7 USC 1359kk: Reallocating sugar quota import shortfalls
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7 USC 1359kk: Reallocating sugar quota import shortfalls Text contains those laws in effect on January 8, 2008
From Title 7-AGRICULTURECHAPTER 35-AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT ACT OF 1938SUBCHAPTER II-LOANS, PARITY PAYMENTS, CONSUMER SAFEGUARDS, MARKETING QUOTAS, AND MARKETING CERTIFICATESPart B-Marketing Quotassubpart vii-flexible marketing allotments for sugar
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§1359kk. Reallocating sugar quota import shortfalls

(a) In general

Notwithstanding any other provision of law, on or after June 1 of each of the 2002 through 2007 calendar years, the United States Trade Representative, in consultation with the Secretary, shall determine the amount of the quota of cane sugar used by each qualified supplying country for that crop year, and may reallocate the unused quota for that crop year among qualified supplying countries.

(b) Qualified supplying country defined

In this section, the term "qualified supplying country" means one of the following foreign countries that is allowed to export cane sugar to the United States under an agreement or any other country with which the United States has an agreement relating to the importation of cane sugar:

Argentina

Australia

Barbados

Belize

Bolivia

Brazil

Colombia

Republic of the Congo

Costa Rica

Dominican Republic

Ecuador

El Salvador

Fiji

Gabon

Guatemala

Guyana

Haiti

Honduras

India

Cote D'Ivoire, formerly known as the Ivory Coast

Jamaica

Madagascar

Malawi

Mauritius

Mexico

Mozambique

Nicaragua

Panama

Papua New Guinea

Paraguay

Peru

Philippines

St. Kitts and Nevis

South Africa

Swaziland

Taiwan

Thailand

Trinidad-Tobago

Uruguay

Zimbabwe.

(Feb. 16, 1938, ch. 30, title III, §359k, as added Pub. L. 107–171, title I, §1403, May 13, 2002, 116 Stat. 204 .)