|   Section 30.70 § 30.70 Statistical information required on import entries.  Information for statistics on merchandise entering the United States 
        from foreign countries, U.S. Foreign Trade Zones, and from the Virgin 
        Islands of the United States, and other nonforeign areas (except Puerto 
        Rico), is required to be reported by importers on the following Customs 
        entry and withdrawal forms respectively required by U.S. Customs regulations 
        for individual transactions: Custom Forms 7500, 7501, 7502, 7505, 7506, 
        7519, 7521, and 7535, and on Customs Form 7512 when used as an intransit 
        entry to document immediate exportation or transportation and exportation. 
        Upon request, the importer or import broker must provide the Census Bureau 
        with information or documentation necessary to verify the accuracy or 
        resolve problems regarding the reported import transaction received by 
        the Census Bureau. The following items of information for statistics shall 
        be reported on the respective forms:   (a) District and port code. (All forms.) The Customs district code number 
        and the port code number (as shown in Schedule D, Classification of Customs 
        Districts and Ports) for the Customs port of entry or filingshall be supplied. 
        (Where Customs does not require that the District and Port codes be inserted 
        by importers, the codes will be filled in by Customs so that all entries 
        and withdrawals received by the Bureau of the Census will bear these codes.)  (b) Importing vessel or carrier. (Not required for merchandise entering 
        U.S. Customs territory from U.S. Foreign Trade Zones.) (1) (Customs Forms 
        7501, 7502, 7512, and 7521.) Information is required as to the carrier 
        or means of transportation by which the merchandise was transported from 
        a foreign country to the first port of unloading in the United States. 
        If the merchandise has been further transported in bond between ports 
        in the United States after having been unladen from the carrier on which 
        it arrived in the United States, the name of the domestic carrier shall 
        not be substituted, and the information furnished shall reflect the name 
        of the carrier or means of transportation by which the merchandise arrived 
        in the first U.S. port of unlading. 
 (2) For merchandise arriving in the United States by vessel, the name 
        of the importing vessel is required. The importing vessel is the vessel, 
        which transported the merchandise from the foreign port of lading to the 
        first U.S. port of unlading.
 
 (3) For merchandise arriving in the United States by air, the name and 
        nationality of the importing airline is required. The importingairline 
        is the airline, which carried the merchandise from the foreign port of 
        lading to the first U.S. port of unlading, and not a domestic airline 
        carrying the merchandise after the initial unlading in the United States.
 
 (4) For merchandise arriving in the United States by means of transportation 
        other than vessel or air, the means of transportation from the foreign 
        country is required, in such terms as ``parcel post,'' ``registered mail,'' 
        ``railroad,'' ``trucks,'' ``pipeline,'' etc.
 (c) Foreign port of lading. (1) (Customs Forms 7501, 7502, 7512 and 7521.) 
        For merchandise arriving in the United States by vessel or air, the name 
        and country of the foreign port at which the merchandise was actually 
        loaded on the vessel or aircraft that carried the merchandise to the United 
        States is required. This information is not required for merchandise entering 
        the U.S. Customs territory from a U.S. Foreign Trade Zone. For shipments 
        originating in either Canada or Mexico by rail, truck, pipeline, or other 
        nonvessel/nonair mode of transportation, supply the name of the province 
        (Canada) or state (Mexico) where the merchandise was first loaded for 
        exportation to the United States.
 
 (2) For merchandise transshipped overseas in the course of shipment to 
        the United States, whether or not covered by a through bill of lading, 
        the information furnished shall reflect only the foreign port at which 
        the merchandise was loaded on the vessel, aircraft, or other carrier which 
        transported it to the first U.S. port of unlading. Neither the foreign 
        port of original lading nor any ort of lading other than the last foreign 
        port of lading shall be substituted. When a single Customs form covers 
        merchandise loaded at more than one foreign port, The foreign port of 
        lading shall be indicated separately in the ``Marks and numbers and Country 
        of origin'' column immediately below the Country of origin designation 
        and on the same line as the merchandise laden at each foreign port.
 
 (3) For merchandise entering the U.S. Customs territory from a U.S. Foreign 
        Trade Zone, the number of the Foreign Trade Zone, preceded by the letters 
        ``FTZ'' shall be shown in this space.
 (d) U.S. port of unlading. (Not required for merchandise entering U.S. 
        Customs territory from U.S. Foreign Trade Zones.) (1) (Customs Forms 7501, 
        7502, 7512, and 7521.) For merchandise arriving in the United States by 
        vessel or air, the U.S. port (as listed in Schedule D) at which the merchandise 
        was unloaded from the importing vessel or aircraft is required, whether 
        or not such port is a Customs port of entry. (For example, if entry is 
        filed at the Port of Los Angeles for merchandise unloaded from the importing 
        vessel at Long Beach, California, the entry should show Long Beach as 
        the port of unlading.)
 (2) When merchandise is transported in bond from the U.S. port where unladen 
        from the importing vessel or carrier to another U.S. port or ports to 
        be entered for consumption or warehouse, the port of unlading required 
        to be shown on the consumption or warehouse entry is the port or point 
        where the merchandise was unladen from the importing vessel or carrier 
        before transportation in bond.
 (e) Date of importation. (All forms.) For merchandise arriving in the 
        United States by vessel, the month, day, and year on which the importing 
        vessel transporting the merchandise from the foreign country arrived within 
        the limits of the U.S. port at which the merchandise was or is to be unladen 
        is required. The date of importation to be reported for merchandise arriving 
        in the United States other than by vessel is the date on which the merchandise 
        arrives within the limits of the United States.
 (f) Country of origin. (1) (All forms.) Country of origin shall be reported 
        in the ``marks and numbers and country of origin'' column on entry and 
        withdrawal forms (in the ``marks and numbers'' column on Forms7512 and 
        7500), the ``country of origin'' space on the Special Customs Invoice 
        form, and in a conspicuous place on commercial invoices supplied to Customs 
        where the Special Customs Invoice form is not required. On multipage entries, 
        country of origin should be shown on each page.
 
 (2) Country of origin shall be reported in terms of the names designated 
        in Schedule C-I, ``Classification of Country and Territory Designations 
        for U.S. Import Statistics,'' unless a more specific geographic area is 
        required to be shown for other purposes. The country of origin is defined 
        as the country in which the product was mined, grown or manufactured. 
        Further labor, work or material added to an article in another foreign 
        country or the Virgin Islands of the United States must effect a substantial 
        transformation in order to render such other country the ``country of 
        origin.'' Such substantial transformations include smelting of ores, refining 
        of crude products, and the like. The country of origin is not changed 
        when the merchandise is subjected in another country merely to minor manipulations, 
        such as sorting, grading, and the like. When the merchandise is invoiced 
        in or exported from a country other than that in which it originated, 
        the actual country of origin shall be specified rather than the country 
        of invoice or exportation. The country of origin for imports of scrap 
        and waste is the country in which the merchandise was reduced to scrap 
        or waste. In the case of such commodities as industrial diamonds or antiques, 
        if the origin of the merchandise is not known or cannot be ascertained 
        with reasonable effort, the country from which the merchandise has been 
        shipped shall be shown and shall be indicated as the ``Country of Shipment.''  (3) Except as provided below, the country of origin shown on import 
        entries and withdrawals should be based on information furnished by the 
        foreign supplier on import invoices. The importer should inform his foreign 
        supplier of the requirements and definitions of this section and instruct 
        the foreign supplier to furnish information on the invoice as to country 
        of origin in accordance with the above definition. If an invoice from 
        the foreign supplier is not available at the time of entry, the importer 
        shall enter the correct country of origin according to his best knowledge. 
        In any case where the importer has reliable knowledge that the country 
        of origin shown on the invoice is incorrect, he shall enter on the form 
        the correct country of origin according to his best knowledge, indicating 
        that it is a correction.
 (4) When a single Customs form covers merchandise from more than one country 
        of origin, the country of origin shall be indicated separately against 
        each item (or group of items).
 (g) Description of merchandise. (All forms.) Except on Customs Form 7512 
        when used as an Immediate Exportation or Transportation and Exportation 
        entry, the description of merchandise shall be in terms of the Tariff 
        Act in accordance with the Tariff Schedules of the United States Annotated 
        for Statistical Reporting (TSUSA) and in sufficient detail to permit the 
        identification of the TSUSA statistical reporting number to which each 
        commodity properly belongs. The name of the commodity and any and all 
        characteristics of the commodity, which distinguish it from commodities 
        of the same name covered by other TSUSA statistical reporting numbers, 
        shall be clearly and fully stated. For merchandise classified in TSUSA 
        classifications for which the instruction ``specify by name'' is shown 
        in TSUSA the specific name of the commodity or a further identifying description 
        in addition to the description in the more general terms of the commodity 
        classification definition is required. When Customs Form 7512 is used 
        as an Immediate Exportation or Transportation and Exportation entry importers 
        need only report in terms of the first five digits of TSUSA (i.e., in 
        terms of HTSUS).
 (h) Gross weight in pounds. (Customs Forms 7501, 7502, 7512, and 7521, 
        for merchandise transported to the United States by vessel or air only.) 
        Gross shipping weight in pounds shall be reported in column (2a) immediately 
        below the description of merchandise (in ``Gross Weight in Pounds'' column 
        on Form 7512 on the same horizontal line with value). Separate gross weight 
        information is required for the merchandise covered by each reporting 
        number, but if gross weight is not available for each reporting number 
        included in one or more packages, approximate shipping weight for each 
        item shall be estimated and reported. The total of these estimated weights 
        should equal the actual gross shipping weight of the entire package or 
        packages. However, for containerized cargo carried in lift vans, cargo 
        vans, or similar substantial outer containers, the weight of such containers 
        should not be included in the gross shipping weight of the merchandise 
        covered by each reporting number.
 (i) Net quantity. (All forms except 7535.) When a unit of quantity is 
        specified in TSUSA for the reporting number under which the item is reported, 
        net quantity shall be reported in the specified unit, and (except where 
        the unit is ``No.'' (number)) the unit in which reported shall also be 
        shown on the entry following the net quantity figure. In cases where two 
        units of quantity are shown for the commodity in TSUSA, net quantity shall 
        be reported on the import entry in each of the specified units with the 
        unit indicated in each case. The quantity in terms of the unit marked 
        with a superior ``v'' in TSUSA should be shown on the entry on the same 
        horizontal line with the value. The quantity in terms of any other units 
        specified in TSUSA should be shown below the first quantity and should 
        be enclosed in parentheses. If no unit of quantity is specified in TSUSA 
        for the reporting number under which the item is reported, net quantity 
        is not required to be reported on theimport entry, and an ``X'' shall 
        be entered in the ``net quantity'' column. Where the unit of quantity 
        specified in TSUSA is ``tons,'' long tons of 2,240 pounds shall be reported 
        unless short tons of 2,000 pounds are specified in TSUSA. Quantities shall 
        be shown in whole units unless fractions of units are required for Customs 
        purposes.
 (j) Value. (All forms.) Except on Customs Form 7512 when used as an Immediate 
        Exportation or Transportation and Exportation entry, the dollar value 
        shall be reported on the forms in accordance with the definitions set 
        forth in the Tariff Schedules of the United States Annotated (TSUSA) and 
        sections 402 and 402a of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended. Moreover, 
        the value shall be reported in accordance with the format prescribed in 
        the U.S. Customs Regulations. (On Customs Form 7512 when used as an Immediate 
        Exportation entry, only the Customs value in accordance with sections 
        402 and 402a of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, need be reported.)
 (k) TSUSA reporting number. (All forms.) Except on Customs Form 7512 when 
        used as an in-transit entry, the reporting number according to the current 
        edition of the Tariff Schedules of the United States Annotated shall be 
        shown in the column provided on the form. The reporting number assigned 
        shall reflect the correct TSUSA classification of the merchandise and 
        be consistent with the rate of duty applicable to the commodity. Where 
        correct reporting as indicated in TSUSA requires the use of more than 
        one TSUSA commodity number, all required reporting numbers will be shown 
        for an item on the Customs form. On Customs Form 7512 when used as an 
        Immediate Exportation or Transportation and Exportation entry, the reporting 
        number, in terms of the first five digits of TSUSA (TSUS), is required 
        to be shown in the column provided on the form for ``Description and Quantity 
        of Merchandise.'' This code should appear to the right of that column, 
        on the same line as the reported gross weight and value.
 [41 FR 9134, Mar. 3, 1976, as amended at 42 FR 59839, Nov. 22, 1977; 
        47 FR 29829, July 9, 1982; 65 FR 42565, July 10, 2000] Subpart G--Special Provisions for Particular Types of Import Transactions Source: 41 FR 9134, Mar. 3, 1976, unless otherwise noted. Re-designated 
        at 64 FR 40977, July 28, 1999. | 
         
          
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