Published: 16 Jul 2026
Essilor Group Gets Fresh Dumping-Margin Review as DGTR Reopens Anti-Dumping Probe on Chinese Ophthalmic Lenses
REGULATORY INTELLIGENCE
REGULATORY UPDATE | F. NO. 6/6/2021-DGTR, DATED 14 JULY 2026 | CASE ID: AD/AA/001/2026
The Directorate General of Trade Remedies (DGTR), Department of Commerce, has initiated a remand proceeding in the anti-dumping investigation concerning imports of Semi-Finished Ophthalmic Lenses originating in or exported from China PR. The proceeding follows a direction from the Customs, Excise and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal (CESTAT) to reconsider how the Essilor Group’s dumping margin was determined in the original 2022 findings, and reopens the case specifically for that limited purpose.
The proceeding has been notified through Initiation Notification F. No. 6/6/2021-DGTR (Case ID: AD/AA/001/2026), dated 14 July 2026, and takes effect from the date of publication, with participation through the SETU portal open with immediate effect.
WHAT HAS CHANGED?
1. Essilor Group’s Status — Non-Cooperative to Cooperative Exporter/Producer
In the original Final Findings dated 29 September 2022, the Essilor Group was treated as a non-cooperative exporter/producer. CESTAT, vide Final Order Nos. 50783–50793/2026 dated 27 April 2026, set aside this treatment and directed the Designated Authority to examine the Essilor Group’s case afresh as a cooperative exporter/producer.
2. Basis for Dumping Margin — Facts Available to Individual Determination
Because the Essilor Group was earlier treated as non-cooperative, its dumping margin was determined using facts available rather than its own transaction-level data. Under the remand proceeding, the Authority will now determine the normal value, export price, and dumping margin specifically for the Essilor Group based on its own submitted information, in accordance with the Anti-Dumping Rules, 1995.
3. Scope of Reconsideration — Full Reopening Limited to the Directed Stage
The remand does not restart the entire investigation. The Authority has taken up proceedings from the stage it considers appropriate in light of the Tribunal’s observations, meaning the scope of fresh examination is confined to the issues concerning the Essilor Group’s dumping margin, not the investigation as a whole.
4. Participation Mechanism — Mandatory Registration on SETU Portal
All interested parties wishing to participate in the remand proceeding must register on the SETU Portal (https://setu.dgtr.gov.in) and upload submissions under Case ID AD/AA/001/2026. Narrative submissions must be in searchable PDF or MS-Word format, and data files must be submitted in MS-Excel format.
| Parameter | Original Finding (2022) | Remand Proceeding (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Essilor Group’s status | Treated as non-cooperative exporter/producer | To be treated as cooperative exporter/producer |
| Basis for dumping margin | Facts available, applied due to non-cooperation finding | Individual normal value, export price and dumping margin |
| Legal basis | Final Findings dated 29 September 2022 | CESTAT Final Order Nos. 50783–50793/2026 dated 27 April 2026 |
| Interested party participation | Concluded | Reopened; submissions via SETU portal under Case ID AD/AA/001/2026 |
WHY THIS MATTERS
Anti-dumping investigations conducted by the DGTR determine whether imported goods are being sold in India below their normal value, causing injury to domestic industry, and if so, what duty should apply to offset that dumping. A remand proceeding arises when an appellate body such as CESTAT finds that the Authority’s original determination was flawed for a specific exporter or issue, requiring the Authority to redo that portion of its analysis while keeping the rest of the investigation intact.
In this case, CESTAT’s intervention turned specifically on how an exporter’s cooperation status is assessed — a finding that carries implications beyond this single case, since it clarifies the standard the Authority must apply when determining whether an exporter genuinely cooperated with an investigation. Businesses involved in other ongoing or past anti-dumping matters may find this precedent relevant to their own proceedings.
This remand creates practical considerations for businesses and stakeholders, particularly those facing:
- Import or distribution arrangements involving Essilor Group ophthalmic lens products from China PR, where duty treatment may change
- Domestic industry interests seeking to defend the original injury and dumping findings during the reopened examination
- Uncertainty over final duty rates on the affected product pending the Authority’s fresh determination
- Tight compliance timelines for submitting confidential and non-confidential versions of evidence via the SETU portal
- A need to monitor DGTR and SETU portal updates closely, since procedural notices may be issued as the remand progresses
BUSINESS IMPACT
- Importers of the affected lenses gain clarity that Essilor Group’s duty treatment is now under fresh, cooperative-exporter review.
- Interested parties get a defined channel — the SETU portal — through which to submit evidence and arguments.
- Domestic industry stakeholders can present submissions to defend the existing findings during the reconsideration.
- Businesses can align internal customs and pricing planning with the prospect of a revised dumping margin.
- Non-cooperation risk is clearly flagged, encouraging timely and complete responses to Authority requests.
- Parties who miss submission deadlines or refuse information requests risk being declared non-cooperative themselves.
CONCLUSION
This remand proceeding gives the Essilor Group a fresh, cooperative-exporter determination of its dumping margin, following a specific direction from CESTAT, while leaving the broader anti-dumping findings on Semi-Finished Ophthalmic Lenses from China PR undisturbed. Interested parties — importers, domestic producers, and other stakeholders — should register on the SETU portal promptly and monitor DGTR’s website for further procedural updates as the reconsideration proceeds.
Businesses with exposure to this product category, or to similar anti-dumping matters where cooperation status is disputed, should treat this notification as a reminder to review their own submission records and ensure any future filings are complete and well-documented.
HOW OMEGA QMS CAN HELP
At Omega QMS, we help businesses navigate India’s evolving regulatory framework, including BIS certification, customs regulations, import-export procedures, QCO compliance, and trade remedy proceedings such as anti-dumping investigations. If your business requires assistance with SETU portal submissions or anti-dumping compliance for the ophthalmic lens sector, our experts can help ensure timely and seamless compliance.
SOURCES
Primary Source
Directorate General of Trade Remedies, Department of Commerce, Ministry of Commerce & Industry, Government of India — Initiation Notification F. No. 6/6/2021-DGTR (Case ID: AD/AA/001/2026), “Remand Proceeding in the Anti-Dumping Investigation concerning imports of Semi-Finished Ophthalmic Lens originating in or exported from China PR,” dated 14 July 2026. (To be published in the Gazette of India, Extraordinary, Part-I, Section-I.)
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.