Lifecycle
- Effective
- Last change
Country / jurisdiction: Mexico · Year: 2000 · Status: In force · Level: International · Type: Voluntary
The Free Trade Agreement between Israel and Mexico entered into force in July 2000. It provides for the elimination of border tariffs for most energy products and its constituents, including :
Agglomerated and reduced iron and Alumina
Scrap metal and Ammonia
Crude steel and Aluminium
Nitrogen fertilisers
Solar PV Modules, Solar Cells, and Solar Wafers
Polysilicon and Battery packs and battery cells
Electrolysers
Heat pumps
Electric cars and ICE cars
Rules of origin delineated in the Agreement include provisions preventing goods only undergoing minimal transformations in one of the signatory countries, or incorporating non- originating materials evalued at more than 10 percent of the transaction value of the good to benefit from the tariff treatment established by the Agreement.
Official source: https://www.gov.il/BlobFolder/policy/free-trade-area-agreement-israel-mexico/he/sahar-hutz_agreements_Mexico-Israel-fta-en.pdf
Source
https://www.iea.org/policies/19162Canonical document at the regulator. Always cite this URL — not the Vantage detail page — in compliance evidence.