are deployed to all client machines and virus definitions are automatically updated daily using a centrally managed update server. Second, all systems are monitored and VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:09 Aug 31, 2021 Jkt 253001 randomly inspected for unauthorized software. DISC EDC employs Retina for daily scans of VMs and configured environments to identify vulnerabilities and alert appropriate personnel. RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES: Individuals seeking notification of and access to any record contained in this system of records, or seeking to contest its content, may submit a request in writing to the Headquarters or component’s FOIA Officer, whose contact information can be found at https://www.dm.usda.gov/foia/poc.htm. If an individual believes more than one component maintains Privacy Act records concerning him or her, the individual may submit the request to the Chief FOIA Officer, Department of Agriculture, 1400 Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20250. The request should include a daytime phone number and email. Provide as much information as possible about the subject matter of the records you are requesting. This will help facilitate the search process. When seeking records about yourself from this NDL system of records, or any other Departmental system of records, your request must conform with the Privacy Act regulations set forth in 7 CFR 1.112 (Procedures for requests pertaining to individual records in a record system). You must submit a written request in accordance with the instructions set forth in the system of records. Provide your full name, date, name of system of records, and either (1) have your signature witnessed by a notary; or (2) include the following statement immediately above the signature on your request letter: ‘‘I declare under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct. Executed on [date].’’ Requests that do not contain the required declaration will be processed under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), and, if records are found, you may not receive as much information, including information about you. If additional information is required to fulfill a Privacy Act request, you will be notified. When the request is for one of access, the request should include the full name of the individual making the request, the name of the system of records, and a statement of whether the requester desires to make a personal inspection of the records or to be supplied with copies by mail or email. In accordance with 7 CFR 1.113, prior to inspection of the records, the requester shall present sufficient identification (e.g., driver’s license, employee identification card, social PO 00000 Frm 00007 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 security card, credit cards) to establish that the requester is the individual to whom the records pertain. No identification shall be required, however, if the records are required by 5 U.S.C. 552 to be released. If FNS determines to grant the requested access, fees may be charged in accordance with § 1.120 before making the necessary copies. In place of a notarization, your signature may be submitted under 28 U.S.C. 1746, a law that permits statements to be made under penalty of perjury as a substitute for notarization. CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES: Individuals seeking to contest or amend records maintained in this system of records must direct their request to the address indicated in the ‘‘RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES’’ paragraph, above and must follow the procedures set forth in 7 CFR part 1, subpart G, § 1.116 (Request for correction or amendment to record). All requests must state clearly and concisely what record is being contested, the reasons for contesting it, and the proposed amendment to the record. A determination whether a record may be amended will be made within 10 days of its receipt. NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES: Individuals may be notified if a record in this system of records pertains to them when the individuals request information utilizing the same procedures as those identified in the ‘‘RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES’’ paragraph, above. EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM: None. HISTORY: https://www.federalregister.gov/ documents/2004/02/12/04-3116/ privacy-act-proposed-new-system-ofrecords. Cynthia Long, Acting Administrator, Food and Nutrition Service. [FR Doc. 2021–18808 Filed 8–31–21; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 3410–30–P DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE Foreign Agricultural Service WTO Agricultural Quantity-Based Safeguard Trigger Levels Foreign Agricultural Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture. ACTION: Notice of product coverage and trigger levels for safeguard measures provided for in the World Trade AGENCY: E:\FR\FM\01SEN1.SGM 01SEN1 Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 167 / Wednesday, September 1, 2021 / Notices Organization (WTO) Agreement on Agriculture. This notice lists the updated quantity-based trigger levels for products which may be subject to additional import duties under the safeguard provisions of the WTO Agreement on Agriculture. This notice also includes the relevant period applicable for the trigger levels on each of the listed products. DATES: This notice is applicable on September 1, 2021. ADDRESSES: Multilateral Affairs Division, Trade Policy and Geographic Affairs, Foreign Agricultural Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Stop 1070, 1400 Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20250–1070. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Souleymane Diaby, (202) 720–2916, Souleymane.Diaby@usda.gov. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Article 5 of the WTO Agreement on Agriculture provides that additional import duties may be imposed on imports of products subject to tariffication as a result of the Uruguay Round, if certain conditions are met. The agreement permits additional duties to be charged if the price of an individual shipment of imported products falls below the average price for similar goods imported SUMMARY: during the years 1986–88 by a specified percentage. It also permits additional duties when the volume of imports of that product exceeds the sum of (1) a base trigger level multiplied by the average of the last three years of available import data and (2) the change in yearly consumption in the most recent year for which data are available (provided that the final trigger level is not less than 105 percent of the threeyear import average). The base trigger level is set at 105, 110, or 125 percent of the three-year import average, depending on the percentage of domestic consumption that is represented by imports. These additional duties may not be imposed on quantities for which minimum or current access commitments were made during the Uruguay Round negotiations, and only one type of safeguard, price or quantity, may be applied at any given time to an article. Section 405 of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act requires that the President cause to be published in the Federal Register information regarding the price and quantity safeguards, including the quantity trigger levels, which must be updated annually based upon import levels during the most recent 3 years. The President delegated this duty to the Secretary of Agriculture in Presidential Proclamation No. 6763, dated December 23, 1994, 60 FR 1007 (Jan. 4, 1995). The Secretary of Agriculture further delegated this duty, which lies with the Administrator of the Foreign Agricultural Service (7 CFR 2.601(a)(42)). The Annex to this notice contains the updated quantity trigger levels, consistent with the provisions of Article 5. Additional information on the products subject to safeguards and the additional duties which may apply can be found in subchapter IV of Chapter 99 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (2021) and in the Secretary of Agriculture’s Notice of Uruguay Round Agricultural Safeguard Trigger Levels, published in the Federal Register at 60 FR 427 (Jan. 4, 1995). Notice: As provided in Section 405 of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act, consistent with Article 5 of the WTO Agreement on Agriculture, the safeguard quantity trigger levels previously notified are superseded by the levels indicated in the Annex to this notice. The definitions of these products were provided in the Notice of Safeguard Action published in the Federal Register, at 60 FR 427 (Jan. 4, 1995). Clay M. Hamilton, Acting Administrator, Foreign Agricultural Service. ANNEX—QUANTITY-BASED SAFEGUARD TRIGGER 2021 Quantity-based safeguard trigger Product khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES Trigger level Beef ............................................................................. Mutton ......................................................................... Cream ......................................................................... Evaporated or Condensed Milk .................................. Nonfat Dry Milk ........................................................... Dried Whole Milk ......................................................... Dried Cream ................................................................ Dried Whey/Buttermilk ................................................ Butter 1 ........................................................................ Butteroil ....................................................................... Chocolate Crumb ........................................................ Lowfat Chocolate Crumb ............................................ Animal Feed Containing Milk ...................................... Ice Cream ................................................................... Dairy Mixtures ............................................................. Infant Formula Containing Oligosaccharides .............. Blue Cheese ............................................................... Cheddar Cheese ......................................................... American-Type Cheese .............................................. Edam/Gouda Cheese ................................................. Italian-Type Cheese .................................................... Swiss Cheese with Eye Formation ............................. Gruyere Process Cheese ........................................... NSPF Cheese ............................................................. Lowfat Cheese ............................................................ Peanut Butter/Paste .................................................... Peanuts 1 ..................................................................... Raw Cane Sugar 1 ...................................................... Refined Sugars and Syrups 1 ..................................... VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:09 Aug 31, 2021 Jkt 253001 PO 00000 267,883 3,384 3,047,452 5,123,257 131,867 3,248,335 65,896 76,425 65,347,766 18,209,591 11,785,460 303,240 236,222 9,968,711 7,581,497 2,741,347 4,086,430 7,613,990 80,873 10,535,143 22,873,353 26,375,209 4,008,437 45,205,687 107,243 4,085 24,220 14,274 766,524 812,543 256,005 Frm 00008 Fmt 4703 Unit Period MT ....................... MT ....................... Liters ................... Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Liters ................... Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... Sfmt 4703 48979 Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. Jan 1, 2021–Dec 31, 2021. April 1, 2020–Mar 31, 2021. April 1, 2021–Mar 31, 2022. Oct 1, 2020–Sep 30, 2021. Oct 1, 2021–Sep 30, 2022. Oct 1, 2020–Sep 30, 2021. E:\FR\FM\01SEN1.SGM 01SEN1 48980 Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 167 / Wednesday, September 1, 2021 / Notices ANNEX—QUANTITY-BASED SAFEGUARD TRIGGER—Continued 2021 Quantity-based safeguard trigger Product Trigger level Articles over 65% Sugar ............................................. Articles over 10% Sugar ............................................. Blended Syrups ........................................................... Sweetened Cocoa Powder ......................................... Mixes and Doughs ...................................................... Mixed Condiments and Seasonings ........................... Short Staple Cotton 2 .................................................. Harsh or Rough Cotton ............................................... Medium Staple Cotton ................................................ Extra Long Staple Cotton ........................................... Cotton Waste 2 ............................................................ Cotton Processed but not Spun 2 ............................... 1 Includes 375,127 482 531 11,093 14,508 391 408 459 707 781 1,142 350 348 45,688 7,944 32,962 10 8,417 102 692,467 813,823 1,013,866 1,458,693 124,933 23,676 Unit Period MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... MT ....................... Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Kilograms ............ Oct 1, 2021–Sep 30, 2022. Oct 1, 2020–Sep 30, 2021. Oct 1, 2021–Sep 30, 2022. Oct 1, 2020–Sep 30, 2021. Oct 1, 2021–Sep 30, 2022. Oct 1, 2020–Sep 30, 2021. Oct 1, 2021–Sep 30, 2022. Oct 1, 2020–Sep 30, 2021. Oct 1, 2021–Sep 30, 2022. Oct 1, 2020–Sep 30, 2021. Oct 1, 2021–Sep 30, 2022. Oct 1, 2020–Sep 30, 2021. Oct 1, 2021–Sep 30, 2022. Sep 20, 2020–Sep 19, 2021. Sep 20, 2021–Sep 19, 2022. Aug 1, 2020–July 31, 2021. Aug 1, 2021–July 31, 2022. Aug 1, 2020–July 31, 2021. Aug 1, 2021–July 31, 2022. Aug 1, 2020–July 31, 2021. Aug 1, 2021–July 31, 2022. Sep 20, 2020–Sep 19, 2021. Sep 20, 2021–Sep 19, 2022. Sep 11, 2020–Sep 10, 2021. Sep 11, 2021–Sep 10, 2022 change in U.S. consumption. period from October to September. 2 12-month [FR Doc. 2021–18817 Filed 8–31–21; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 3410–10–P DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE Forest Service Virginia Resource Advisory Committee Forest Service, Agriculture (USDA). ACTION: Notice of meeting. AGENCY: The Virginia Resource Advisory Committee (RAC) will hold a virtual meeting by phone and/or video conference. The committee is authorized under the Secure Rural Schools and Community SelfDetermination Act (the Act) and operates in compliance with the Federal Advisory Committee Act. The purpose of the committee is to improve collaborative relationships and to provide advice and recommendations to the Forest Service concerning projects and funding consistent with Title II of the Act. Additional RAC information, including the meeting agenda and the meeting summary/minutes, can be found at the following website: www.fs.fed.us/r8/gwj. DATES: The meeting will be held on September 22, 2021 from 2:00 p.m.–5:00 p.m., Eastern Daylight Time. khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES SUMMARY: VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:09 Aug 31, 2021 Jkt 253001 All RAC meetings are subject to cancellation. For the status of the meeting prior to attendance, please contact the person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held virtually via Microsoft Teams. Participants may join through the following link: https://msteams.link/ J9GS. Participants may also join via phone by dialing (202) 650–0123, Participant Code: 162316632#. Written comments may be submitted as described under SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. All comments, including names and addresses when provided, are placed in the record and are available for public inspection and copying. The public may inspect comments received at the George Washington and Jefferson National Forests Supervisor’s Office. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stephanie Chapman, RAC Coordinator by phone at (540) 984–4101 or via email at stephanie.l.chapman@usda.gov. Individuals who use telecommunication devices for the hearing-impaired (TDD) may call the Federal Relay Service (FRS) at 1–800–877–8339, 24 hours a day, every day of the year, including holidays. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The 1. Orient new RAC members; and 2. Vote and nominate on a RAC Chairperson. The meeting is open to the public. The agenda will include time for people to make oral statements of three minutes or less. Individuals wishing to make an oral statement should request in writing by September 15, 2021 to be scheduled on the agenda. Anyone who would like to bring related matters to the attention of the committee may file written statements with the committee staff before or after the meeting. Written comments and requests for time for oral comments must be sent to Stephanie Chapman, RAC Coordinator, George Washington and Jefferson NF Supervisor’s Office, 5162 Valleypointe Parkway, Roanoke, Virginia 24019; or by email to stephanie.l.chapman@ usda.gov. Meeting Accommodations: If you are a person requiring reasonable accommodation, please make requests in advance for sign language interpreting, assistive listening devices or other reasonable accommodation for access to the proceedings by contacting the person listed in the section titled FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. All purpose of the meeting is to: PO 00000 Frm 00009 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 E:\FR\FM\01SEN1.SGM 01SEN1

Agencies

[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 167 (Wednesday, September 1, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 48978-48980]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-18817]


-----------------------------------------------------------------------

DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

Foreign Agricultural Service


WTO Agricultural Quantity-Based Safeguard Trigger Levels

AGENCY: Foreign Agricultural Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture.

ACTION: Notice of product coverage and trigger levels for safeguard 
measures provided for in the World Trade

[[Page 48979]]

Organization (WTO) Agreement on Agriculture.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: This notice lists the updated quantity-based trigger levels 
for products which may be subject to additional import duties under the 
safeguard provisions of the WTO Agreement on Agriculture. This notice 
also includes the relevant period applicable for the trigger levels on 
each of the listed products.

DATES: This notice is applicable on September 1, 2021.

ADDRESSES: Multilateral Affairs Division, Trade Policy and Geographic 
Affairs, Foreign Agricultural Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 
Stop 1070, 1400 Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20250-1070.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Souleymane Diaby, (202) 720-2916, 
[email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Article 5 of the WTO Agreement on 
Agriculture provides that additional import duties may be imposed on 
imports of products subject to tariffication as a result of the Uruguay 
Round, if certain conditions are met. The agreement permits additional 
duties to be charged if the price of an individual shipment of imported 
products falls below the average price for similar goods imported 
during the years 1986-88 by a specified percentage. It also permits 
additional duties when the volume of imports of that product exceeds 
the sum of (1) a base trigger level multiplied by the average of the 
last three years of available import data and (2) the change in yearly 
consumption in the most recent year for which data are available 
(provided that the final trigger level is not less than 105 percent of 
the three-year import average). The base trigger level is set at 105, 
110, or 125 percent of the three-year import average, depending on the 
percentage of domestic consumption that is represented by imports. 
These additional duties may not be imposed on quantities for which 
minimum or current access commitments were made during the Uruguay 
Round negotiations, and only one type of safeguard, price or quantity, 
may be applied at any given time to an article.
    Section 405 of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act requires that the 
President cause to be published in the Federal Register information 
regarding the price and quantity safeguards, including the quantity 
trigger levels, which must be updated annually based upon import levels 
during the most recent 3 years. The President delegated this duty to 
the Secretary of Agriculture in Presidential Proclamation No. 6763, 
dated December 23, 1994, 60 FR 1007 (Jan. 4, 1995). The Secretary of 
Agriculture further delegated this duty, which lies with the 
Administrator of the Foreign Agricultural Service (7 CFR 2.601(a)(42)). 
The Annex to this notice contains the updated quantity trigger levels, 
consistent with the provisions of Article 5.
    Additional information on the products subject to safeguards and 
the additional duties which may apply can be found in subchapter IV of 
Chapter 99 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States 
(2021) and in the Secretary of Agriculture's Notice of Uruguay Round 
Agricultural Safeguard Trigger Levels, published in the Federal 
Register at 60 FR 427 (Jan. 4, 1995).
    Notice: As provided in Section 405 of the Uruguay Round Agreements 
Act, consistent with Article 5 of the WTO Agreement on Agriculture, the 
safeguard quantity trigger levels previously notified are superseded by 
the levels indicated in the Annex to this notice. The definitions of 
these products were provided in the Notice of Safeguard Action 
published in the Federal Register, at 60 FR 427 (Jan. 4, 1995).

Clay M. Hamilton,
Acting Administrator, Foreign Agricultural Service.

                                     Annex--Quantity-Based Safeguard Trigger
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                          2021 Quantity-based safeguard trigger
                Product                -------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                         Trigger level             Unit                        Period
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beef..................................         267,883  MT.......................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Mutton................................           3,384  MT.......................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Cream.................................       3,047,452  Liters...................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Evaporated or Condensed Milk..........       5,123,257  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Nonfat Dry Milk.......................         131,867  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Dried Whole Milk......................       3,248,335  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Dried Cream...........................          65,896  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Dried Whey/Buttermilk.................          76,425  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Butter \1\............................      65,347,766  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Butteroil.............................      18,209,591  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Chocolate Crumb.......................      11,785,460  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Lowfat Chocolate Crumb................         303,240  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Animal Feed Containing Milk...........         236,222  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Ice Cream.............................       9,968,711  Liters...................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Dairy Mixtures........................       7,581,497  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Infant Formula Containing                    2,741,347  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
 Oligosaccharides.
Blue Cheese...........................       4,086,430  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Cheddar Cheese........................       7,613,990  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
American-Type Cheese..................          80,873  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Edam/Gouda Cheese.....................      10,535,143  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Italian-Type Cheese...................      22,873,353  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Swiss Cheese with Eye Formation.......      26,375,209  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Gruyere Process Cheese................       4,008,437  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
NSPF Cheese...........................      45,205,687  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Lowfat Cheese.........................         107,243  Kilograms................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Peanut Butter/Paste...................           4,085  MT.......................  Jan 1, 2021-Dec 31, 2021.
Peanuts \1\...........................          24,220  MT.......................  April 1, 2020-Mar 31, 2021.
                                                14,274  MT.......................  April 1, 2021-Mar 31, 2022.
Raw Cane Sugar \1\....................         766,524  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2020-Sep 30, 2021.
                                               812,543  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2021-Sep 30, 2022.
Refined Sugars and Syrups \1\.........         256,005  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2020-Sep 30, 2021.

[[Page 48980]]

 
                                               375,127  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2021-Sep 30, 2022.
Articles over 65% Sugar...............             482  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2020-Sep 30, 2021.
                                                   531  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2021-Sep 30, 2022.
Articles over 10% Sugar...............          11,093  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2020-Sep 30, 2021.
                                                14,508  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2021-Sep 30, 2022.
Blended Syrups........................             391  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2020-Sep 30, 2021.
                                                   408  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2021-Sep 30, 2022.
Sweetened Cocoa Powder................             459  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2020-Sep 30, 2021.
                                                   707  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2021-Sep 30, 2022.
Mixes and Doughs......................             781  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2020-Sep 30, 2021.
                                                 1,142  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2021-Sep 30, 2022.
Mixed Condiments and Seasonings.......             350  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2020-Sep 30, 2021.
                                                   348  MT.......................  Oct 1, 2021-Sep 30, 2022.
Short Staple Cotton \2\...............          45,688  Kilograms................  Sep 20, 2020-Sep 19, 2021.
                                                 7,944  Kilograms................  Sep 20, 2021-Sep 19, 2022.
Harsh or Rough Cotton.................          32,962  Kilograms................  Aug 1, 2020-July 31, 2021.
                                                    10  Kilograms................  Aug 1, 2021-July 31, 2022.
Medium Staple Cotton..................           8,417  Kilograms................  Aug 1, 2020-July 31, 2021.
                                                   102  Kilograms................  Aug 1, 2021-July 31, 2022.
Extra Long Staple Cotton..............         692,467  Kilograms................  Aug 1, 2020-July 31, 2021.
                                               813,823  Kilograms................  Aug 1, 2021-July 31, 2022.
Cotton Waste \2\......................       1,013,866  Kilograms................  Sep 20, 2020-Sep 19, 2021.
                                             1,458,693  Kilograms................  Sep 20, 2021-Sep 19, 2022.
Cotton Processed but not Spun \2\.....         124,933  Kilograms................  Sep 11, 2020-Sep 10, 2021.
                                                23,676  Kilograms................  Sep 11, 2021-Sep 10, 2022
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Includes change in U.S. consumption.
\2\ 12-month period from October to September.

[FR Doc. 2021-18817 Filed 8-31-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-10-P


This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.