- Registration date2025-06-10
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The Korea Trade Commission (KTC) under the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (MOTIE) held the Seoul International Forum on Trade Remedies 2025 (“Seoul Forum 2025”) today at COEX in Seoul.
Now in its 23rd year since the initial launch in 2001, Seoul Forum is the world’s exclusive international forum on trade remedies. This year’s event drew the participation of 150 persons composed of representatives and experts of trade remedies institutions from 11 economies around the world, including the U.S., EU, China, and Japan, as well as the World Trade Organization (WTO).
The first and second session was each held under the theme of “Supply Chain Realignment and the New Challenge Facing Trade Remedies Institutions” and “Recent Trends in Trade Remedy Investigations: Cases and Tasks,” consisting of presentations and panel discussions among different countries’ trade remedies institutions. Furthermore, a technical committee meeting and a conference for the heads of trade remedies institutions served as platforms for cooperation and sharing of policies and actual investigation experiences.
This year’s Seoul Forum saw its international status advance considerably as participating countries held 29 bilateral meetings on the sidelines, with Seoul Forum itself drawing the attendance of numerous high-level officials including Frédéric Seppey, Chairperson of the Canadian International Trade Tribunal (CITT), and David Latina, Australia’s Anti-Dumping Commissioner.
The forum noted a shared consensus recognizing trade remedies as a key measure for upholding the fair trade order amid supply chain shifts and uncertainties across the global trade landscape. Also noted was the various countries’ respective push for reform of trade remedies and efforts for capacity building in view of factors increasing the complexity of investigations, such as global oversupply and circumvention.
The KTC has received five anti-dumping investigation requests during this year’s first quarter alone, already reaching half of the record high 10 requests received last year. By this May, the KTC has also submitted a total of eight proposals, including those for provisional duties, for anti-dumping duties on steel and petrochemical products based on a cause-and-effect relation between dumped imports and injury on domestic industries.
The above outcomes are a result of the organizational expansion and restructuring efforts that the KTC carried out in March, aiming to enhance its timely responses to domestic industrial damage from low-priced imports and to strengthen trade defense mechanisms.