Form ITA-4150P Survey of Non-Tariff Trade Barriers to the U.S. Environm

Survey of Non-Tariff Trade Barriers to the U.S. Environmental Industry

0625-0241 NTB Survey

Survey of Non-Tariff Trade Barriers to the U.S. Environmental Industry

OMB: 0625-0241

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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Office of Energy and Environmental Industries
www.environment.ita.doc.gov

Survey of Non-Tariff Trade Barriers to the U.S. Environmental Industry


The U.S. Department of Commerce seeks your assistance in identifying non-tariff trade barriers (NTBs) that affect U.S. exports of environmental goods and services. The information you provide will be used to seek the elimination of these barriers. NTBs occur in many forms; examples include: quotas, licensing requirements, customs procedures, and limits on delivery of professional services.

Company Information




Name: Shape1 Title: Shape2

Company Name: Shape3

Address: Shape4

City: Shape5 State: Shape6 Shape7 Zip: Shape8

Phone Number: Shape9 Fax: Shape10

E-mail: Shape11


Regions of Interest: Shape12

Is the information supplied in this survey business confidential? Shape13 Shape14 Yes Shape15 No


Freedom of Information Act: Information submitted to the government may be subject to disclosure pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act. However, all confidential commercial information will be protected from disclosure to the extent permitted by law. You will be notified in advance if any such information submitted by you becomes subject to release pursuant to a Freedom of Information Act request.

Type of Company (check all that apply):

Shape16 Architectural

Shape17 Construction

Shape18 Consulting

Shape19 Distributor

Shape20 Engineer

Shape21 Federal Agency

Shape22 Finance

Shape23 Legal

Shape24 Manufacturer

Shape25 Media

Shape26 Minority/Female Owned

Shape27 Service Provider

Shape28 State Agency

Shape29 State Enviro Bus Assoc

Shape30 Trade Association

Shape31 Trade Center

Shape32 Trade Show Firm

Shape33 University/Academic

Shape34 U.S. NGO

Shape35 Utility

Shape36 Other

Industry (check all that apply):

Shape37 Air

Shape38 All

Shape39 Energy

Shape40 Finance

Shape41 Hazardous Waste

Shape42 Incineration

Shape43 Instrumentation/Monitoring

Shape44 Medical Waste

Shape45 Oil Cleanup

Shape46 Pollution Prevention

Shape47 Recycling

Shape48 Remediation

Shape49 Sanitation

Shape50 Services

Shape51 Solid Waste Eqp.

Shape52 Solid Waste Serv.

Shape53 Water/Wastewater Eqp.

Shape54 Water/Wastewater Serv.

Shape55 Other

Annual Sales (check one):
Shape56 Shape57 Under $1 million Shape58 $1-$5 million Shape59 $6-$50 million Shape60 $51-$75 million Shape61 Over $75 million Shape62 Unknown

Non - Tariff Barriers Survey


Please check the non-tariff trade barriers (NTBs) that your company has experienced. Provide as much information as possible for each barrier cited. Following each item checked, please include specific laws, regulations, etc... of the country that adversely affect the importation of your products and services, and in each instance, name specific countries. For example: “In country X, regulations (cite regulations) do not allow the establishment of foreign owned engineering companies. For every construction project in country Y, it is necessary to get design approval from local institutes that do not publish transparent design specifications.”

1.) Subsidies:
Shape63 Shape64 Internal subsidies for local producers or service providers
Shape65 Cheap financing and tax holidays for local manufacturers
Shape66 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape67

2.) Quotas and Quantitative Restrictions:
Shape68 Shape69 Limits on number of service suppliers in a market
Shape70 Limits on how many units/dollars of products can be imported
Shape71 Cut-off dates during calendar year for entry of products
Shape72 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape73

3.) Sanitary and Phythosanitary (SPS) Measures:
Shape74 Shape75 Onerous licensing procedures
Shape76 non Science-base regulations
Shape77 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape78

4.) Restrictions on Who Can Import:
Shape79 Shape80 Only state sanctioned trading companies may import
Shape81 Govt./Quasi Govt. organizations only are permitted to import
Shape82 Govt. organizations are sometimes/always exonerated from paying duties
Shape83 Govt. organizations can have preferential access to foreign exchange
Shape84 Private firms with accumulated "export credits" can have preferential access to foreign exchange/import permits
Shape85 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape86

5.) Labeling, Packaging, & Documentation Requirements
Shape87 Shape88 Date of expiration of chemical requirements
Shape89 Pallet/packaging fumigation requirements
Shape90 Conflicting hazardous material labeling requirements and packaging between countries of origin & destination
Shape91 Conflicting requirements of support documentation for hazardous materials (i.e.- MSDS documentation)
Shape92 Labeling indicating certification of requirements of importing country
Shape93 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape94

6.) Standards
Shape95 Shape96 ISO certifications required to supply products or services- ISO 14000 environmental standards must be met
Shape97 Requirements for periodic proof of instrument calibration
Shape98 Emissions compliance requirements
Shape99 Safety requirements for grounding and other hazards
Shape100 Off-standard electrical requirements (90-120 VAC/60hz etc )
Shape101 Unclear quality regulations or those based on unique or outdated standards
Shape102 Use of metrological certification boards to determine if instrumentation is designed to standard(s)
Shape103 Milling mixing or other processing regulations
Shape104 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape105

7.) Intellectual Property Requirements
Shape106 Shape107 Inadequate protection
Shape108 Inadequate enforcement
Shape109 Arbitrary rulings on patent or trademark rights forcing time consuming court reviews
Shape110 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape111

8.) Harassment of Imports:
Shape112 Shape113 Onerous licencing or qualification requirements
Shape114 Embargoes (political or economic)
Shape115 Arbitrary values on goods for duty purposes including shipping charges
Shape116 National boycotts
Shape117 Currency fluctuations adversely affecting importers
Shape118 Delays resulting from competitor's influence on susceptible officials (corruption/bribery)
Shape119 Cumbersome customs formalities/requirements
Shape120 Restrictive customs procedures that promulgate complexities and regulations for classifying and valuing commodities making compliance difficult and expensive
Shape121 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape122

9.) Restrictions on Distribution, Logistics, and Banking Services:
Shape123 Shape124 Foreign exchange restrictions
Shape125 Access to hard currency
Shape126 Advanced deposit on import requirements
Shape127 National carrier preferences
Shape128 Foreign carrier restrictions
Shape129 Prohibition of collection-basis sales
Shape130 Govt requirements to withhold/reduce commission payments to distributors
Shape131 Arbitrarily short periods in which to apply for import licenses
Shape132 Pre-shipment inspections required prior to exportation from source country
Shape133 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape134

10.) Restrictions on Marketing:
Shape135 Shape136 Advertising restrictions
Shape137 Complicated bidding requirements
Shape138 Requirements for local surety and performance bonds
Shape139 Proof of % of national content requirements
Shape140 Letters of authorization to sell (or resell) product or service requirements
Shape141 Requirements for extended or extraordinary warranty coverage for product or service
Shape142 Arbitrary rulings on patent or trademark rights forcing time consuming court reviews
Shape143 National state or municipal requirements to use specific distribution channels at the wholesale and retail level
Shape144 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape145

11.) Restrictions on Investment & Nature of Commercial Relationships
Shape146 Shape147 Restrictions on foreign ownership of companies
Shape148 Restrictions on foreign management of companies
Shape149 Commercial relationships such as partnerships are not permitted
Shape150 Percentage of local workforce required
Shape151 Percentage of local content required
Shape152 Better treatment provided to home country investors or third party investors
Shape153 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape154

12.) Discriminatory Devices:
Shape155 Shape156 Unfair competition from local state-owned enterprises
Shape157 Competition from third-country exporters who enjoy subsidies monopolies or state-organization status
Shape158 Discriminatory government purchasing practices
Shape159 Discrimination resulting from bilateral trade agreements or barter agreements
Shape160 Discrimination arising from special relationships including ex-colonial status customs unions commonwealth preferences or currency areas
Shape161 Disguised tariffs such as "surcharges" revenue duties and consumption taxes levied against only imported goods
Shape162 Turnover equalization taxes ostensibly to put imports on the footing as local products
Shape163 Countervailing duties (offsets to subsidies)
Shape164 Arbitrary interpretations of anti-dumping laws
Shape165 Impact psychological or direct of "buy home products" policies
Shape166 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape167

13.) Restrictions on the Cross-Border Supply of a Service:
Shape168 Shape169 Limitations on movement of personnel to supply a service
Shape170 Restrictions on what services can be sold cross-border
Shape171 Local presence requirements that must be met before service can be supplied cross-border
Shape172 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape173

14.) Transparency:
Shape174 Shape175 Non-transparent regulations
Shape176 Unequal enforcement of regulations
Shape177 Regulations imposed without prior notice or input from interested parties
Shape178 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape179

15.) Recognition:
Shape180 Shape181 Licencing or certification requirements unevenly applied to professionals
Shape182 Other

Explain: Specific Examples-
Shape183


Privacy Statement

Burden Statement


Public reporting for this collection of information is estimated to be 10 minutes per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. All responses to this collection of information are voluntary, and will be provided confidentially to the extent allowed under the Freedom of Information Act. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person is required to respond to nor shall a person be subject to a penalty for failure to comply with a collection of information subject to the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act unless that collection of information displays a current valid OMB Control Number. Send comments regarding the burden estimate or any other aspect of this collection of information, including suggestions for reducing this burden, to the Reports Clearance Officer, International Trade Administration, Department of Commerce, Room 4001, 14th and Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20230.

Shape184


NOTE: You may also return this survey via e-mail, fax, or regular mail. Please also provide this survey to your agents or distributors in foreign countries. We need as much information as possible to help U.S. exporters!

Todd DeLelle or Maureen Hinman
U.S. Department of Commerce
Room 4053
Washington, DC 20230

Email: todd.delelle@trade.gov , maureen.hinman@trade.gov

Tel: 202-482-5225

Fax: 202-482-0170

URL: www.environment.ita.doc.gov


OMB No: 0625-0241
Expires: 06/30/2013



File Typeapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
AuthorMaureen Hinman
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File Created2021-01-29

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