Notice of Antidumping Duty Order: Magnesium Metal From the People's Republic of China, 19928-19930 [E5-1790]
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19928
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 72 / Friday, April 15, 2005 / Notices
petitioners’ request and from one
additional exporter.
On January 31, 2005 the Department
initiated a review on all 25 companies
for which an administrative review was
requested. See Initiation of
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Administrative Reviews and Request for
Revocation in Part, 70 FR 4818 (January
31, 2005) and the Corrections Notice, 70
FR 7143 (February 10, 2005).
On February 22, 2005, petitioners
submitted timely withdrawal of requests
for review of the following companies:
Centauro S.A., Comexter Robinson S.A.,
Compa Inversora Platense S.A., ConAgra
Argentina S.A., Coope–Riel Ltda.,
Cooperativa DeAgua Potable y Otros,
Establecimiento Don Angel S.r.L, Food
Way, S.A., Francisco Facundo
Rodriguez, Jay Bees, Jose Luis Garcia,
Navicon S.A., Parodi Agropecuaria S.A.,
Times S.A., and Mielar S.A. See Letter
from petitioners to the Department,
Honey From Argentina, (February 22,
2005), on file in the Central Records
Unit (CRU), room B–099 of the main
Department building. On February 24,
2005, both petitioners and Nexco (an
exporter) submitted letters withdrawing
their individual requests for review of
Nexco. See letters from petitioners and
from Nexco to the Department, Honey
From Argentina, (February 24, 2005), on
file in the CRU. On February 24, 2005,
petitioner rescinded its withdrawal with
respect to Mielar. On March 9, 2005, El
Mana S.A. (an exporter) submitted a
letter withdrawing its request for the
administrative review of El Mana S.A.
See letter El Mana S.A. to the
Department, Honey From Argentina,
(March 9, 2005), on file in the CRU. On
March 31, 2005, petitioners submitted
timely withdrawal of requests for review
of the following companies: Compania
Apicola Argentina (CAA), Mielar and
TransHoney S.A. (TransHoney). See
Letter from petitioners to the
Department, Honey From Argentina,
(March 31, 2005), on file in the Central
Records Unit (CRU), room B–099 of the
main Department building
Rescission in Part, of Administrative
Review:
The applicable regulation, 19 CFR
351.213(d)(1), states that if a party that
requested an administrative review
withdraws the request within 90 days of
the publication of the notice of
initiation of the requested review, the
Secretary will rescind the review in
whole or in part. The petitioners made
a timely withdrawal of their requests for
an administrative review within the 90–
day deadline, in accordance with 19
CFR 351.213(d)(1) for the following
companies: Centauro S.A., Comexter
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Robinson S.A., Compa Inversora
Platense S.A., Compania Apicola
Argentina S.A., ConAgra Argentina S.A.,
Coope–Riel Ltda., Cooperativa DeAgua
Potable y Otros, Establecimiento Don
Angel S.r.L, Food Way, S.A., Francisco
Facundo Rodriguez, Jay Bees, Jose Luis
Garcia, Mielar S.A., Navicon S.A.,
Parodi Agropecuaria S.A., Times S.A,
and TransHoney S.A. Because
petitioners were the only party to
request the administrative review of
these companies, we have accepted the
withdrawal requests and we are
rescinding this administrative review of
the antidumping duty order on honey
from Argentina covering the period
December 1, 2003, through November
30, 2004 for the aforementioned
companies.
With respect to Nexco, because both
petitioners and the respondent
requested the administrative review of
Nexco, and because both parties
submitted withdrawal requests, we are
rescinding this administrative review
with respect to Nexco. With respect to
El Mana S.A., because the respondent
requested the administrative review of
El Mana S.A., and because El Mana S.A.
submitted a timely withdrawal request,
we are also rescinding this
administrative review with respect to El
Mana S.A.
The Department will issue
appropriate assessment instructions
directly to the CBP within 15 days of the
publication of this notice. The
Department will direct CBP to assess
antidumping duties for these companies
at the cash deposit rate in effect on the
date of entry for entries during the
period December 1, 2003 to November
30, 2004.
Notification to Parties
This notice serves as a reminder to
importers of their responsibility under
section 351.402(f) of the Department’s
regulations to file a certificate regarding
the reimbursement of antidumping
duties prior to liquidation of the
relevant entries during this period of
time. Failure to comply with this
requirement could result in the
Secretary’s presumption that
reimbursement of antidumping duties
occurred and subsequent assessment of
double antidumping duties.
This notice also serves as a reminder
to parties subject to administrative
protective order (APO) of their
responsibility concerning the
disposition of proprietary information
disclosed under APO in accordance
with section 351.305(a)(3) of the
Department’s regulations. Timely
written notification of the return or
destruction of APO materials or
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conversion to judicial protective order is
hereby requested. Failure to comply
with the regulations and terms of an
APO is a sanctionable violation.
This notice is issued and published in
accordance with section 351.213(d)(4) of
the Department’s regulations and
sections 751(a)(2)(C) and 777(i)(1) of the
Tariff Act of 1930, as amended.
Dated: April 8, 2005.
Barbara E. Tillman,
Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration.
[FR Doc. E5–1789 Filed 4–14–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[A–570–896]
Notice of Antidumping Duty Order:
Magnesium Metal From the People’s
Republic of China
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: Based on affirmative final
determinations by the Department of
Commerce (‘‘the Department’’) and the
International Trade Commission
(‘‘ITC’’), the Department is issuing an
antidumping duty order on magnesium
metal from the People’s Republic of
China (‘‘PRC’’). On April 11, 2005, the
ITC notified the Department of its
affirmative determination of material
injury to a U.S. industry (Magnesium
from China and Russia, Investigations
Nos. 731–TA–1071 and 1072 (Final),
Publication 3763, April 2005).
EFFECTIVE DATE: April 15, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lilit
Astvatsatrian, Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th
Street and Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20230; telephone: (202)
482–6412.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
AGENCY:
Background
In accordance with section 735(d) and
777(i)(1) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
amended (‘‘the Act’’), on February 24,
2005, the Department published the
Notice of Final Determination of Sales
at Less Than Fair Value and Affirmative
Critical Circumstances: Magnesium
Metal From The People’s Republic of
China, 70 FR 9037 (February 24, 2005)
(‘‘Final Determination’’). An amended
final determination was published on
March 29, 2005 to correct ministerial
errors that occurred in the calculation of
the rates as published in the Final
E:\FR\FM\15APN1.SGM
15APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 72 / Friday, April 15, 2005 / Notices
Determination. See Notice of Amended
Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Magnesium Metal
from the People’s Republic of China, 70
FR 15838 (March 29, 2005).
Scope of Order
The merchandise covered by the order
is magnesium metal, which includes
primary and secondary alloy
magnesium metal, regardless of
chemistry, raw material source, form,
shape, or size. Magnesium is a metal or
alloy containing by weight primarily the
element magnesium. Primary
magnesium is produced by
decomposing raw materials into
magnesium metal. Secondary
magnesium is produced by recycling
magnesium-based scrap into magnesium
metal. The magnesium covered by this
investigation includes blends of primary
and secondary magnesium.
The subject merchandise includes the
following alloy magnesium metal
products made from primary and/or
secondary magnesium including,
without limitation, magnesium cast into
ingots, slabs, rounds, billets, and other
shapes, magnesium ground, chipped,
crushed, or machined into raspings,
granules, turnings, chips, powder,
briquettes, and other shapes: Products
that contain 50 percent or greater, but
less than 99.8 percent, magnesium, by
weight, and that have been entered into
the United States as conforming to an
‘‘ASTM Specification for Magnesium
Alloy’’ 1 and thus are outside the scope
of the existing antidumping orders on
magnesium from the PRC (generally
referred to as ‘‘alloy’’ magnesium).
The scope of the order excludes the
following merchandise: (1) All forms of
pure magnesium, including chemical
combinations of magnesium and other
material(s) in which the pure
magnesium content is 50 percent or
greater, but less than 99.8 percent, by
weight, that do not conform to an
‘‘ASTM Specification for Magnesium
Alloy;’’ 2 (2) magnesium that is in liquid
or molten form; and (3) mixtures
containing 90 percent or less
magnesium in granular or powder form,
by weight, and one or more of certain
1 The
meaning of this term is the same as that
used by the American Society for Testing and
Materials in its Annual Book of ASTM Standards:
Volume 01.02 Aluminum and Magnesium Alloys.
2 This material is already covered by existing
antidumping orders. See Antidumping Duty Orders:
Pure Magnesium from the People’s Republic of
China, the Russian Federation and Ukraine;
Amended Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Antidumping Duty Investigation
of Pure Magnesium from the Russian Federation, 60
FR 25691 (May 12, 1995), and Antidumping Duty
Order: Pure Magnesium in Granular Form from the
People’s Republic of China, 66 FR 57936 (November
19, 2001).
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14:34 Apr 14, 2005
Jkt 205001
non-magnesium granular materials to
make magnesium-based reagent
mixtures, including lime, calcium
metal, calcium silicon, calcium carbide,
calcium carbonate, carbon, slag
coagulants, fluorspar, nephaline syenite,
feldspar, alumina (Al203), calcium
aluminate, soda ash, hydrocarbons,
graphite, coke, silicon, rare earth
metals/mischmetal, cryolite, silica/fly
ash, magnesium oxide, periclase,
ferroalloys, dolomite lime, and
colemanite.3
The merchandise subject to the order
is currently classifiable under items
8104.19.00 and 8104.30.00 of the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the
United States (‘‘HTSUS’’). Although the
HTSUS items are provided for
convenience and customs purposes, the
written description of the subject
merchandise is dispositive.
Antidumping Duty Order
On April 11, 2005, in accordance with
section 735(d) of the Act, the ITC
notified the Department of its final
determination pursuant to section
735(b)(1)(A)(i) of the Act that an
industry in the United States is
materially injured by reason of lessthan-fair-value imports of subject
merchandise from the PRC. In addition,
the ITC notified the Department of its
final determination that critical
circumstances do not exist with respect
to imports of subject merchandise from
the PRC that are subject to the
Department’s affirmative critical
circumstances finding. Therefore, in
accordance with section 736(a)(1) of the
Act, the Department will direct U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (‘‘CBP’’)
to assess, upon further instruction by
the Department, antidumping duties
equal to the amount by which the
normal value of the merchandise
exceeds the export price (or constructed
export price) of the merchandise for all
relevant entries of magnesium metal
from the PRC. These antidumping
duties will be assessed on all
unliquidated entries of magnesium
metal from the PRC entered, or
withdrawn from the warehouse, for
3 This third exclusion for magnesium-based
reagent mixtures is based on the exclusion for
reagent mixtures in the 2000–2001 investigations of
magnesium from the PRC, Israel, and Russia. See
Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair
Value: Pure Magnesium in Granular Form From the
People’s Republic of China, 66 FR 49345
(September 27, 2001); Final Determination of Sales
at Less Than Fair Value: Pure Magnesium From
Israel, 66 FR 49349 (September 27, 2001); Final
Determination of Sales at Not Less Than Fair Value:
Pure Magnesium From the Russian Federation, 66
FR 49347 (September 27, 2001). These mixtures are
not magnesium alloys because they are not
chemically combined in liquid form and cast into
the same ingot.
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19929
consumption on or after October 4,
2004, the date on which the Department
published its Notice of Preliminary
Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value and Postponement of the
Final Determination: Magnesium Metal
From The People’s Republic of China,
69 FR 59187 (October 4, 2004)
(‘‘Preliminary Determination’’).
With regard to the ITC negative
critical circumstances determination,
we will instruct Customs to lift
suspension and to release any bond or
other security, and refund any cash
deposit made, to secure the payment of
antidumping duties with respect to
entries of the merchandise entered, or
withdrawn from warehouse, for
consumption on or after July 6, 2004,
but before October 4, 2004. July 4, 2004
is 90 days prior to October 4, 2004, the
date of publication of the Department’s
preliminary determination in the
Federal Register.
Section 733(d) of the Act states that
instructions issued pursuant to an
affirmative preliminary determination
may not remain in effect for more than
four months except where exporters
representing a significant proportion of
exports of the subject merchandise
request the Department to extend that
four-month period to no more than six
months. At the request of exporters that
account for a significant proportion of
the PRC exports of the subject
merchandise, we extended the fourmonth period to no more than six
months. See Preliminary Determination.
In this investigation, the six-month
period beginning on the date of the
publication of the preliminary
determination ends on April 1, 2005.
Furthermore, section 737 of the Act
states that definitive duties are to begin
on the date of publication of the ITC’s
final injury determination. Therefore, in
accordance with section 733(d) of the
Act and our practice, we will instruct
CBP to terminate the suspension of
liquidation and to liquidate, without
regard to antidumping duties,
unliquidated entries of magnesium
metal from the PRC entered, or
withdrawn from warehouse, for
consumption on or after April 2, 2005,
and before the date of publication of the
ITC’s final injury determination in the
Federal Register. Suspension of
liquidation will resume on the date of
publication of the ITC’s final injury
determination in the Federal Register.
Effective on the date of publication of
the ITC’s final affirmative injury
determination, CBP officers will require,
at the same time as importers would
normally deposit estimated duties on
this merchandise, a cash deposit equal
to the estimated weighted-average
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15APN1
19930
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 72 / Friday, April 15, 2005 / Notices
Commerce (the Department) and the
U.S. International Trade Commission
(ITC), the Department is issuing an
antidumping duty order on magnesium
metal from the Russian Federation
(Russia). On April 11, 2005, the ITC
notified the Department of its
MAGNESIUM METAL FROM THE PRC
affirmative determination of injury to a
WeightedU.S. industry (Magnesium from China
average
and Russia, Investigations Nos. 731–
Manufacturer/exporter
margin
TA–1071 and 1072 (Final), Publication
percent
3763, April 2005).
Tianjin .......................................
49.66 EFFECTIVE DATE: April 15, 2005.
Guangling .................................
49.66 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
PRC-Wide Rate* .......................
141.49
Mark Hoadley, Kimberley Hunt, or
* This is not a separate rate; the RSM 4 Joshua Reitze at (202) 482–3148, (202)
companies and Jiangsu Metals are subject to 482–1272, and (202) 482–0666,
the PRC-wide rate.
respectively; AD/CVD Operations,
This notice constitutes the
Office 6, Import Administration,
antidumping duty order with respect to
International Trade Administration,
magnesium metal from the PRC
U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th
pursuant to section 736(a) of the Act.
Street and Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Interested parties may contact the
Washington, DC 20230.
Department’s Central Records Unit,
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Room B–099 of the main Commerce
building, for copies of an updated list of Background
antidumping duty orders currently in
The final determination in this
effect.
investigation was published on
This order is published in accordance February 24, 2005. See Magnesium
with section 736(a) of the Act and 19
Metal From the Russian Federation:
CFR 351.211.
Notice of Final Determination of Sales
at Less Than Fair Value, 70 FR 9041
Dated: April 12, 2005.
(February 24, 2005) (Final
Joseph A. Spetrini,
Determination). An amended final
Acting Assistant Secretary for Import
determination was published on March
Administration.
29, 2005, to correct ministerial errors
[FR Doc. E5–1790 Filed 4–14–05; 8:45 am]
which occurred in the calculation of the
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
rates as published in the Final
Determination. See Magnesium Metal
From the Russian Federation: Notice of
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Amended Final Determination of Sales
at Less Than Fair Value, 70 FR 15837
International Trade Administration
(March 29, 2005) (Amended Final
[A–821–819]
Determination). In the Amended Final
Determination, the Department
Notice of Antidumping Duty Order:
amended the rate of one respondent as
Magnesium Metal From the Russian
well as the all others’ rate.
Federation
Scope of the Order
AGENCY: Import Administration,
antidumping duty margins as listed
below. The ‘‘PRC-wide’’ rate applies to
all exporters of subject merchandise not
specifically listed. The weightedaverage dumping margins are as follows:
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: Based on affirmative final
determinations by the Department of
4 In the preliminary determination, we
determined that the following companies were
collapsed members of the RSM group of companies
for the purposes of this investigation: Nanjing
Yunhai Special Metals Co., Ltd. (‘‘Yunhai Special’’),
Nanjing Welbow Metals Co., Ltd. (‘‘Welbow’’),
Nanjing Yunhai Magnesium Co., Ltd. (‘‘Yunhai
Magnesium’’), Shanxi Wenxi Yunhai Metals Co.,
Ltd. (‘‘Wenxi Yunhai’’). See Memorandum to Laurie
Parkhill, Director, Office 8, NME/China Group, from
Laurel LaCivita, Senior Case Analyst, through
Robert Bolling, Program Manager: Antidumping
Duty Investigation of Magnesium Metal from the
People’s Republic of China: Affiliation and
Collapsing of Members of the RSM Group and its
Affiliated U.S. Reseller, Toyota Tsusho America,
Inc., dated September 24, 2004.
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14:34 Apr 14, 2005
Jkt 205001
The merchandise covered by this
order is magnesium metal (also referred
to as magnesium), which includes
primary and secondary pure and alloy
magnesium metal, regardless of
chemistry, raw material source, form,
shape, or size. Magnesium is a metal or
alloy containing by weight primarily the
element magnesium. Primary
magnesium is produced by
decomposing raw materials into
magnesium metal. Secondary
magnesium is produced by recycling
magnesium-based scrap into magnesium
metal. The magnesium covered by this
order includes blends of primary and
secondary magnesium.
The subject merchandise includes the
following pure and alloy magnesium
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metal products made from primary and/
or secondary magnesium, including,
without limitation, magnesium cast into
ingots, slabs, rounds, billets, and other
shapes, and magnesium ground,
chipped, crushed, or machined into
raspings, granules, turnings, chips,
powder, briquettes, and other shapes:
(1) Products that contain at least 99.95
percent magnesium, by weight
(generally referred to as ‘‘ultra-pure’’
magnesium); (2) products that contain
less than 99.95 percent but not less than
99.8 percent magnesium, by weight
(generally referred to as ‘‘pure’’
magnesium); and (3) chemical
combinations of magnesium and other
material(s) in which the magnesium
content is 50 percent or greater, but less
than 99.8 percent, by weight, whether or
not conforming to an ‘‘ASTM
Specification for Magnesium Alloy.’’
The scope of this order excludes: (1)
Magnesium that is in liquid or molten
form; and (2) mixtures containing 90
percent or less magnesium in granular
or powder form by weight and one or
more of certain non-magnesium
granular materials to make magnesiumbased reagent mixtures, including lime,
calcium metal, calcium silicon, calcium
carbide, calcium carbonate, carbon, slag
coagulants, fluorspar, nephaline syenite,
feldspar, alumina (Al203), calcium
aluminate, soda ash, hydrocarbons,
graphite, coke, silicon, rare earth
metals/mischmetal, cryolite, silica/fly
ash, magnesium oxide, periclase,
ferroalloys, dolomite lime, and
colemanite.1
The merchandise subject to this order
is currently classifiable under items
8104.11.00, 8104.19.00, 8104.30.00, and
8104.90.00 of the Harmonized Tariff
Schedule of the United States (HTSUS).
Although the HTSUS items are provided
for convenience and customs purposes,
the written description of the
merchandise under investigation is
dispositive.
Antidumping Duty Order
On April 11, 2005, in accordance with
section 735(d) of the Tariff Act of 1930,
as amended (the Act), the ITC notified
1 This second exclusion for magnesium-based
reagent mixtures is based on the exclusion for
reagent mixtures in the 2000–2001 investigations of
magnesium from China, Israel, and Russia. See
Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair
Value: Pure Magnesium in Granular Form From the
People’s Republic of China, 66 FR 49345
(September 27, 2001); Final Determination of Sales
at Less Than Fair Value: Pure Magnesium From
Israel, 66 FR 49349 (September 27, 2001); Final
Determination of Sales at Not Less Than Fair Value:
Pure Magnesium From the Russian Federation, 66
FR 49347 (September 27, 2001). These mixtures are
not magnesium alloys, because they are not
chemically combined in liquid form and cast into
the same ingot.
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15APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 72 (Friday, April 15, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 19928-19930]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E5-1790]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[A-570-896]
Notice of Antidumping Duty Order: Magnesium Metal From the
People's Republic of China
AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: Based on affirmative final determinations by the Department of
Commerce (``the Department'') and the International Trade Commission
(``ITC''), the Department is issuing an antidumping duty order on
magnesium metal from the People's Republic of China (``PRC''). On April
11, 2005, the ITC notified the Department of its affirmative
determination of material injury to a U.S. industry (Magnesium from
China and Russia, Investigations Nos. 731-TA-1071 and 1072 (Final),
Publication 3763, April 2005).
EFFECTIVE DATE: April 15, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lilit Astvatsatrian, Import
Administration, International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC
20230; telephone: (202) 482-6412.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
In accordance with section 735(d) and 777(i)(1) of the Tariff Act
of 1930, as amended (``the Act''), on February 24, 2005, the Department
published the Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair
Value and Affirmative Critical Circumstances: Magnesium Metal From The
People's Republic of China, 70 FR 9037 (February 24, 2005) (``Final
Determination''). An amended final determination was published on March
29, 2005 to correct ministerial errors that occurred in the calculation
of the rates as published in the Final
[[Page 19929]]
Determination. See Notice of Amended Final Determination of Sales at
Less Than Fair Value: Magnesium Metal from the People's Republic of
China, 70 FR 15838 (March 29, 2005).
Scope of Order
The merchandise covered by the order is magnesium metal, which
includes primary and secondary alloy magnesium metal, regardless of
chemistry, raw material source, form, shape, or size. Magnesium is a
metal or alloy containing by weight primarily the element magnesium.
Primary magnesium is produced by decomposing raw materials into
magnesium metal. Secondary magnesium is produced by recycling
magnesium-based scrap into magnesium metal. The magnesium covered by
this investigation includes blends of primary and secondary magnesium.
The subject merchandise includes the following alloy magnesium
metal products made from primary and/or secondary magnesium including,
without limitation, magnesium cast into ingots, slabs, rounds, billets,
and other shapes, magnesium ground, chipped, crushed, or machined into
raspings, granules, turnings, chips, powder, briquettes, and other
shapes: Products that contain 50 percent or greater, but less than 99.8
percent, magnesium, by weight, and that have been entered into the
United States as conforming to an ``ASTM Specification for Magnesium
Alloy'' \1\ and thus are outside the scope of the existing antidumping
orders on magnesium from the PRC (generally referred to as ``alloy''
magnesium).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The meaning of this term is the same as that used by the
American Society for Testing and Materials in its Annual Book of
ASTM Standards: Volume 01.02 Aluminum and Magnesium Alloys.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The scope of the order excludes the following merchandise: (1) All
forms of pure magnesium, including chemical combinations of magnesium
and other material(s) in which the pure magnesium content is 50 percent
or greater, but less than 99.8 percent, by weight, that do not conform
to an ``ASTM Specification for Magnesium Alloy;'' \2\ (2) magnesium
that is in liquid or molten form; and (3) mixtures containing 90
percent or less magnesium in granular or powder form, by weight, and
one or more of certain non-magnesium granular materials to make
magnesium-based reagent mixtures, including lime, calcium metal,
calcium silicon, calcium carbide, calcium carbonate, carbon, slag
coagulants, fluorspar, nephaline syenite, feldspar, alumina (Al203),
calcium aluminate, soda ash, hydrocarbons, graphite, coke, silicon,
rare earth metals/mischmetal, cryolite, silica/fly ash, magnesium
oxide, periclase, ferroalloys, dolomite lime, and colemanite.\3\
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\2\ This material is already covered by existing antidumping
orders. See Antidumping Duty Orders: Pure Magnesium from the
People's Republic of China, the Russian Federation and Ukraine;
Amended Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value:
Antidumping Duty Investigation of Pure Magnesium from the Russian
Federation, 60 FR 25691 (May 12, 1995), and Antidumping Duty Order:
Pure Magnesium in Granular Form from the People's Republic of China,
66 FR 57936 (November 19, 2001).
\3\ This third exclusion for magnesium-based reagent mixtures is
based on the exclusion for reagent mixtures in the 2000-2001
investigations of magnesium from the PRC, Israel, and Russia. See
Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Pure Magnesium
in Granular Form From the People's Republic of China, 66 FR 49345
(September 27, 2001); Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair
Value: Pure Magnesium From Israel, 66 FR 49349 (September 27, 2001);
Final Determination of Sales at Not Less Than Fair Value: Pure
Magnesium From the Russian Federation, 66 FR 49347 (September 27,
2001). These mixtures are not magnesium alloys because they are not
chemically combined in liquid form and cast into the same ingot.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The merchandise subject to the order is currently classifiable
under items 8104.19.00 and 8104.30.00 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule
of the United States (``HTSUS''). Although the HTSUS items are provided
for convenience and customs purposes, the written description of the
subject merchandise is dispositive.
Antidumping Duty Order
On April 11, 2005, in accordance with section 735(d) of the Act,
the ITC notified the Department of its final determination pursuant to
section 735(b)(1)(A)(i) of the Act that an industry in the United
States is materially injured by reason of less-than-fair-value imports
of subject merchandise from the PRC. In addition, the ITC notified the
Department of its final determination that critical circumstances do
not exist with respect to imports of subject merchandise from the PRC
that are subject to the Department's affirmative critical circumstances
finding. Therefore, in accordance with section 736(a)(1) of the Act,
the Department will direct U.S. Customs and Border Protection (``CBP'')
to assess, upon further instruction by the Department, antidumping
duties equal to the amount by which the normal value of the merchandise
exceeds the export price (or constructed export price) of the
merchandise for all relevant entries of magnesium metal from the PRC.
These antidumping duties will be assessed on all unliquidated entries
of magnesium metal from the PRC entered, or withdrawn from the
warehouse, for consumption on or after October 4, 2004, the date on
which the Department published its Notice of Preliminary Determination
of Sales at Less Than Fair Value and Postponement of the Final
Determination: Magnesium Metal From The People's Republic of China, 69
FR 59187 (October 4, 2004) (``Preliminary Determination'').
With regard to the ITC negative critical circumstances
determination, we will instruct Customs to lift suspension and to
release any bond or other security, and refund any cash deposit made,
to secure the payment of antidumping duties with respect to entries of
the merchandise entered, or withdrawn from warehouse, for consumption
on or after July 6, 2004, but before October 4, 2004. July 4, 2004 is
90 days prior to October 4, 2004, the date of publication of the
Department's preliminary determination in the Federal Register.
Section 733(d) of the Act states that instructions issued pursuant
to an affirmative preliminary determination may not remain in effect
for more than four months except where exporters representing a
significant proportion of exports of the subject merchandise request
the Department to extend that four-month period to no more than six
months. At the request of exporters that account for a significant
proportion of the PRC exports of the subject merchandise, we extended
the four-month period to no more than six months. See Preliminary
Determination. In this investigation, the six-month period beginning on
the date of the publication of the preliminary determination ends on
April 1, 2005. Furthermore, section 737 of the Act states that
definitive duties are to begin on the date of publication of the ITC's
final injury determination. Therefore, in accordance with section
733(d) of the Act and our practice, we will instruct CBP to terminate
the suspension of liquidation and to liquidate, without regard to
antidumping duties, unliquidated entries of magnesium metal from the
PRC entered, or withdrawn from warehouse, for consumption on or after
April 2, 2005, and before the date of publication of the ITC's final
injury determination in the Federal Register. Suspension of liquidation
will resume on the date of publication of the ITC's final injury
determination in the Federal Register.
Effective on the date of publication of the ITC's final affirmative
injury determination, CBP officers will require, at the same time as
importers would normally deposit estimated duties on this merchandise,
a cash deposit equal to the estimated weighted-average
[[Page 19930]]
antidumping duty margins as listed below. The ``PRC-wide'' rate applies
to all exporters of subject merchandise not specifically listed. The
weighted-average dumping margins are as follows:
Magnesium Metal From the PRC
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Weighted-
average
Manufacturer/exporter margin
percent
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tianjin.................................................... 49.66
Guangling.................................................. 49.66
PRC-Wide Rate*............................................. 141.49
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* This is not a separate rate; the RSM \4\ companies and Jiangsu Metals
are subject to the PRC-wide rate.
This notice constitutes the antidumping duty order with respect to
magnesium metal from the PRC pursuant to section 736(a) of the Act.
Interested parties may contact the Department's Central Records Unit,
Room B-099 of the main Commerce building, for copies of an updated list
of antidumping duty orders currently in effect.
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\4\ In the preliminary determination, we determined that the
following companies were collapsed members of the RSM group of
companies for the purposes of this investigation: Nanjing Yunhai
Special Metals Co., Ltd. (``Yunhai Special''), Nanjing Welbow Metals
Co., Ltd. (``Welbow''), Nanjing Yunhai Magnesium Co., Ltd. (``Yunhai
Magnesium''), Shanxi Wenxi Yunhai Metals Co., Ltd. (``Wenxi
Yunhai''). See Memorandum to Laurie Parkhill, Director, Office 8,
NME/China Group, from Laurel LaCivita, Senior Case Analyst, through
Robert Bolling, Program Manager: Antidumping Duty Investigation of
Magnesium Metal from the People's Republic of China: Affiliation and
Collapsing of Members of the RSM Group and its Affiliated U.S.
Reseller, Toyota Tsusho America, Inc., dated September 24, 2004.
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This order is published in accordance with section 736(a) of the
Act and 19 CFR 351.211.
Dated: April 12, 2005.
Joseph A. Spetrini,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
[FR Doc. E5-1790 Filed 4-14-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P