10.769—Definitions.
For purposes of §§ 10.769 through 10.777:
(b) Generally Accepted Accounting Principles.
“Generally Accepted Accounting Principles” means the recognized consensus or substantial authoritative support in the territory of a Party, with respect to the recording of revenues, expenses, costs, assets, and liabilities, the disclosure of information, and the preparation of financial statements. These standards may encompass broad guidelines of general application as well as detailed standards, practices, and procedures;
(d) Goods wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of one or both of the Parties.
“Goods wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of one or both of the Parties” means:
(2)
Vegetable goods, as such goods are defined in the HTSUS, harvested in the territory of one or both of the Parties;
(5)
Goods obtained from hunting, trapping, or fishing in the territory of one or both of the parties;
(6)
Goods (fish, shellfish, and other marine life) taken from the sea by vessels registered or recorded with a Party and flying its flag;
(7)
Goods produced from goods referred to in paragraph (d)(5) on board factory ships registered or recorded with that Party and flying its flag;
(8)
Goods taken by a Party or a person of a Party from the seabed or beneath the seabed outside territorial waters, provided that a Party has rights to exploit such seabed;
(9)
Goods taken from outer space, provided they are obtained by a Party or a person of a Party and not processed in the territory of a non-Party;
(ii)
Used goods collected in the territory of one or both of the Parties, provided such goods are fit only for the recovery of raw materials;
(11)
Recovered goods derived in the territory of a Party from used goods, and utilized in the territory of that Party in the production of remanufactured goods; and
(12)
Goods produced in the territory of one or both of the Parties exclusively from goods referred to in paragraphs (d)(1) through (d)(10) of this section, or from their derivatives, at any stage of production;
(f) Indirect material.
“Indirect material” means a good used in the growth, production, manufacture, testing, or inspection of a good but not physically incorporated into the good, or a good used in the maintenance of buildings or the operation of equipment associated with the growth, production, or manufacture of a good, including:
(4)
Lubricants, greases, compounding materials, and other materials used in the growth, production, or manufacture of a good or used to operate equipment and buildings;
(8)
Any other goods that are not incorporated into the good but the use of which in the growth, production, or manufacture of the good can reasonably be demonstrated to be a part of that growth, production, or manufacture;
(g) Material.
“Material” means a good, including a part or ingredient, that is used in the growth, production, or manufacture of another good that is a new or different article of commerce that has been grown, produced, or manufactured in one or both of the Parties;
(h) Material produced in the territory of one or both of the Parties.
“Material produced in the territory of one or both of the Parties” means a good that is either wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of one or both of the Parties, or a new or different article of commerce that has been grown, produced, or manufactured in the territory of one or both of the Parties;
(i) New or different article of commerce.
A “new or different article of commerce” exists when the country of origin of a good which is produced in a Party from foreign materials is determined to be that country under the provisions of §§ 102.1 through 102.21 of this chapter;
(j) Non-originating material.
“Non-originating material” means a material that does not qualify as originating under this subpart or General Note 27, HTSUS;
(k) Packing materials and containers for shipment.
“Packing materials and containers for shipment” means the goods used to protect a good during its transportation to the United States, and does not include the packaging materials and containers in which a good is packaged for retail sale;
(l) Recovered goods.
“Recovered goods” means materials in the form of individual parts that result from:
(2)
The cleaning, inspecting, testing, or other processing of those parts as necessary for improvement to sound working condition;
(m) Remanufactured good.
“Remanufactured good” means an industrial good that is assembled in the territory of a Party and that:
(2)
Has a similar life expectancy to, and meets the similar performance standards as, a like good that is new; and
(n) Simple combining or packaging operations.
“Simple combining or packaging operations” means operations such as adding batteries to electronic devices, fitting together a small number of components by bolting, gluing, or soldering, or packing or repacking components together;