Notice of Preliminary Results of Countervailing Duty Administrative Review: Certain Softwood Lumber Products from Canada, 33088-33116 [E5-2884]
Download as PDF
33088
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
¨
Yucel maintains a file that documents
the order confirmations for each of its
sales to the United States. At
verification, the Department attempted
to corroborate this claim by verifying a
sample of the order confirmations,
which would enable a comparison to
the reported shipment sale dates.
¨
However, Yucel was unable to produce
all the e–mail confirmations requested
¨
by the Department and Yucel was
unable to substantiate its claim that
order confirmation date (‘‘contract
date’’) was representative of the date on
which the material terms of sale were
finalized. Therefore, for purposes of the
preliminary results, we have used the
¨
invoice date reported by Yucel as the
¨
basis for Yucel’s U.S. date of sale.
Pursuant to section 351.212(b) of the
Department’s regulations, the
Department calculated an assessment
rate for each importer of subject
merchandise. Upon completion of this
review, the Department will instruct
CBP to assess antidumping duties on all
entries of subject merchandise by those
importers. We have calculated each
importer’s duty assessment rate based
on the ratio of the total amount of
antidumping duties calculated for the
examined sales to the total calculated
entered value of examined sales. Where
the assessment rate is above de minimis,
the importer–specific rate will be
assessed uniformly on all entries made
during the POR.
Preliminary Results of Review
Cash Deposit Requirements
As a result of this review, we
preliminarily determine that the
following margins exist for the period
May 1, 2003, through April 30, 2004:
Manufacturer/Exporter
Margin (percent)
¨
Yucel .............................
Borusan ........................
12.11
0.86
We will disclose the calculations used
in our analysis to parties to this
proceeding within five days of the
publication date of this notice. See
section 351.224(b) of the Department’s
regulations. Interested parties are
invited to comment on the preliminary
results. Interested parties may submit
case briefs within 30 days of the date of
publication of this notice. Rebuttal
briefs, limited to issues raised in the
case briefs, may be filed no later than 37
days after the date of publication of this
notice. Parties who submit arguments
are requested to submit with each
argument: (1) a statement of the issue,
(2) a brief summary of the argument,
and (3) a table of authorities. Further,
parties submitting written comments
should provide the Department with an
additional copy of the public version of
any such comments on a diskette. Any
interested party may request a hearing
within 30 days of publication of this
notice. See section 351.310(c) of the
Department’s regulations. If requested, a
hearing will be held 44 days after the
publication of this notice, or the first
workday thereafter. The Department
will publish a notice of the final results
of this administrative review, which
will include the results of its analysis of
issues raised in any written comments
or hearing, within 120 days from
publication of this notice.
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
Assessment
The following cash deposit rates will
be effective upon publication of the
final results of this administrative
review for all shipments of welded pipe
and tube from Turkey entered, or
withdrawn from warehouse, for
consumption on or after the publication
date, as provided by section 751(a)(1) of
the Act: (1) the cash deposit rates for the
companies listed above will be the rates
established in the final results of this
review, except if the rates are less than
0.5 percent and, therefore, de minimis,
the cash deposit will be zero; (2) for
previously reviewed or investigated
companies not listed above, the cash
deposit rate will continue to be the
company–specific rate published for the
most recent period; (3) if the exporter is
not a firm covered in this review, a prior
review, or the less–than-fair–value
(‘‘LTFV’’) investigation, but the
manufacturer is, the cash deposit rate
will be the rate established for the most
recent period for the manufacturer of
the merchandise; and (4) if neither the
exporter nor the manufacturer is a firm
covered in this or any previous review
or the LTFV investigation conducted by
the Department, the cash deposit rate
will be 14.74 percent, the ‘‘All Others’’
rate established in the LTFV
investigation. These cash deposit
requirements, when imposed, shall
remain in effect until publication of the
final results of the next administrative
review.
This notice serves as a preliminary
reminder to importers of their
responsibility under section
351.402(f)(2) of the Department’s
regulations to file a certificate regarding
the reimbursement of antidumping
duties prior to liquidation of the
relevant entries during this review
period. Failure to comply with this
requirement could result in the
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Secretary’s presumption that
reimbursement of antidumping duties
occurred and the subsequent assessment
of double antidumping duties.
This determination is issued and
published in accordance with sections
751(a)(1) and 777(I)(1) of the Act.
Dated: May 27, 2005.
Holly A. Kuga,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration.
[FR Doc. E5–2887 Filed 6–6–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
(C–122–839)
Notice of Preliminary Results of
Countervailing Duty Administrative
Review: Certain Softwood Lumber
Products from Canada
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce
(the Department) is conducting an
administrative review of the
countervailing duty order on certain
softwood lumber products from Canada
for the period April 1, 2003, through
March 31, 2004. If the final results
remain the same as these preliminary
results of administrative review, we will
instruct U.S. Customs and Border
Protection (CBP) to assess
countervailing duties as detailed in the
‘‘Preliminary Results of Review’’ section
of this notice. Interested parties are
invited to comment on these
preliminary results. (See Public
Comment section of this notice.)
EFFECTIVE DATE: June 7, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stephanie Moore at (202) 482–3692, or
Robert Copyak at (202) 482–2209, AD/
CVD Operations, Office 3, Import
Administration, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, Room 4012, 14th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington,
DC 20230.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
AGENCY:
Background
On May 22, 2002, the Department
published in the Federal Register (67
FR 36070) the amended final affirmative
countervailing duty (CVD)
determination and CVD order on certain
softwood lumber products from Canada
(67 FR 37775, May 30, 2002). On May
3, 2004, the Department published a
notice of opportunity to request an
administrative review of this CVD order.
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
See Antidumping or Countervailing
Duty Order, Finding, or Suspended
Investigation; Opportunity to Request
Administrative Review, 69 FR 24117
(May 3, 2004). The Department received
requests that it conduct an aggregate
review from, among others, the
Coalition for Fair Lumber Imports
Executive Committee (petitioners) and
the Government of Canada (GOC), as
well as requests for review covering an
estimated 263 individual companies.1
On June 25, 2004, we initiated the
review covering the period April 1,
2003, through March 31, 2004. See 69
FR 39409.
On July 30, 2004, we determined to
conduct this administrative review on
an aggregate basis consistent with
section 777A(e)(2)(B) of the Tariff Act of
1930, as amended (the Act). See the
memorandum to James J. Jochum,
Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration, from Jeffrey May,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration, entitled, ‘‘Methodology
for Conducting the Review,’’ dated July
30, 2004, which is a public document
on file in the Central Records Unit
(CRU) in room B–099 of the main
Commerce building. The Department
further determined that it was not
practicable to conduct any form of
company–specific review. Id.
On September 8, 2004, we issued our
initial questionnaire to the GOC as well
as to the Provincial Governments of
Alberta (GOA), British Columbia
(GOBC), Manitoba (GOM), New
Brunswick (GONB), Newfoundland
(GON), Nova Scotia (GONS), Ontario
(GOO), Prince Edward Island (GOPEI),
Quebec (GOQ), and Saskatchewan
(GOS).
On September 30, 2004, we extended
the period for completion of these
preliminary results until May 31, 2005,
pursuant to section 751(a)(3)(A) of the
Act. See Certain Softwood Lumber
Products From Canada: Extension of
Time Limit for Preliminary Results of
Countervailing Duty Administrative
Review, 69 FR 58394 (September 30,
2004).
On November 22, 2004, the GOC,
GOA, GOBC, GOM, GONB, GON,
GONS, GOO, GOPEI, GOQ, and GOS
submitted their initial questionnaire
responses.
From February through May 2005, we
issued a series of supplemental
questionnaires to the GOC, GOBC, GOA,
GOS, GOM, GOO, GOQ, GONS, and
GONB. The Federal and Provincial
Governments of Canada responded to all
1 Of these 263 company-specific requests, 116
were for zero/de minimis rate reviews under 19 CFR
351.213(k)(1).
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
supplemental questionnaires in a timely
manner.
Pursuant to 19 CFR 351.301, the
deadline for interested parties to submit
factual information is 140 days after the
last day of the anniversary month.
However, both petitioners’ and the
Canadian parties requested that the
Department extend this due date. After
a series of extensions, we established
that the deadline for interested parties
to submit factual information would be
March 2, 2005. Accordingly, the due
date for submitting rebuttal and/or
clarifying information was extended to
March 15, 2005. Both petitioners and
the Canadian parties submitted factual
information by the March 2 and March
15 deadlines.
Period of Review
The period of review (POR) for which
we are measuring subsidies is April 1,
2003, through March 31, 2004.
Scope of the Review
The products covered by this order
are softwood lumber, flooring and
siding (softwood lumber products).
Softwood lumber products include all
products classified under headings
4407.1000, 4409.1010, 4409.1090, and
4409.1020, respectively, of the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the
United States (HTSUS), and any
softwood lumber, flooring and siding
described below. These softwood
lumber products include:
(1) Coniferous wood, sawn or chipped
lengthwise, sliced or peeled,
whether or not planed, sanded or
finger–jointed, of a thickness
exceeding six millimeters;
(2) Coniferous wood siding (including
strips and friezes for parquet
flooring, not assembled)
continuously shaped (tongued,
grooved, rabbeted, chamfered, v–
jointed, beaded, molded, rounded
or the like) along any of its edges or
faces, whether or not planed,
sanded or finger–jointed;
(3) Other coniferous wood (including
strips and friezes for parquet
flooring, not assembled)
continuously shaped (tongued,
grooved, rabbeted, chamfered, v–
jointed, beaded, molded, rounded
or the like) along any of its edges or
faces (other than wood moldings
and wood dowel rods) whether or
not planed, sanded or finger–
jointed; and
(4) Coniferous wood flooring
(including strips and friezes for
parquet flooring, not assembled)
continuously shaped (tongued,
grooved, rabbeted, chamfered, v–
jointed, beaded, molded, rounded
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33089
or the like) along any of its edges or
faces, whether or not planed,
sanded or finger–jointed.
Although the HTSUS subheadings are
provided for convenience and customs
purposes, the written description of the
merchandise subject to this order is
dispositive.
As specifically stated in the Issues
and Decision Memorandum
accompanying the Notice of Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value: Certain Softwood Lumber
Products from Canada, 67 FR 15539
(April 2, 2002) (see comment 53, item D,
page 116, and comment 57, item B–7,
page 126), available at
www.ia.ita.doc.gov, drilled and notched
lumber and angle cut lumber are
covered by the scope of this order.
The following softwood lumber
products are excluded from the scope of
this order provided they meet the
specified requirements detailed below:
(1) Stringers (pallet components used
for runners): if they have at least
two notches on the side, positioned
at equal distance from the center, to
properly accommodate forklift
blades, properly classified under
HTSUS 4421.90.98.40.
(2) Box–spring frame kits: if they
contain the following wooden
pieces—two side rails, two end (or
top) rails and varying numbers of
slats. The side rails and the end
rails should be radius–cut at both
ends. The kits should be
individually packaged, they should
contain the exact number of
wooden components needed to
make a particular box spring frame,
with no further processing required.
None of the components exceeds 1’’
in actual thickness or 83’’ in length.
(3) Radius–cut box–spring-frame
components, not exceeding 1’’ in
actual thickness or 83’’ in length,
ready for assembly without further
processing. The radius cuts must be
present on both ends of the boards
and must be substantial cuts so as
to completely round one corner.
(4) Fence pickets requiring no further
processing and properly classified
under HTSUS heading 4421.90.70,
1’’ or less in actual thickness, up to
8’’ wide, 6’ or less in length, and
have finials or decorative cuttings
that clearly identify them as fence
pickets. In the case of dog–eared
fence pickets, the corners of the
boards should be cut off so as to
remove pieces of wood in the shape
of isosceles right angle triangles
with sides measuring 3/4 inch or
more.
(5) U.S. origin lumber shipped to
Canada for minor processing and
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33090
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
imported into the United States, is
excluded from the scope of this
order if the following conditions are
met: 1) the processing occurring in
Canada is limited to kiln–drying,
planing to create smooth–to-size
board, and sanding, and 2) if the
importer establishes to the
satisfaction of CBP that the lumber
is of U.S. origin.
(6) Softwood lumber products
contained in single family home
packages or kits,2 regardless of tariff
classification, are excluded from the
scope of this order if the importer
certifies to items 6 A, B, C, D, and
requirement 6 E is met:
A. The imported home package or kit
constitutes a full package of the
number of wooden pieces specified
in the plan, design or blueprint
necessary to produce a home of at
least 700 square feet produced to a
specified plan, design or blueprint;
B. The package or kit must contain all
necessary internal and external
doors and windows, nails, screws,
glue, sub floor, sheathing, beams,
posts, connectors, and if included
in the purchase contract, decking,
trim, drywall and roof shingles
specified in the plan, design or
blueprint.
C. Prior to importation, the package or
kit must be sold to a retailer of
complete home packages or kits
pursuant to a valid purchase
contract referencing the particular
home design plan or blueprint, and
signed by a customer not affiliated
with the importer;
D. Softwood lumber products entered
as part of a single family home
package or kit, whether in a single
entry or multiple entries on
multiple days, will be used solely
for the construction of the single
family home specified by the home
design matching the entry.
E. For each entry, the following
documentation must be retained by
the importer and made available to
CBP upon request:
i. A copy of the appropriate home
design, plan, or blueprint matching
the entry;
ii. A purchase contract from a retailer
of home kits or packages signed by
a customer not affiliated with the
importer;
iii. A listing of inventory of all parts
of the package or kit being entered
2 To
ensure administrability, we clarified the
language of exclusion number 6 to require an
importer certification and to permit single or
multiple entries on multiple days as well as
instructing importers to retain and make available
for inspection specific documentation in support of
each entry.
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
that conforms to the home design
package being entered;
iv. In the case of multiple shipments
on the same contract, all items
listed in E(iii) which are included
in the present shipment shall be
identified as well.
Lumber products that CBP may
classify as stringers, radius cut box–
spring-frame components, and fence
pickets, not conforming to the above
requirements, as well as truss
components, pallet components, and
door and window frame parts, are
covered under the scope of this order
and may be classified under HTSUS
subheadings 4418.90.45.90,
4421.90.70.40, and 4421.90.97.40.
Finally, as clarified throughout the
course of the investigation, the
following products, previously
identified as Group A, remain outside
the scope of this order. They are:
1. Trusses and truss kits, properly
classified under HTSUS 4418.90;
2. I–joist beams;
3. Assembled box spring frames;
4. Pallets and pallet kits, properly
classified under HTSUS 4415.20;
5. Garage doors;
6. Edge–glued wood, properly
classified under HTSUS item
4421.90.98.40;
7. Properly classified complete door
frames;
8. Properly classified complete
window frames;
9. Properly classified furniture.
In addition, this scope language has
been further clarified to now specify
that all softwood lumber products
entered from Canada claiming non–
subject status based on U.S. country of
origin will be treated as non–subject
U.S.-origin merchandise under the
countervailing duty order, provided that
these softwood lumber products meet
the following condition: upon entry, the
importer, exporter, Canadian processor
and/or original U.S. producer establish
to CBP’s satisfaction that the softwood
lumber entered and documented as
U.S.-origin softwood lumber was first
produced in the United States as a
lumber product satisfying the physical
parameters of the softwood lumber
scope.3 The presumption of non–subject
status can, however, be rebutted by
evidence demonstrating that the
merchandise was substantially
transformed in Canada.
Subsidies Valuation Information
Allocation Period
In the underlying investigation and
pursuant to 19 CFR 351.524(d)(2), the
3 See the scope clarification message (# 3034202),
dated February 3, 2003, to CBP, regarding treatment
of U.S. origin lumber on file in the CRU.
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Department allocated, where applicable,
all of the non–recurring subsidies
provided to the producers/exporters of
subject merchandise over a 10-year
average useful life (AUL) of renewable
physical assets for the industry
concerned, as listed in the Internal
Revenue Service’s (IRS) 1977 Class Life
Asset Depreciation Range System, as
updated by the Department of the
Treasury. See Notice of Preliminary
Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Determination, Preliminary Affirmative
Critical Circumstances Determination,
and Alignment of Final Countervailing
Duty Determination With Final
Antidumping Determination: Certain
Softwood Lumber Products From
Canada, 66 FR 43186 (August 2001)
(Preliminary Determination); see also
Notice of Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination and
Final Negative Critical Circumstances
Determination: Certain Softwood
Lumber Products From Canada, 67 FR
15545 (April 2, 2002) (Final
Determination). No interested party
challenged the 10-year AUL derived
from the IRS tables. Thus, in this
review, we have allocated, where
applicable, all of the non–recurring
subsidies provided to the producers/
exporters of subject merchandise over a
10-year AUL.
Recurring and Non–Recurring Benefits
The Department has previously
determined that the sale of Crown
timber by Canadian provinces confers
countervailable benefits on the
production and exportation of the
subject merchandise under 771(5)(E)(iv)
of the Act because the stumpage fees at
which the timber is sold are for less
than adequate remuneration. See, e.g.,
‘‘Recurring and Non–Recurring
Benefits’’ section of the March 21, 2002,
Issues and Decision Memorandum the
accompanied the Final Determination
(Final Determination Decision
Memorandum); see also Notice of
Preliminary Results of Countervailing
Duty Administrative Review: Certain
Softwood Lumber Products from
Canada, 69 FR 33204 (June 14, 2004)
(Preliminary Results of 1st Review). For
the reasons described in the program
sections, below, the Department
continues to find that Canadian
provinces sell Crown timber for less
than adequate remuneration to softwood
lumber producers in Canada. Pursuant
to 19 CFR 351.524(c)(1), subsidies
conferred by the government provision
of a good or service normally involve
recurring benefits. Therefore, consistent
with our regulations and past practice,
benefits conferred by the provinces’
administered Crown stumpage programs
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
have, for purposes of these preliminary
results, been expensed in the year of
receipt.
In this review the Department is also
investigating other programs that
involve the provision of grants to
producers and exporters of subject
merchandise. Under 19 CFR 351.524,
benefits from grants can either be
classified as providing recurring or non–
recurring benefits. Recurring benefits
are expensed in the year of receipt,
while grants providing non–recurring
benefits are allocated over time
corresponding to the AUL of the
industry under review. However, under
19 CFR 351.524(b)(2), grants which
provide non–recurring benefits will also
be expensed in the year of receipt if the
amount of the grant under the program
is less than 0.5 percent of the relevant
sales during the year in which the grant
was approved (referred to as the 0.5
percent test). We have preliminarily
determined to expense all grants under
non–stumpage programs in the year of
receipt.
Benchmarks for Loans and Discount
Rate
In selecting benchmark interest rates
for use in calculating the benefits
conferred by the various loan programs
under review, the Department’s normal
practice is to compare the amount paid
by the borrower on the government
provided loans with the amount the
firm would pay on a comparable
commercial loan actually obtained on
the market. See section 771(5)(E)(ii) of
the Act; 19 CFR 351.505(a)(1) and (3)(i).
However, because we are conducting
this review on an aggregate basis and we
are not examining individual
companies, for those programs requiring
a Canadian dollar–denominated, short–
term or long–term benchmark interest
rate, we used for these preliminary
results the national average interest
rates on commercial short–term or long–
term Canadian dollar–denominated
loans as reported by the GOC.
The information submitted by the
GOC was for fixed–rate short–term and
long–term debt. For short–term debt, the
GOC provided monthly weight–
averaged short–term interest rates based
on the prime business rate, small and
medium enterprise (SME) rate, threemonth corporate paper rate, and onemonth bankers’ acceptance rate, as
reported by the Bank of Canada. For
long–term debt, the GOC provided
quarterly implied rates calculated from
long–term debt and the interest
payments made on long–term debt as
reported by Statistics Canada
(STATCAN). Based on these rates, we
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
derived simple averaged POR rates for
both short–term and long–term debt.
Some of the reviewed programs
provided long–term loans to the
softwood lumber industry with variable
interest rates instead of fixed interest
rates. Because we were unable to gather
information on variable interest rates
charged on commercial loans in Canada,
we have used as our benchmark for
those variable loans the rate applicable
to long–term fixed interest rate loans for
the POR as reported by the GOC.
Aggregate Subsidy Rate Calculation
As noted above, this administrative
review is being conducted on an
aggregate basis. We have used the same
methodology to calculate the country–
wide rate for the programs subject to
this review that we used in the Final
Determination and Notice of Final
Results of Countervailing Duty
Administrative Review and Rescission
of Certain Company–Specific Reviews:
Certain Softwood Lumber Products from
Canada, 69 FR 75917 (December 20,
2004) (Final Results of 1st Review).
Provincial Crown Stumpage Programs
For stumpage programs administered
by the Canadian provinces subject to
this review, we first calculated a
provincial subsidy rate by dividing the
aggregate benefit conferred under each
specific provincial stumpage program
by the total stumpage denominator
calculated for that province. For further
information regarding the stumpage
denominator, see ‘‘Numerator and
Denominator Used for Calculating the
Stumpage Programs’ Net Subsidy Rates’’
section, below. As required by section
777A(e)(2)(B) of the Act, we next
calculated a single country–wide
subsidy rate. To calculate the country–
wide subsidy rate conferred on the
subject merchandise from all stumpage
programs, we weight–averaged the
subsidy rate from each provincial
stumpage program by the respective
provinces’ relative shares of total
exports to the United States during the
POR. As in Final Determination and the
Final Results of the 1st Review, these
weight–averages of the subject
merchandise do not include exports
from the Maritime Provinces or sales of
companies excluded from the
countervailing duty order.4 We then
summed these weight–average subsidy
rates to determine the country–wide rate
for all provincial Crown stumpage
programs.
4 The Maritime provinces are Nova Scotia, New
Brunswick, Newfoundland, and Prince Edward
Island.
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33091
Other Programs
We also examined a number of non–
stumpage programs administered by the
Canadian Federal Government and
certain Provincial Governments in
Canada. To calculate the country–wide
rate for these programs, we used the
same methodology employed in the first
administrative review. For federal
programs that were found to be specific
because they were limited to certain
regions, we calculated the
countervailable subsidy rate by dividing
the benefit by the relevant denominator
(i.e., total production of softwood
lumber in the region or total exports of
softwood lumber to the United States
from that region), and then multiplying
that result by the relative share of total
softwood exports to the United States
from that region. For federal programs
that were not regionally specific, we
divided the benefit by the relevant
country–wide sales (i.e., total sales of
softwood lumber, total sales of the wood
products manufacturing industry
(which includes softwood lumber), or
total sales of the wood products
manufacturing and paper industries).
For provincial programs, we
calculated the countervailable subsidy
rate by dividing the benefit by the
relevant sales amount for that province
(i.e., total exports of softwood lumber
from that province to the United States,
total sales of softwood lumber in that
province, or total sales of the wood
products manufacturing and paper
industries in that province). That result
was then multiplied by the relative
share of total softwood exports to the
United States from that province.
Where the countervailable subsidy
rate for a program was less than 0.005
percent, the program was not included
in calculating the country–wide
countervailing duty rate.
Numerator and Denominator Used for
Calculating the Stumpage Programs’
Net Subsidy Rates5
1. Aggregate Numerator and
Denominator
As noted above, the Department is
determining the stumpage subsidies to
the production of softwood lumber in
Canada on an aggregate basis. The
methodology employed to calculate the
ad valorem subsidy rate requires the use
of a compatible numerator and
denominator. In the final results of the
first review, the Department explained
that in the numerator of the net subsidy
rate calculation, the Department
5 The denominators used for non-stumpage
programs are discussed below in the individual
program write-ups.
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33092
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
included only the benefit from those
softwood Crown logs that entered and
were processed by sawmills during the
POR (i.e., logs used in the lumber
production process). See
‘‘Denominator’’ section of the December
13, 2004, Issues and Decision
Memorandum that accompanied the
Final Results of 1st Review (Final
Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum). Accordingly, the
denominator used for the final
calculation included only those
products that result from the softwood
lumber manufacturing process. Id. For
purposes of these preliminary results,
we continue to calculate the numerator
and denominator using the approach
adopted in the final results of the first
review.6
Consistent with the Department’s
previously established methodology, we
included the following in the
denominator: softwood lumber,
including softwood lumber that
undergoes some further processing (so–
called ‘‘remanufactured’’ lumber),
softwood co–products (e.g., wood chips
and sawdust) that resulted from
softwood lumber production at
sawmills, and residual products
produced by sawmills that were the
result of the softwood lumber
manufacturing process, specifically,
softwood fuelwood and untreated
softwood ties.
We would have included in the
denominator those softwood co–
products produced by lumber
remanufacturers that resulted from the
softwood lumber manufacturing
process. However, the GOC failed to
separate softwood co–products that
resulted from the softwood lumber
manufacturing process of lumber
remanufacturers from those resulting
from the myriad of other production
processes performed by producers in the
remanufacturing category that have
nothing to do with the production of
subject merchandise. Lacking the
information necessary to determine the
value of softwood co–products that
resulted from the softwood lumber
manufacturing process of lumber
remanufacturers during the softwood
lumber manufacturing process, we have
preliminarily determined not to include
any softwood co–product values from
the non–sawmill category. See Final
6 In the case of Alberta and British Columbia, it
was necessary to derive the volume of softwood
Crown logs that entered and were processed by
sawmills during the POR (i.e., logs used in the
lumber production process). Our methodology for
deriving those volumes is described in the
Calculation of Provincial Benefits section of these
preliminary results.
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comment 16.
2. Adjustments to Account for
Companies Excluded from the
Countervailing Duty Order
In the investigation, we deducted
from the denominator sales by
companies that were excluded from the
countervailing duty order. The
Department has since also concluded
expedited reviews for a number of
companies, pursuant to which a number
of additional companies have been
excluded from the countervailing duty
order. See Final Results of
Countervailing Duty Expedited Reviews:
Certain Softwood Lumber Products from
Canada: Notice of Final Results of
Countervailing Duty Expedited Reviews,
68 FR 24436, (May 7, 2003); see also
Notice of Final Results of Countervailing
Duty Expedited Reviews of the Order on
Certain Softwood Lumber from Canada,
69 FR 10982 (March 9, 2004). In the
final results of the first review, we
removed the sales of companies
excluded from the countervailing duty
order from the relevant sales
denominators of our country–wide rate
calculations. See ‘‘Excluded
Companies’’ section of the Final Results
of 1st Review Decision Memorandum.
In its case briefs submitted for
consideration in the final results of the
first review, the GOC argued for the first
time in that proceeding that, for the
numerator and denominator to match,
the Department must also reduce the
numerator to account for any de
minimis benefits received by the
excluded companies.7 See, e.g., Final
Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comment 15. We
agreed with the GOC in principle. Id.
However, because the GOC first raised
the issue in its case briefs, the
Department was unable to solicit the
information from the excluded
Canadian parties regarding the
appropriate numerator. Thus, we placed
the exclusion calculations from the
underlying investigation and expedited
reviews on the record of the first review.
Id. We then multiplied the
countervailable volumes of logs and
lumber reported by the excluded
companies by each subject provinces’
weight–average unit benefit. The
resulting products were then removed
from provincial stumpage benefit of
each of the corresponding province. See
Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comment 15.
7 Though excluded from the countervailing duty
order, many companies involved in the exclusion
and/or expedited review processes received de
minimis levels of countervailable benefits.
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
In the current review, we requested
benefit and sales data, on an aggregate
basis for each province, as they
pertained to the excluded companies
during the POR. \ page 2 of our April 8,
2005 supplemental questionnaire. The
GOC, GOO, and GOQ responded that
they did not have the requested POR
sales data. See page 2 of the GOC’s April
28, 2005 questionnaire response.
Regarding the benefit information we
requested, the GOQ and GOO stated that
the excluded companies in their
respective provinces did not harvest
Crown timber during the POR. The GOC
stated the same with respect to the
excluded companies in the Yukon
Territories. Id. at page 6. The GOC, GOO
and GOQ further claimed they did not
have any information regarding the
volume of lumber and/or Crown logs
purchased by the excluded companies
during the POR.
Pursuant to our prior practice and, as
discussed above, we have deducted the
sales of all companies excluded from
the countervailing duty order from the
relevant sales denominators used to
calculate the country–wide subsidy
rates. Because we lack POR sales data
from the excluded companies, we have,
consistent with our approach in the
final results of first review, indexed the
excluded companies’ sales data to the
POR using province–specific lumber
price indices obtained from STATCAN.
We then subtracted the indexed sales
data of the excluded companies from
the corresponding provincial
denominators. See Preliminary Results
of 1st Review, 69 FR at 33207 and the
‘‘Excluded Companies’’ section of the
Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum.
Because the Canadian parties have
stated that the excluded companies did
not acquire Crown timber during the
POR and because they have not
provided any other additional benefit
data from the companies, we have not
adjusted the aggregate numerator data
from the relevant provinces.
3. Pass–through
In the first administrative review, the
Canadian parties claimed that a portion
of the Crown timber processed by
sawmills was purchased by the mills in
arm’s–length transactions with
independent harvesters. The Canadian
parties further claimed that such
transactions must not be included in the
subsidy calculation unless the
Department determines that the benefit
to the independent harvester passed
through to the lumber producers. In the
first review, we determined that Alberta,
British Columbia (B.C.), Manitoba,
Ontario, and Saskatchewan each failed
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
to substantiate this claim. See
Preliminary Results of 1st Review, 69 FR
at 33208, 33209 and Comments 10 and
11 of the Final Results of 1st Review
Decision Memorandum.
The basis of our determination in the
first administrative review was that
transactions cannot be considered
arm’s–length transactions if they are
characterized by limitations that
constrain buyers and sellers of
harvested Crown timber or other
conditions that render those sales
ineligible for the pass–through analysis.
The limitations and other conditions we
identified include (1) government–
imposed appurtenancy and local
processing requirements; (2)
government–mandated wood supply
agreements; (3) the structure of certain
log purchase agreements; (4) fiber
exchanges between Crown tenure
holders; and (5) the payment of Crown
stumpage fees by sawmills for logs
purchased from independent harvesters.
Thus, the starting point of our analysis
was to examine whether in these log
sale transactions the ability of a buyer
or seller to bargain freely with
whomever they chose was encumbered
by government mandates or other
conditions that render those sales not at
arm’s–length or otherwise ineligible for
the pass–through analysis. If a
transaction was conducted under the
constraint(s) of one or more of these
factors, we determined that it was not
conducted at arm’s–length or otherwise
is ineligible for a pass–through analysis,
and no adjustment to the stumpage
calculation was warranted. For example,
where we found that the sawmills paid
the Crown for stumpage fees for logs
acquired from so–called independent
harvesters, no pass–through analysis
was warranted because any benefits go
directly to the sawmill. Id.
In anticipation of a similar claim in
this administrative review, we requested
in the initial questionnaire that each of
the Canadian provinces report, by
species, the volume and value of Crown
logs sold by independent harvesters to
unrelated parties during the POR. See
e.g., page III–22 of the Department’s
September 8, 2004, initial questionnaire.
In response to the Department’s original
questionnaire, the Canadian parties
provided two sets of information for us
to analyze. The GOA, GOBC, British
Columbia Lumber Trade Counsel
(BCLTC), and GOO each provided an
‘‘aggregate’’ claim (with accompanying
information) of the amount of Crown
timber that was obtained by the
sawmills through arm’s–length
transactions. The Ontario Lumber
Manufacturers Association (OLMA) also
provided company–specific transaction
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
data and supporting information for us
to analyze with respect to Ontario and
Manitoba. Regarding Quebec, the GOQ
asserted that the Department would
have to conduct a pass–through analysis
before it included any softwood log
volumes harvested under Forest
Management Contracts (FMCs) and
Forest Management Agreements
(FMAs).8
We have reviewed and considered all
of the information provided on the
record of this administrative review. We
determine that none of the provinces or
parties provided any new information
regarding their aggregate claims which
warrants a change in or departure from
the methodology we used in the first
administrative review. As in the first
administrative review, we determine
that Alberta, B.C., Manitoba, Ontario,
and Saskatchewan each failed to
provide the information necessary to
demonstrate that the transactions
included in their respective ‘‘aggregate’’
claims were in fact conducted at arm’s
length. Consistent with our
determination in the first administrative
review, we also determine that no pass–
through analysis is warranted for many
of the transactions, e.g., where the
sawmill paid the stumpage fee directly
to the Crown, and for fiber exchanges
between Crown tenure holders. We
therefore preliminarily determine that
changes to the subsidy calculation based
on the provinces’ ‘‘aggregate’’ claims are
not warranted.
However, for purposes of these
preliminary results, we preliminarily
determine that, based our analysis of the
company–specific data and information
provided by the OLMA, a reduction in
the Ontario subsidy benefit is
warranted. Our analysis and
preliminary findings with respect to
these claims are detailed, by province,
below.
a. Alberta
In the first review, the GOA claimed
that the numerator of Alberta’s
provincial subsidy rate calculation
should be reduced to account for fair–
market, arm’s length sales of Crown logs
between unrelated parties. The GOA
based its claim on a survey of TDA
transactions that was conducted by a
private consulting firm hired by the
GOA. See Preliminary Results of 1st
8 The GOM and GOS did not claim that their
sawmills purchased Crown logs in arm’s length
transactions. See page MB–69 of the GOM’s
November 22, 2004 questionnaire response and
page SK–99 of the GOS’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response. Therefore, we have
preliminarily concluded that a pass-through
analysis is not warranted for Manitoba and
Saskatchewan.
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33093
Review, 69 FR at 33208. In the final
results of the first review, the
Department found that it is common for
sawmills in Alberta to enter into
agreements where a tenure–holding
independent harvester will supply
timber to the sawmills but the sawmill
will pay the stumpage directly to the
GOA. Id.; see also Final Results of 1st
Review Decision Memorandum at
Comment 11. Accordingly, we found
that in such transactions, known as
‘‘delegation of signing authority’’ or SA
agreements, any stumpage benefit
would go directly to the sawmill paying
the stumpage fee, just as if the sawmill
were drawing from its own tenure and
contracting out for harvesting and
hauling services. We therefore found
that the GOA failed to substantiate that
the volumes in the TDA survey were
free of any volumes associated with SA
agreements and, thus, the GOA’s pass–
through claim was not warranted. Id.
In the current review, we stated that
for any pass–through claim, the GOA
had to provide a breakdown by species
of the total volume and value that it
claims did not pass–through to the
purchasing sawmill. See page III–22 of
our September 8, 2004 questionnaire.
We also instructed the GOA not to
include in its pass–through claim any
purchases for which the mills paid the
stumpage fee to the Crown. Id.
The GOA claimed in its initial
questionnaire response that ‘‘at least by
1.7 million cubic meters of softwood
logs were purchased by Alberta mills in
arm’s length, cash only transactions
with unrelated parties.’’ See page XII–1
and AB–S–76 of the GOA’s November
22, 2004 questionnaire response. As in
the first review, the GOA based its
contention on the TDA survey, as
updated for the POR. We note that the
updated TDA survey and the GOA’s
questionnaire responses do not indicate
whether the volumes it analyzed were
subject to SA agreements. See page 45
of the GOA’s April 8, 2005
supplemental questionnaire response.
In fact, regarding the TDA survey, the
GOA stated that ‘‘Alberta does not have
access to the detailed information on log
sales collected on a company–bycompany basis by the independent
private consultant . . .’’ hired by the
GOA to conduct the TDA survey. See
page XII–2 of the GOA’s November 22,
2004 questionnaire response.
Given the GOA’s failure to indicate
whether the sales in the TDA survey
were made pursuant to SA agreements,
and the GOA’s statement that it lacked
access to company–specific data
collected by the consultant it hired to
conduct the TDA survey, we asked the
GOA to respond to the pass–through
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33094
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
questions contained in our initial
questionnaire without reliance on the
TDA survey. See page 9 of our March
16, 2005 supplemental questionnaire. In
particular, we instructed the GOA to:
. . . breakout all data on arm’s length
log transactions and include
information regarding the volume,
value, species, corporate affiliations
of the parties subject to the
transaction, {as well as} a chart
identifying whether or not the
transaction is subject to a delegation
of signing authority (SA) agreement.
Id. The GOA responded that it did not
maintain or collect such information as
any part of its normal function and that
it had no means on its own to respond
to our pass–through questions aside
from the TDA survey. See page 45 of the
GOA’s April 8, 2005 supplemental
questionnaire response.
In our subsequent supplemental
questionnaire, we noted the GOA’s
claims regarding its inability to respond
to our pass–through questions without
reliance on the TDA survey and pointed
out that in the concurrent Section 129
proceeding the GOA was, indeed, able
to report company–specific data
separate from the TDA survey in
response to the same pass–through
questions.9 We therefore asked the GOA
to provide in this review the same type
of company–specific data, updated for
the POR. See page 2 of the Department’s
April 21, 2005 supplemental
questionnaire. In response to our
request for company–specific pass–
through information that was not reliant
on the TDA survey, the GOA answered
that the Province ‘‘does not keep the
information requested here’’ and it
reiterated its assertion that the
Department should conduct its pass–
through analysis for Alberta using the
TDA survey. See page 2 of its May 2,
2005 questionnaire response.
The GOA further stated that, ‘‘in an
effort to provide some additional
information,’’ it contacted
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) to
provide a ‘‘limited’’ update of the
survey that was included in the pass–
through claim the GOA made in the
context of the Section 129 proceeding.
Id. PWC performed this update of the
Section 129 data using information held
by the GOA on volumes of section 80/
81 wood purportedly transferred to
tenure–holding sawmills from unrelated
parties. Id.
9 In our April 21, 2005 supplemental
questionnaire, we inadvertently referred to the first
administrative review of the countervailing duty
order when we should have instead referred to the
Section 129 proceeding concerning the passthrough issue in the underlying investigation.
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
In regard to the volume represented in
the TDA survey, we note that the GOA
failed to indicate whether the sales in
the TDA survey were made pursuant to
SA agreements and the GOA explained
that it lacks access to the underlying
company–specific data. Regarding the
claimed lack of access, the GOA has
been unable or unwilling to demonstrate
that it made reasonable efforts to obtain
the necessary company–specific data.
Consequently, we preliminarily find
that we are unable to rely on the TDA
survey as a basis for the GOA’s pass–
through claim.
Regarding the data supplied by the
PwC, we note that, by the GOA’s own
admission, the data constitutes a
‘‘limited’’ survey population and, thus,
does not reflect the total volumes
included in the pass–through claim
made by the GOA in this review. See
page 2 and Exhibit AB–S–102 of the
GOA’s May 2, 2005 supplemental
questionnaire response. Further, the
information from PwC does not include
any documentation regarding purchase
agreements, as requested in our April
21, 2005 questionnaire.10 See pages 1–
3 and Exhibit AB–S–102 of the GOA’s
May 2, 2005 supplemental
questionnaire response. Moreover, the
information from PwC lacks any
corresponding value information that
would enable the Department to
conduct its pass–through analysis on a
transaction–specific basis. Id. The GOA
has been unable or unwilling to explain
why it has not supplied the necessary
information. Therefore, we
preliminarily determine to reject the
information from the PwC as a basis for
the GOA’s pass–through claim.
Therefore, based on our findings
above, we preliminarily determine that
a pass–through analysis for Alberta is
not warranted.
b. British Columbia
The GOBC claims that 14.7 million
cubic meters of Crown timber, or 22
percent of the total Crown softwood log
harvest, was harvested by so–called
independent harvesters, i.e., harvesters
that do not own and are not affiliated
with sawmills during the POR. The
GOBC further claims that no subsidy
that may be attributable to this harvest
volume passed through to purchasing
10 As explained above, it is necessary to examine
purchase contacts in order to determine whether
they were structured as SA agreements. In addition,
it is necessary to review the purchase contracts to
ensure that the transactions were made at arm’s
length, i.e., were not affected by any additional
factors we previously identified, including: (1)
limitations on log sales that may be contained in
Crown tenure contracts such as appurtenancy
requirements (2) local processing requirements, or
(3) fiber exchanges between Crown tenureholders.
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
sawmills and, thus, the volumes should
not be included in the numerator of
British Columbia’s provincial subsidy
rate calculation. See page BC–XIV–2 of
the GOBC’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response. In support of
this claim, the GOBC provided survey
data on what were purported to be
B.C.’s primary sawmills’ arm’s–length
log purchases. These data, covering the
prior review period, were originally
placed on the record of the first review
by the BCLTC. See ‘‘Norcon Forestry
Ltd. Survey of Primary Sawmills’ Arm’s
Length Log Purchases in the Province of
British Columbia,’’ which was placed on
the record of this review at Volume IV,
Exhibit 24 A, B of the BCLTC’s February
24, 2005 submission (Norcon Study).11
In the first review, the Department
found that the transactions in the
Norcon Study involved sales of Crown
logs through Section 20 auctions as well
as sales to mills by small woodlot
owners. See e.g., Preliminary Results of
1st Review, 69 FR 33208 and Final
Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comment 10. In the
first review, we further found that most
of the Section 20 transactions are
structured under standard contracts
called ‘‘Log Purchase Agreements’’ in
which sawmills purchasing the Crown
timber are billed for the Crown
stumpage fee directly by the B.C.
Ministry of Forests. Id. As explained
above, in the first review, we
determined that no pass–through
analysis is warranted where the sawmill
or some third–party company pays
Crown stumpage fees for logs purchased
from independent harvesters. See Final
Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comment 10.
In addition to the information in the
Norcon Study, evidence obtained in this
review further supports our finding that
sawmills pay the stumpage fee directly
to the Crown for logs purchased from
so–called independent harvesters. See
Exhibits BC–S–245, 246, and 247 of the
GOBC’s April 21, 2005 questionnaire
response, which contain source
documents illustrating how sawmills
pay for stumpage on Section 20 sales.
Thus, under such arrangements, any
stumpage benefit would go directly to
the sawmills paying the stumpage fee,
just as if the sawmill were drawing from
its own tenure and contracting out for
harvesting and hauling services, thereby
eliminating the need for a pass–through
analysis.
11 In its initial questionnaire response, the GOBC
claimed that the BCLTC would provide a Norcon
Study updated for the POR of this review. See page
BC-XIV–1 of the GOBC’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response.
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
In the prior review, we determined
that log sales cannot be considered to be
arm’s–length transactions where there
are restrictive government–imposed
appurtenancy and local processing
requirements that dictate to the
harvester those entities to whom it may
sell, thereby severely hampering the
ability of the harvesters to bargain freely
with willing purchasers in the
marketplace. See Final Results of 1st
Review Decision Memorandum at
Comment 10. However, in this review
the GOBC has stated that amendments
to the Forest Act, effective November
2003, nullified the timber processing
and appurtenancy clauses for
replaceable and non–replaceable
licenses older than 10 years. For
licenses in effect fewer than 10 years,
the timber processing and appurtenancy
clauses will expire with the licenses or
be nullified upon the license’s tenth
anniversary. Further, the GOBC claims
that no new licenses advertised after
November 4, 2003 contain any of these
clauses. See GOBC’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response at BC–III–11 and
GOBC’s April 13, 2005 questionnaire
response at page 60.
In light of the GOBC’s new legislation
and because pre–existing licenses
continued to retain the appurtenancy
clauses we identified in the prior
review, we requested that the GOBC
demonstrate that none of the tenure
agreements for which it claimed no
benefits passed through from the
independent harvesters to the sawmills
contained any of these restrictive
clauses. In response, the GOBC claimed
that the timber processing and
appurtenancy clauses have no impact
on the arm’s length transactions and are
therefore irrelevant to the Department’s
pass–through analysis. As to our request
that it demonstrate that none of the
tenure agreements included in its pass–
through claim contained any restrictive
clauses, the GOBC claimed that it could
not provide such information because it
would be burdensome. See page 61 of
the GOBC’s April 13, 2005
questionnaire response. Instead, the
GOBC provided some copies of the
types of tenure agreements that may
have been held by so–called
independent harvesters during the POR.
However, regarding these agreements,
the GOBC provided no information
linking the tenure agreements it
submitted to those transactions
included in its no–pass-through claim
(e.g., several of the submitted
agreements were merely blank
templates). Therefore, for purposes of
these preliminary results, we find that
the GOBC has failed to demonstrate that
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
the restrictive clauses were eliminated
as a consequence of the amendments to
the Forest Act. We also continue to
disagree with the GOBC that these
restrictions are irrelevant to the pass–
through analysis. These government–
imposed restrictions severely limit the
ability of buyers and sellers of logs to
bargain freely with whomever they
choose or to bargain on terms that are
not encumbered by government
mandates.
For the reasons explained above, and
the fact that the GOBC has not
submitted any new information that
warrants reconsideration of the
Department’s prior findings, we
preliminarily conclude that the GOBC
has failed to adequately substantiate its
pass–through claim, and no adjustment
to the provincial numerator has been
made.
c. Ontario
As mentioned above, in response to
the Department’s initial questionnaire,
the GOO submitted an ‘‘aggregate’’
claim of the portion of the Crown timber
processed by Ontario sawmills that was
purchased in arm’s–length transactions.
The GOO made a claim of no pass–
through for 2,459,812 cubic meters or
23.55 percent of the total invoiced
volume of Crown timber entering the
largest 25 sawmills in Ontario during
the POR. In support of this claim, the
GOO provided a breakdown of log
transactions between the 25 largest mills
in Ontario and tenure holders that do
not own a sawmill, and certifications
from officials of three mills each stating
that their mill is not affiliated with its
timber suppliers. The OLMA separately
submitted company–specific
information for one harvester and eight
mills. The information included
transaction–specific data, statements
and certification of non–affiliation, and
additional supporting documentation.
For the reasons described below, we
preliminarily determine that the GOO
failed to substantiate its ‘‘aggregate’’ no–
pass-through claim. Although the
Department accepts the three
certifications of non–affiliation
provided by the GOO, the GOO’s
submission is lacking certifications for
the other mills it included in its claim.
Furthermore, in the initial
questionnaire, we requested that the
GOO ‘‘not include (as part of its claim)
any transactions that were made
pursuant to wood supply commitments
or purchases for which the mills paid
the stumpage to the Crown rather than
the harvester.’’ page VI–22 of the Initial
Questionnaire at ‘‘Section VI:
Questionnaire for the Province of
Ontario. However, the GOO did not
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33095
delineate the transactions in which the
mills paid the stumpage fees directly to
the Crown or the transactions that were
made under a wood supply commitment
letter or a wood supply agreement. See
pages ON–237 and ON–238 of Vol. 1 of
19 and exhibit ON–PASS–1 of Vol. 17
of 19 of the GOO’s November 22, 2004,
initial questionnaire response. Due to
these deficiencies, we are unable to
conduct a pass–through analysis using
the ‘‘aggregate’’ data provided by the
GOO. We therefore preliminarily
determine that changes to the subsidy
calculation based on the GOO’s
‘‘aggregate’’ no–pass-through claim are
not warranted.
With respect to the company–specific
data and information provided by the
OLMA, we preliminarily determine that
these are sufficient for purposes of
conducting a pass–through analysis. We
accept the certifications by the
companies that the transactions they
reported were between unaffiliated
parties. In addition, the company–
specific data clearly identified those
transactions for which the harvesters
(rather than the mills) paid the
stumpage fees and those that were not
subject to other restrictions, such as
government–mandated wood supply
commitments or fiber exchange
agreements. Accordingly, we determine
that a portion of the log sale transactions
reported by the OLMA were conducted
at arm’s–length and were otherwise not
affected by other conditions during the
POR.
For these transactions, we then
performed the next step of our pass–
through analysis by examining whether
the mill received a competitive benefit
from the purchase of the subsidized
logs. This competitive benefit analysis is
guided by the provisions of the
Department’s regulation on upstream
subsidies. See 19 CFR 351.523. Under
this analysis, a competitive benefit
exists when the price for the input is
lower than the price for a benchmark
input price. The Department’s
regulations provide for the use of actual
or average prices for unsubsidized input
products, including imports, or an
appropriate surrogate as the benchmark
input price.
We have previously determined that
the record in the first administrative
review did not contain any private
prices in Ontario that were suitable for
use as benchmarks to measure the
adequacy of remuneration for Crown
provided stumpage. See ‘‘Private
Provincial Market Prices’’ section and
Final Results of 1st Admin Review at
Comments 20, 21. As explained in
‘‘Provincial Stumpage Programs’’ below,
we have reached the same conclusion
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33096
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
based on the record in this proceeding.
We have also explained in the first
administrative review with respect to
British Columbia, that ‘‘stumpage and
log markets are closely intertwined and
therefore Crown stumpage prices affect
both stumpage and log prices, ‘‘and that
subsidized prices in the stumpage
market would result in price
suppression in log markets. Id. at ‘‘B.C.
Log Prices Are Not An Appropriate
Benchmark.’’ We have reached the same
conclusion with respect to the log
markets in Ontario. In Ontario, Crown
timber supplies a dominant portion of
the market, and the unit cost of this
supply effectively determines the
market prices of logs in Ontario. As
shown on the record in this review and
the prior review, the prices harvesters
charge for logs are derived directly from
the prices they pay for stumpage plus
harvesting costs. Because of the
relationship between timber (stumpage)
and log prices, prices for logs in Ontario
would be suppressed by the subsidized
prices in the timber markets. As such,
log prices in Ontario are unsuitable for
purposes of measuring whether a
competitive benefit has passed–through
in transactions involving sales of Crown
logs.
Instead, we have turned to private
stumpage prices in the Maritimes,
which we have determined are market–
determined, in–country prices.
However, because we are measuring the
competitive benefit for the sale of
subsidized logs, we have derived
species–specific benchmark log prices
by combining the unsubsidized
Maritimes stumpage prices with the
various harvest, haul, road, and
management costs reported by the GOO.
We then compared the per unit prices
listed for each transaction reported by
the OLMA that we determined was
eligible for a competitive benefit
analysis with our benchmark log prices.
If the price per cubic meter was equal
to or higher than the benchmark price,
we determined that no competitive
benefit passed through and the
corresponding volume was excluded
from the numerator of our calculations.
Where the per unit price was lower than
the benchmark price, and where the
difference between the benchmark and
actual log prices was greater than that
province–specific per–unit stumpage
benefit (e.g., C$8.74 for Ontario SPF),
we capped the amount of the subsidy
considered to have ‘‘passed–through’’
by the province–specific per–unit
stumpage benefit. As such, the amount
of the competitive benefit that
calculated as was not passed though in
the transaction was never greater than
the subsidy granted by the Crown. The
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
result of these calculations is that only
a small portion of the Crown harvest
volume originally included in the
numerator is excluded from the
numerator of our revised subsidy
calculations. Accordingly, a small
reduction in the Ontario subsidy benefit
is warranted. The calculations are
business proprietary. See the May 31,
2005, Preliminary Calculations
Memorandum for Ontario. As noted
above, if we were unable to determine
that the transaction qualified as an
arm’s–length transaction or was subject
to other conditions (e.g., the stumpage
for the log was paid by the harvester),
we did not conduct a competitive
benefit analysis and the corresponding
volume associated with these
transactions was not excluded from the
subsidy calculation.
d. Manitoba
The Canadian parties and the GOM
did not make an ‘‘aggregate’’ claim of
the portion of the Crown timber
processed by Manitoba sawmills that
was purchased in arm’s–length
transactions. Rather, the OLMA
submitted company–specific
information on behalf of Tembec Inc.
We determine that the company–
specific data and information provided
by the OLMA are sufficient for purposes
of our analysis and that a portion of the
transactions in Manitoba constitute
arm’s–length sales of logs by
independent harvesters to unaffiliated
sawmills during the POR. We accept the
statement that ‘‘with respect to its
operations in Manitoba, Tembec is an
independent harvester.’’ See page 4 of
Volume 1 of the OLMA’’s November 22,
2004, submission. In addition, the
information and data provided indicate
that the transactions were not
characterized by the limitations which
constrain buyers and sellers of
harvested Crown timber from free
negotiation, described above.
Accordingly, we determine that a
portion of the transactions in Manitoba
constitute arm’s–length sales of logs by
independent harvesters to unaffiliated
sawmills during the POR.
We applied the same methodology as
described above in the Ontario pass–
through section when conducting our
competitive benefit analysis. Because
the GOM did not submit any log pricing
data on the record, we derived the
species–specific benchmark log price by
combining the private market–
determined, in–country Maritime
stumpage prices with the various costs
reported by the GOM. Because the GOM
did not report certain harvesting costs
and hauling costs, we used, where
necessary, harvesting and hauling costs
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
placed on the record by the GOO as
surrogates. The result of these
calculations is that none of the Crown
harvest volume originally included in
the numerator is excluded from the
numerator of our revised subsidy
calculations. Accordingly, no reduction
in the Manitoba subsidy benefit is
warranted. The calculations contain
business proprietary information and,
thus, cannot be discussed in further
detail in these preliminary results.
Therefore, for further details, see the
May 31, 2005, Preliminary Calculations
Memorandum for Manitoba.
e. Quebec
In the first review, the Department did
not include Crown timber harvested by
FMC and FMA licensees in the
numerator of Quebec’s provincial
subsidy rate calculation. While we
acknowledged that evidence on the
record of the first review demonstrated
that some of the timber harvested under
FMCs was sold to sawmills during the
POR, such transactions may have
included sales of logs from non–sawmill
owning tenure holders to sawmills and,
thus, would have required a pass–
through analysis. SeeFinal Results of the
1st Review Decision Memorandum at
Comment 13. Because in the first review
we did not examine the relationship
between the harvesters and sawmills or
the terms and conditions of the timber
sales in the context of a pass–through
analysis, we found that we were unable
to reach a determination as to whether
the volume of timber harvested under
FMCs should be included in the
numerator. Id. However, we indicated
that we would reconsider the issue in
the course of the second review. Id.
In this review, petitioners assert that
the Department must include in the
numerator of the Quebec provincial
subsidy rate calculation the volumes of
Crown timber harvested by FMC and
FMA licensees on the grounds that the
GOQ has refused to answer the
Department’s questions concerning
these licensees. See page 112 through
114 of petitioners’ April 29, 2005
submission.
For purposes of these preliminary
results, we have included the volume of
Crown timber harvested under the FMC
license program in the numerator of
Quebec’s provincial subsidy rate
calculation. In our initial questionnaire,
we explained to the GOQ that if it
wished to claim that any portion of the
reported volume of Crown timber
harvested under the FMC and FMA
licences was sold in arm’s length
transactions and that any subsidies
provided for that portion of timber of
the Crown harvest did not ‘‘pass–
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
through’’ to purchasing sawmill(s), it
had to provide a breakdown, by species,
of the total volume and value of this
harvested timber during the POR. In
addition, we instructed the GOQ to
respond to a series of questions
regarding the terms and conditions of
the transactions covered by any pass–
through claim and to identify any
affiliations between the buyer and seller
of the logs in question. See VII–30 of our
September 8, 2005 questionnaire. In its
response, the GOQ stated:
At this time, the Gouvernment of
Quebec is not claiming that any
portion of the reported volume of
Crown harvest was sold in arms’
length transactions. This is not to
suggest that there are no such
transactions. To the contrary, the
volumes of Crown timber harvested
pursuant to FMCs and FMAs, and
subsequently sold in open market
transactions are undoubtedly arm’s
length transactions. . . Because the
volume of standing timber
harvested under FMCs and FMAs is
negligible, the Department’s
consistent practice has been to base
its calculations on the volumes
harvested pursuant to TSFMAs.
Adherence to this practice obviates
the need for pass–through analysis
in Quebec.
See page QC–157 through QC–158 of
the GOQ’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response. The GOQ added
that if the Department decided to
include FMC and FMA volumes in its
calculations, then it would have to
undertake a pass–through analysis. Id.
In our initial questionnaire, we
further asked the GOQ to indicate the
total volume and value of Crown timber
billed to any person or company that
did not own or operate a sawmill and
was not affiliated with a sawmill that
the GOQ permitted to harvest Crown
timber during the POR. See page VII–6
of our September 8, 2004 questionnaire.
In response, the GOQ provided a list of
FMC holders that it claimed did not
own or operate sawmills during the
POR. See Exhibit 50 of its November 22,
2004 questionnaire response. Many of
the FMC holders identified in Exhibit 50
were municipalities. The GOQ also
provided consolidated volume and
value harvest data for FMC holders that
‘‘paid no stumpage’’ and those that
‘‘paid stumpage.’’ See Exhibit 57 of the
GOQ’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response. However, this
exhibit did not list the volume and
value data separately for each FMC
holder, as instructed by our initial
questionnaire.
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
In our initial questionnaire, we also
asked the GOQ to identify the volume
and value, by species and grade, of
Crown log sales by FMC holders to
companies that own sawmills. See page
VII–7 of our September 8, 2004
questionnaire. In its questionnaire
response, the GOQ stated:
The requested volume and value data
is collected by the {Ministry of
Natural Resources} as part of an
annual process. The data for the
POR are not yet available. The
{Ministry} does not know the
specific arrangements entered into
by holders of FMCs and FMAs and,
therefore, cannot describe the
nature of those agreements or
provide the representative
contracts.
See page QC–48 of the GOQ’s November
22, 2004 questionnaire response.
FMC Licences
Pursuant to section 102 of the
Forestry Act, the GOQ may grant a FMC
license to any ‘‘person.’’ See QC–S–13
and page QC–44 of the GOQ’s November
22, 2004 questionnaire response. Thus,
FMC license holders may or may not
own sawmills. However, cross–
referencing a list of FMC holders, as
provided in Exhibit 32 of the GOQ’s
November 22, 2004 questionnaire
response, with a list of sawmills with
GOQ authorization to consume
softwood timber, reveals that several
sawmills did hold FMCs during the
POR. For authorized consumption data,
see page 55, Attachment III, of the June
2, 2004 ‘‘Quebec Private Price
Documentation Memo’’ from the
Preliminary Results of the 1st Review,
which was placed on the record of this
review the February 28, 2005
memorandum to the file from Maura
Jeffords, Case Analyst.
In addition, evidence indicates that
the GOQ often grants FMCs to
municipalities in the province. See page
QC–24 of the GOQ’s November 22, 2005
questionnaire response and Preliminary
Results of 1st Review, 69 FR at 33225.
Further, sections 104.2 and 104.3 of the
GOQ’s Forestry Act stipulate that the
holder of a FMC license must supply
standing timber covered by the license
to timber wood processing plants in
Quebec in the amount specified on the
license’s management permit. This
stipulation is also reflected in the
standard language of the FMC contract.
See e.g., page 3 and 10 of the sample
FMC contract contained in Exhibit 31 of
the GOQ’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response. Therefore,
based on the information discussed
above, we preliminarily determine that
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33097
the FMC volume reported by the GOQ
includes FMC licenses held by sawmills
as well as softwood log volumes that
were sold directly by government
entities in Quebec (e.g., municipalities)
to sawmills.
As explained above, we provided the
GOQ an opportunity to substantiate its
claim that Crown logs were sold in
arm’s length transactions and that any
subsidies did not ‘‘pass–through’’ to
purchasing sawmills. We also
specifically instructed the GOQ not to
include in its pass–through claim any
logs sold directly by government entities
holding FMCs. The GOQ did not do so.
Rather, the GOQ reported the entire
volume of timber harvested under FMC
licenses, which, apart from government
municipalities, may also include timber
harvested by sawmills with tenure. The
volume of timber harvested by
government entities and sawmills with
tenure is not be eligible for a pass–
through analysis. The sale by
government municipalities of Crown–
harvested logs is no different from the
provincial government itself selling the
logs and thus does not involve an
‘‘indirect’’ subsidy. Further, timber
harvested by sawmills with tenure
would be used by these mills to produce
lumber in their own facilities rather
than for the sale of logs to other
sawmills. Because the GOQ did not
break out separately the volume of
Crown timber harvested by government
entities and sawmills with tenure from
the volume harvested by independent
harvesters that sold logs to sawmills
during the POR, we preliminarily
determine that a pass–through analysis
is not warranted. Therefore, we have
included all of the FMC harvest volume
in the numerator of our subsidy
calculations.
Petitioners have further argued that
the GOQ’s questionnaire response
indicates that no stumpage fees at all
were paid for a portion of FMC harvest
volume and that the Department should
reflect that lack of payment in our
calculations. See Exhibit QC–S–82 of
the GOQ’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response. We disagree. In
cases where the FMC licensee is a
municipality, the municipality collects
dues for the cutting rights, not the GOQ.
See QC S—92 of the GOQ’s November
22, 2004 questionnaire response. Thus,
the information contained in Exhibit
QC–S–82 reflects the FMC harvest
volumes sold by government
municipalities and non–profit
organizations but not the corresponding
prices charged to the buyers of the logs.
Therefore, lacking the price information
for these FMC volumes, as facts
available we are applying the unit prices
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33098
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
that the GOQ reported for the remaining
amount of the FMC volume.
FMA Licenses
We are not including the timber
volumes harvested under FMA licenses
in the numerator of our calculations.
Under section 84.1 of the Forest Act, an
FMA licensee may not be the holder of
a wood processing permit nor be
affiliated with the holder of a wood
processing permit. See QC–S–13 of the
GOQ’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response. Although the
record does not contain the prices
which the FMA license holders charge
their customers for Crown logs even if
the full amount of the subsidy is
assumed to pass–through to its
customer, inclusion of this volume in
the numerator has no impact on the
portion of the country–wide rate
attributable to Quebec. Therefore, we
have not included any of the FMA
harvest volume in our calculations.
Analysis of Programs
I. Programs Preliminarily Determined to
Confer Subsidies
A. Provincial Stumpage Programs
In Canada, the vast majority of
standing timber sold originates from
lands owned by the Crown. Each of the
reviewed Canadian provinces, i.e.,
Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba,
Ontario, Quebec and Saskatchewan,12
has established programs through which
it charges certain license holders
‘‘stumpage’’ fees for standing timber
harvested from these Crown lands. With
the exception of British Columbia, these
administered stumpage programs have
remained largely unchanged. Thus, for a
description of the stumpage programs
administered by the GOA, GOS, GOM,
GOO, and GOQ, see ‘‘Description of
Provincial Stumpage Programs’’ section
of the Preliminary Results of 1st Review.
Changes to British Columbia
administered stumpage system are
discussed below.
Legal Framework
In accordance with section 771(5) of
the Act, to find a countervailable
subsidy, the Department must
determine that a government provided a
financial contribution and that a benefit
was thereby conferred, and that the
subsidy is specific within the meaning
of section 771(5A) of the Act. As set
forth below, no new information or
12 In this review, we did not examine the
stumpage programs with respect to the Yukon
Territory, Northwest Territories, and timber sold on
federal land because the amount of exports to the
U.S. is insignificant and would have no measurable
effect on any subsidy rate calculated in this review.
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
argument on the record of this review
has resulted in a change in the
Department’s determinations from the
final results of the first review that the
provincial stumpage programs
constitute financial contributions
provided by the provincial governments
and that they are specific.
Financial Contribution and Specificity
In the underlying investigation, the
Department determined, consistent with
section 771(5)(D)(iii) of the Act, that the
Canadian provincial stumpage programs
constitute a financial contribution
because the provincial governments are
providing a good to lumber producers,
and that good is timber. The Department
further noted that the ordinary meaning
of ‘‘goods’’ is broad, encompassing all
‘‘property or possessions’’ and ‘‘saleable
commodities.’’ See ‘‘Financial
Contribution’’ in the Final
Determination Decision Memorandum.
Further, the Department found that
‘‘nothing in the definition of the term
’goods’ indicates that things that occur
naturally on land, such as timber, do not
constitute ’goods.’’’ To the contrary, the
Department found that the term
specifically includes ’’. . . growing crops
and other identified things to be severed
from real property.’’ Id. The Department
further determined that an examination
of the provincial stumpage systems
demonstrated that the sole purpose of
the tenures was to provide lumber
producers with timber. Thus, the
Department determined that regardless
of whether the provinces are supplying
timber or making it available through a
right of access, they are providing
timber. Id. No new information has been
placed on the record of this review
warranting a change in our finding that
the provincial stumpage programs
constitute a financial contribution in the
form of a good, and that the provinces
are providing that good, i.e., timber, to
lumber producers. Consistent with our
findings in the underlying investigation,
we preliminarily continue to find that
the stumpage programs constitute a
financial contribution provided to
lumber producers within the meaning of
section 771(5)(D)(iii) of the Act.
In the investigation, the Department
determined that provincial stumpage
subsidy programs were used by a
‘‘limited number of certain enterprises’’
and, thus, were specific in accordance
with section 771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of the
Act. More particularly, the Department
found that stumpage subsidy programs
were used by a single group of
industries, comprised of pulp and paper
mills, and the sawmills and
remanufacturers that produce the
subject merchandise. See ‘‘Specificity’’
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
section of the Final Determination
Decision Memorandum. This was true
in each of the reviewed provinces. No
information in the record of this review
warrants a change in this determination
and, thus, we preliminarily continue to
find that the provincial stumpage
programs are specific within the
meaning of section 771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of
the Act.
Benefit
Section 771(5)(E)(iv) of the Act and 19
CFR 351.511(a) govern the
determination of whether a benefit has
been conferred from subsidies involving
the provision of a good or service.
Pursuant to section 771(5)(E)(iv) of the
Act, a benefit is conferred by a
government when the government
provides a good or service for less than
adequate remuneration. Section
771(5)(E) further states that the
adequacy of remuneration:
. . . shall be determined in relation to
prevailing market conditions for the
good or service being provided . . .
in the country which is subject to
the investigation or review.
Prevailing market conditions
include price, quality, availability,
marketability, transportation, and
other conditions of . . . sale.
The hierarchy for selecting a
benchmark price to determine whether
a government good or service is
provided for less than adequate
remuneration is set forth in 19 CFR
351.511(a)(2). The hierarchy, in order of
preference, is: (1) market–determined
prices from actual transactions within
the country under investigation or
review; (2) world market prices that
would be available to purchasers in the
country under investigation; or (3) an
assessment of whether the government
price is consistent with market
principles.
Under this hierarchy, we must first
determine whether there are actual
market–determined prices for timber
sales in Canada that can be used to
measure whether the provincial
stumpage programs provide timber for
less than adequate remuneration. Such
benchmark prices could include prices
resulting from actual transactions
between private parties, actual imports,
or, in certain circumstances, actual sales
from competitively–run government
auctions. See 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(i).
The Preamble to the CVD Regulations
provides additional guidance on the use
of market–determined prices stemming
from actual transactions within the
country. See ‘‘Explanation of the Final
Rules ‘‘Countervailing Duties, Final
Rule, 63 FR 65348, 65377 (November
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
25, 1998) (the Preamble). For example,
the Preamble states that prices from a
government auction would be
appropriate where the government sells
a significant portion of the good or
service through competitive bid
procedures that are open to everyone,
that protect confidentiality, and that are
based solely on price. The Preamble also
states that the Department normally will
not adjust such competitively bid prices
to account for government distortion of
the market because such distortion will
normally be minimal as long as the
government involvement in the market
is not substantial. 63 FR at 65377.
The Preamble also states that ‘‘[w]hile
we recognize that government
involvement in the marketplace may
have some impact on the price of the
good or service in that market, such
distortion will normally be minimal
unless the government provider
constitutes a majority or, in certain
circumstances, a substantial portion of
the market. Where it is reasonable to
conclude that actual transaction prices
are significantly distorted as a result of
the government’s involvement in the
market, we will resort to the next
alternative in the hierarchy.’’13
The guidance in the Preamble reflects
the fact that, when the government is
the predominant provider of a good or
service there is a likelihood that it can
affect private prices for the good or
service. Where the government
effectively determines the private
prices, a comparison of the government
price and the private prices cannot
capture the full extent of the subsidy
benefit. In such a case, therefore, the
private prices cannot serve as an
appropriate benchmark.
In the first administrative review, the
Department determined that there were
no usable private market stumpage
prices in the provinces whose stumpage
programs are under review that could
serve as benchmarks. See ‘‘Private
Provincial Market Prices’’ section of the
Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum. For the reasons
discussed below, the Department
continues to find that there are no
private stumpage market prices in the
provinces under review that can serve
as first–tier benchmarks in Alberta,
British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario,
Quebec, and Saskatchewan.
13 Preamble, 63 FR at 65377–78 (emphasis
added); see also Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat
Products from Thailand, 66 Fed. Reg. at 20259.
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
There Are No Useable First–Tier
Benchmarks in the Subject Provinces
Measuring the Benefit on Stumpage
Programs Administered by the GOA,
GOBC, GOO, GOQ, GOM, and GOS
In this administrative review, the
GOA reported private price data and
government competitive bid data as
reported in Alberta’s 2004 Timber
Damage Assessment (TDA) update; the
GOO provided an updated survey of
private prices prepared by Demers
Gobeil Mercier & Associes Inc. (DGM);
the GOQ provided private stumpage
prices charged in its province; and the
GOBC provided prices from auctions the
government administers under the B.C.
Timber Sales (BCTS) program. As
discussed below, we have preliminarily
determined that pricing data reported by
the GOA, GOO, GOQ, and GOBC are not
suitable for use as a benchmark within
the meaning of 19 CFR 351.111(a)(2)(i).
Province of Alberta
In response to the Department’s
request for private timber prices, the
GOA explained that it is not involved in
private party transactions and does not
know the process by which private
timber is sold. See GOA’s November 22,
2004 response, Volume 1 at page VIII–
1. However, the GOA submitted the
TDA as a source of data for arm’s–
length, cash only private log sales. See
GOA’s November 22, 2003 response at
Exhibit AB–S–76. We have examined
Alberta’s TDA private price data and
government ‘‘competitive’’ bid data
reported in Alberta’s TDA 2004 update
and continue to find that the TDA prices
are not actual market–determined
prices, as required by the CVD
regulations, and, thus, cannot be used as
a benchmark. See Preliminary Results of
1st Review, 69 FR at 33214 and ‘‘Private
Provincial Market Prices’’ section of the
Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum and at Comment 19.
The GOA explains that the TDA began
in the mid–1990’s as a means for
mediating disputes between timber
operators and other industrial operators
concerning the value of standing timber
adversely affected by industrial
operations on timber tenures. Pursuant
to these efforts, a consultant has
collected information on log purchases
which does not differentiate between
private and Crown sources. The GOA
describes the methodology, stating that
‘‘the values on the {TDA} table are
derived by consultants from a two year
average of competitive Commercial
Timber Permit (CTP) sales values, as
well as the value of arm’s length log
purchases, adjusted to stumpage values
by backing out harvesting and haul
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33099
costs.’’ See the GOA’s November 22,
2004, Questionnaire Response at
Volume 1, page I–8.
The GOA’s response indicates that the
methodology used to report the TDA
private timber transaction data for this
administrative review is consistent with
and has not changed since the period
covered by the prior administrative
review. Id. As previously explained by
the Department, the vast majority of the
CTP prices do not reflect competition
for the right to harvest timber and the
CTP prices underlying the TDA
calculations do not reflect market
determined prices. See Final Results of
1st Review Decision Memorandum at
Comment 19.
There is no new evidence offered by
the GOA that would result in a
reconsideration of the Department’s
decision to reject the use of TDA as a
provincial benchmark. Moreover, due to
the fact that the TDA data does not
differentiate private and Crown sources
in its survey, there is no method for the
Department to identify the potentially
private transactions captured by the
TDA survey (which would only
represent a maximum of 203,041 cubic
meters or 2 percent of Alberta’s total
softwood sawmill Section 80/81 harvest
volume that is reported as harvested
from private lands). See GOA’s
November 22, 2003 response Table 1 at
Exhibit AB–S–1. Therefore,
based on the record evidence and
consistent with the Department’s prior
determinations, we find that the TDA
prices are not actual market–determined
prices, as required by the CVD
regulations, and, thus, cannot be used as
a benchmark. See 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2).
Province of British Columbia
British Columbia did not provide
private stumpage prices for the record of
this proceeding. Instead, the Province
provided prices from auctions the
government administers under section
20 of the Forest Act. These auctions
were formerly conducted under the
Small Business Forest Enterprise
Program (SBFEP). In the investigation
and first administrative review, the
Department determined that the auction
prices under the SBFEP program were
not suitable for use as benchmarks in
determining whether the GOBC sold
Crown timber for less than adequate
remuneration because the SBFEP
auctions were only open to small
business forest enterprises. As such, we
determined that these prices did not
reflect prices from a competitively run
government auction, as required by our
regulations. See 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(i)
and the Preamble, 63 FR at 65377; see
also the ‘‘Private Provincial Market
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33100
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
Prices’’ section of the Final Results of
1st Review Decision Memorandum and
Preliminary Results of 1st Review, 69 FR
at 33214.
The GOBC has explained in this
proceeding that the Forest Act was
amended effective November 4, 2003.
The amendments include specific
changes to the section 20 auction
program, under which the SBFEP was
replaced by the new B.C. Timber Sales
(BCTS) program. The GOBC claims that
pursuant to these changes, section 20
auction prices may serve as first–tier
benchmarks for the November 2003 to
April 2004 period to determine whether
Crown timber in British Columbia was
sold for less than adequate
remuneration. See GOBC November 22,
2004 Questionnaire Response, BC–III–1.
See also GOBC May 18, 2005 Comments
at page 2.
To support its claim, the GOBC
highlights an amendment that
eliminated the limitation of section 20
auctions to small businesses. Before the
amendment, section 20 sales under the
SBFEP were classified under three
categories. The second and third
categories were subsumed into the new
BCTS program largely unchanged, and
continue to contain the same
restrictions on participants as before the
amendments to the law. According to
the GOBC, the first category, however,
was broadened to include individuals or
corporations that own a timber
processing facility. Previously, these
participants were excluded. This change
effectively eliminated the restriction of
section 20 auction sales to small
businesses allowing them to include all
applicants in the Province. See GOBC
November 22, 2004 Questionnaire
Response, BC–III–2.
As explained in detail, below, the
Department preliminarily determines
that record evidence does not support
the use of prices for Crown timber
auctioned under section 20 of the Forest
Act, as amended, as benchmarks to
measure the adequacy of remuneration
for Crown stumpage. Firstly, the volume
sold at auction does not meet the
standard set out in the Department’s
Regulations. Secondly, the auction
prices submitted by the GOBC are not
market determined prices as they are
effectively limited by Crown stumpage
prices paid by Crown tenure–holding
sawmills. The Department’s analysis
cannot utilize a benchmark that would
reflect any underlying subsidy to
determine whether and to what extent
that very subsidy exists.
Section 351.511(a)(2)(i) of the CVD
Regulations states that in measuring the
adequacy of remuneration the
benchmark may be derived from actual
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
sales from competitively run
government auctions and that, when
choosing from such auction prices,
product similarity, quantities sold, and
other factors affecting comparability
will be considered. The Preamble to the
CVD Regulations further elaborates on
this as it requires the use of market
determined prices which may include
actual sales prices from government–run
auctions where such sales are
competitive, account for a significant
portion of the total market, and are
based solely on price. See Preamble, 63
FR at 65377. Record evidence does not
support the use of prices for Crown
timber auctioned under section 20 of the
Forest Act, as amended, as benchmarks
because the volumes sold under the
auctions are not ‘‘significant.’’ As such,
these prices do not meet this part of the
standard as stipulated in the CVD
Regulations.
Specifically, since the amendments to
the Forest Act became effective, on
November 4, 2003, to the end of the
POR, on March 31, 2004, participants in
the BCTS program, including all auction
sales (i.e., section 20 and section 21),
accounted for 7.1 percent of the total
Crown harvest and volume billed, while
participants in the newly ‘‘unrestricted’’
category 1 auction sales accounted for
only 1.1 percent of the total Crown
harvest and volume billed. See GOBC
April 13, 2005, Exhibit BC–S–225. Thus,
the volume of Crown timber sold by the
GOBC through the section 20 auctions
during the POR cannot be considered to
represent a ‘‘significant’’ portion of the
timber sold in British Columbia during
the POR, and the prices from these
auctions therefore do not meet a key
requirement for their consideration as
benchmarks for measuring the adequacy
of remuneration for government
provided goods.
Our determination that the prices for
Crown timber auctioned under section
20 of the Forest Act, as amended, are
not market–determined prices, but
rather reflect prices for
administratively–set Crown stumpage,
is based on a number of factors. First,
participants in the auctions included
Crown tenure holding sawmills but,
most often, were loggers who then sold
the timber to Crown tenure holding
sawmills. Second, the price that Crown
tenure holding mills are willing to pay
at auction or, more frequently, to loggers
is determined by the price they pay for
Crown stumpage because of the non–
binding Annual Allowable Cut (AAC) in
B.C. Third, the price loggers bid at the
auctions is limited by the price they
receive from their customers, the largest
of whom are tenure–holding sawmills.
Therefore, the auction prices
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
represented directly or indirectly by
sales to Crown tenure–holding sawmills
are effectively determined by Crown
stumpage prices. The substantial
presence of valuations by Crown
tenure–holding sawmills within the
BCTS prices means that the BCTS
auction prices are not market–
determined prices as required in the
Department’s Regulations and are not
useable as benchmarks for measuring
the adequacy of remuneration.
Record information demonstrates that
the participants in BCTS section 20
auctions were primarily logging firms
but included some limited participation
by Crown tenure–holding sawmills . In
a study prepared by Susan Athey and
Peter Cramton of Market Design Inc,
titled ‘‘Competitive Auction Markets in
British Columbia,’’ (BCLTC Study), the
authors state at pages 6—7, that ‘‘most
of the bidders in the auctions during
this time period were not the major
timber companies or tenure–holders,
but rather most bidders were logging
firms.’’ See BCLTC’s March 2, 2005,
factual submission. A footnote in the
study clarifies that ‘‘about two–thirds of
the 34 Coast tracts were won by log
brokers or market loggers, while about
four–fifths of the 142 Interior tracts were
won by log brokers or market loggers.’’
Id
The record further shows that a large
portion of the Crown timber purchased
in the auctions by loggers was, in turn,
sold to Crown tenure–holding sawmills
in the province. The BCLTC Study
explains that because of the nature of
the industry in B.C.:
the efficient industry structure has
specialized logging firms and
manufacturing firms. The logging
firms place bids in BCTS auctions,
and they sell the timber directly to
mills, through log markets, or some
combination thereof. Mills
occasionally participate in auctions
directly, but this participation is the
exception rather than the rule. Id.
During the course of this proceeding,
we specifically asked the GOBC for
additional information concerning the
identity of the BCTS section 20 auctions
bidders and the use of the timber
obtained from these auctions. See the
Department’s requests for information in
the questionnaires to the GOBC, dated
March 16, 2005, March 23, 2005, and
April 5, 2005. The GOBC contacted the
Department on March 21, March 28, and
on April 8, to advise that it was unable
to respond fully to these questionnaires
because of the voluminous data
associated with each of the timber sale
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
licences (TSL) associated with the
section 20 auctions sales.14
In light of this, the Department
requested information from 14
randomly selected TSLs, including a
copy of ‘‘payment distribution,’’ of the
Ministry of Forests (MOF) invoices. The
GOBC provided the requested
information for ten of these TSLs,
stating that no invoices were issued
during the POR for the remaining four
TSLs selected by the Department. The
information from these 10 TSLs shows
that the winning bidders of the Crown
timber under BCTS section 20 auctions
sold at least 65 percent of the timber to
large Crown tenure holders with
sawmills. See Exhibits BC–S–245 and
246 of the GOBC’s April 21, 2005
questionnaire response.
The evidence that the auction
winning loggers’ principal customers
are large tenure–holding sawmills is
supported by the dominance of the B.C.
timber market by the large Crown
tenure–holding sawmills. This is
significant to the extent that it limits the
loggers’ ability to sell timber bought at
the auctions to other customers. Record
information demonstrates that a small
number of these large tenure–holding
sawmills harvest the majority of the
Crown timber in B.C. For example, the
ten largest licensees by AAC (Canadian
Forest Products Ltd., Weyerhaeuser
Company Limited, Slocan Forest
Products Ltd., West Fraser Mills Ltd.,
Doman Industries, International Forest
Products, Riverside Forest Products
Limited, Weldwood of Canada Limited,
Tolko Industries Ltd., and Tembec
Industries Inc) account for
approximately 59 percent of the Crown
harvest and 52 percent of all timber
harvested in the province. See BC–III–
14 of the GOBC’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response and Exhibits
BC–S–1 and BC–S–10. These large
Crown tenure–holding sawmills, and
the timber harvested from
administratively–set Crown logs, thus
dominate a significant portion of the
timber market in British Columbia.
The idea that the customers of loggers
bidding at the auctions are large tenure–
holding sawmills is further supported
with other information on the record.
For example, West Fraser, a large Crown
tenure–holding sawmill, claims that it
purchased logs from market loggers who
won bids in section 20 small business
or BCTS auctions; in such purchases,
West Fraser also claims that other
14 TSLs grant the right to harvest timber within
a specific Timber Supply Area or TFL Area. TSLs
have a duration of no more than 10 years. TSLs
under Section 20 and 23 typically have a one-year
term while TSLs under Section 21 have terms
averaging four or five years.
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
sawmills participated. See BCLTC’s
February 28, 2005 submission at
Appendix C, page 2. Other sawmills
submitted statements that they too
purchased section 20 auction logs from
winning bidders. Id. at Appendices B—
G.
On the basis of the record information
described above showing that most of
the participants in the auctions were
loggers who sold most of the timber
bought at auction to Crown tenure–
holding sawmills, we determine that it
is reasonable to conclude that most of
the Crown timber sold in BCTS section
20 auctions was ultimately purchased
and used by Crown tenure–holding
sawmills.
The AAC in the province effectively
limits the amount that Crown tenure–
holding mills are willing to pay for
timber from the auctions or pay to
loggers who win bids at the auctions.
The AAC in BC is not an effective
limitation on timber supply for Crown
tenure–holding sawmills, as sawmills
can just decide to harvest more from
their Crown tenure, the price they pay
for auctioned timber would be limited
by what they pay for Crown stumpage.
The record shows that these large
Crown tenure–holding sawmills did not
exhaust the amount of timber they could
harvest from their tenures during the
POR. As such, they were not forced to
obtain timber from other sources, such
as the BCTS section 20 auctions,
because of a scarcity of available timber
on their own tenure.
Specifically, the Crown tenure–
holding sawmills, who hold forest
licenses and tree farm licenses, were
allocated 61.0 million cubic meters of
timber or 85 percent of the AAC, which
is the annual rate of timber harvesting
specified in each Timber Supply Area
(TSA), during the POR. However, these
licensees harvested only 42.4 million
cubic meters or 70 percent of their AAC,
a shortfall of 18.6 million cubic meters.
See GOBC’s November 22, 2004,
Questionnaire Response at BC–S–139.
Moreover, since Crown tenure holders
are allowed to overcut their AAC, even
meeting their AAC would not have
necessitated their buying from the
auctions as additional timber could
have been harvested under their
tenures. See GOBC November 22, 2004,
Questionnaire Response at BC–S–88.
The mills’ willingness to pay for timber
from other sources, such as the auctions,
will be limited by their costs for
obtaining timber from their own
tenures.
The price that loggers bid at the
auctions is limited by the price they
receive from tenure–holding sawmills
because these sawmills are major
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33101
purchasers of timber from the loggers
and the major producers of softwood
lumber in B.C. That loggers consider the
price they will receive from tenure–
holding sawmills and that this price
determines what they bid in the BCTS
auctions is demonstrated in the record
by the fact that logging firms negotiate
with the Crown tenure holding sawmills
prior to placing a bid in the BCTS
auction. See GOBC’s November 22,
2004, Questionnaire Response at BC–
IV–43 and April 13, 2005, Supplemental
Response at page 47, and GOBC’s
November 22, 2004, Questionnaire
Response at BC–S–26. See also the
BCLTC Study at page 6–7, which states
that:
The BCTS auctions during this time
period restricted bidders to hold no
more than three BCTS timber
licenses simultaneously. .. In
addition, if a [saw]mill is unable to
bid on a tract due to the restriction,
the market loggers participating in
the BCTS auctions will still take
into account the mill’s valuation for
the logs, since the loggers anticipate
being able to sell the harvested logs
directly to the mill or through the
log market (where log market prices
will reflect the valuations of all
local mills). Thus, a mill’s valuation
for the logs is still reflected in the
auction prices, even it if does not
bid directly. (Emphasis added.)
As stated previously, our analysis
cannot utilize a benchmark that would
reflect any underlying subsidy to
determine whether and to what extent
that very subsidy exists. As described
above, the prices for timber auctioned
under section 20 are effectively limited
by Crown stumpage prices paid by
Crown tenure–holding sawmills. These
sawmills purchase the predominant
amount of the timber bought in the
auctions by logging companies at prices
that are negotiated with the loggers prior
to the auction in addition to being
minor participants in the auctions.
Moreover, the sawmills are in a position
to establish these timber prices in a
manner that reflects the prices they pay
for Crown stumpage on their own
tenures, i.e., administratively–set prices,
because they are not faced with a
scarcity of timber from their tenure.
For these reasons, we preliminarily
determine that the prices of Crown
timber auctioned under section 20 of the
Forest Act, as amended during the POR,
are effectively limited by prices for
administratively–set Crown timber. As
such, these prices cannot serve as
benchmarks to measure the adequacy of
remuneration for Crown provided
timber, because they do not reflect
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33102
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
market–determined prices from
competitively run government auctions,
a key requirement of the CVD
regulations. See 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(i).
Province of Ontario
In the first administrative review, we
determined that the prices for private
standing timber in Ontario placed on
the record by the GOO could not be
used for benchmark purposes.
Specifically, we determined that the
prices reported in a survey prepared by
DGM could not be used as benchmarks
because the prices are effectively
determined by the price for public
timber. See Preliminary Results of 1st
Review, 69 FR at 33215–33217; and
Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comments 20 and 21.
In this review, the GOO submitted
estimates (based on mill return data) of
the volumes of private timber delivered
to the various mills and a survey of
prices of standing timber from private
lands conducted by Bearing Point. In
addition, the GOO submitted an
economic analysis written by Charles
River Associates and a map which
shows the distribution of private forest
lands in Ontario.
This new information has not led us
to alter our findings from the first
review. As in the prior review, we
determine that the prices for private
standing timber in Ontario are
effectively determined by the price for
public timber and, thus, cannot be used
as benchmarks for determining whether
the GOO sells Crown timber for less
than adequate remuneration.
Information on the record indicates
that sawmills in Ontario rely on Crown
timber for the vast majority of their
timber supply needs and use private
timber in small quantities. According to
mill return data provided by the GOO,
70 out of 75 mills reported usage of both
Crown timber and timber from private
lands, accounting for 99.7 percent of the
total volume reported. See Exhibit ON–
SUPP–3 of the GOO’s April 15, 2005,
supplemental questionnaire response.
Also according to data provided by the
GOO, the twenty–five largest sawmills,
which account for about 74 percent of
the volume reported, used
approximately 10 million cubic meters
of Crown timber during POR and less
than one half million cubic meters of
private timber. Information provided on
the record by the GOO also indicates
that tenure holders in Ontario are
virtually unconstrained in the amount
of Crown timber they can obtain. During
the POR, loggers and mills in Ontario
harvested only 70 percent of the annual
allowable cut set by the GOO. See
exhibit ON–TNR–3 of the GOO’s April
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
15, 2005, supplemental questionnaire
response. In each of the last four years,
the harvest level ranged from as low as
56 percent to no more than 88 percent
of the annual allowable cut. Id.
With no constraints on the amount of
Crown timber that sawmills can obtain,
the price that loggers are willing to bid
on private stumpage is dictated by the
difference of the expected sale price of
the log and their harvesting costs plus
profit. Loggers who sell to tenure–
holding mills cannot expect to charge
more for their private logs than the cost
of the logs that the mills can source
from their public tenure. The largest 25
softwood sawmills, producing 92
percent of the lumber in Ontario, have
Crown tenure for which they pay
government–set stumpage prices. See
page ON–236 of the GOO’s November
22, 2004 initial questionnaire response.
Because the AAC in Ontario is not
binding, mills with public tenure can
always harvest more timber from their
tenure and are not driven to the private
market by demand that cannot be met
from their tenure–holdings. See Final
Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comment 20. Their
willingness to pay for logs from other
sources will be limited by their costs for
obtaining timber from their own
tenures. Therefore, the prices loggers
bid for private stumpage are limited by
the public stumpage prices paid by
these mills. For these reasons, the
Department finds that the transactions
recorded in the Bearing Point Survey are
effectively determined by the Crown
stumpage prices and are, hence, not
suitable benchmarks for assessing
adequacy of remuneration.
Our analysis cannot utilize a
benchmark that would reflect any
underlying subsidy to determine
whether and to what extent that very
subsidy exists. Because the prices in the
Bearing Point Survey are dictated by the
price for Crown timber, they are not
useable under tier one of our regulatory
hierarchy.
Province of Quebec
In the first administrative review, we
concluded that prices for private
standing timber in Quebec could not
serve as benchmarks for determining
whether the GOQ sells Crown timber for
less than adequate remuneration
because the incentives that tenure
holders face vis–a-vis the private market
are distorted. We based our conclusion
on the following factors:
• Tenure–holding sawmills have an
interest in maintaining a low value of
standing trees in private forests, as this
value provides the basis for calculating
PO 00000
Frm 00048
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Crown timber prices (the Feedback
Effect)
• Sawmills with access to Crown timber
can avoid sourcing in the private forest
because, among other things, the annual
allowable cut on Crown land is not
binding.
• Tenure–holding sawmills dominate
the private market
• Sawmills without access to Crown
timber account for small harvest volume
in the private forest
See Preliminary Results of 1st Review,
69 FR at 33215–33217. See also Final
Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comments 22 through
33.
A review of the information on the
record of this review has not led us to
alter this finding. Similar to the first
administrative review, the GOQ
provided the aggregate sourcing patterns
of Quebec’s 1,020 softwood sawmills
during 2003. The mills were divided
into four categories: mills sourcing
exclusively from public sources (purely
public mills), mills sourcing exclusively
from private sources (purely private
mills), mills sourcing from public and
private sources, and mills sourcing from
public, private, and other (e.g., imports)
sources (public/private/other mills).
Analysis of the data provided shows
that purely private mills sourced
534,769 cubic meters of softwood timber
which accounted for only 1.7 percent of
the volume of softwood harvested in the
province. See Exhibit 162 of the GOQ’s
April 19, 2005 supplemental
questionnaire response; see also Table 1
of the May 31, 2005, Memorandum to
the File from Eric B. Greynolds,
‘‘Quebec Internal Price Memorandum’’
(Quebec Internal Price Memorandum)
Further, record evidence indicates that
the average consumption rate of the 819
purely private mills continues to be
small, on average approximately 653
cubic meters, relative to the 146 dual–
source mills, whose consumption rate
was approximately 171,421 cubic
meters (a.k.a., mills that source from
public and private sources). Id.
In addition, evidence on the record of
this review indicates that dual–source
mills dominate the market for private
standing timber. The 146 dual–source
mills accounted for 85.9 percent of the
private timber harvested in 2003. Id. At
the same time, dual–source mills
obtained only a small percentage of
their total harvest during 2003 from
private lands. For instance, public/
private/other mills obtained 17.6
percent of their total harvest from the
private forest while public/private mills
sourced just 10.6 percent of their
softwood from the private forest. Id.
Thus, the data continue to indicate that
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
the public stumpage market is a much
more important sourcing component for
dual–source mills and, thus, continues
to be the market on which these mills
focus the majority of their interests and
operations.
As in the first administrative review,
record evidence indicates that the
dominance of the dual–source mills is
pronounced at the corporate level. In
Exhibit 120 of its March 15, 2005
questionnaire response, the GOQ
provided actual consumption data for
440 of Quebec’s softwood sawmills.15
The data in Exhibit 120 indicate that in
2003 six corporations, whose mills
source from both public and private
sources, consumed approximately 54
percent of the total timber harvest, 63
percent of the public harvest, and 31
percent of the private harvest. See Table
2 of the Quebec Internal Price
Memorandum. Further, sorting the data
in Exhibit 120 by private timber
consumption indicates that 20
corporations (15 of which operate dual–
source mills) account for over 70
percent of the private timber harvest.
See Table 3 of the Quebec Internal Price
Memorandum. However, while these
corporations consume the majority of
private timber in Quebec, private–origin
timber accounts, on a weighted–average
basis, for 12 percent of their inputs
while public timber accounts for 83
percent.
In addition, information on the record
of this review indicates that there have
been no changes to Quebec’s Forestry
Act that would lead us to alter our
previous findings that feedback effects
inherent in the GOQ’s administered
stumpage system encourage tenure
holders to maintain low prices for
private timber. We also continue to find
that sawmills with access to Crown
timber can avoid sourcing in the private
forest. Therefore, for purposes of these
preliminary results, we find that private
prices for standing timber in Quebec
cannot serve as benchmarks within the
meaning of 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(i)
when determining whether the GOQ
sells Crown timber for less than
adequate remuneration, because these
prices are distorted by a combination of
the GOQ’s administered stumpage
system, the relative size of public and
private markets, feedback effects
between the private and public markets,
and a non–binding AAC. See ‘‘Private
Provincial Market Prices’’ section of the
15 These mills accounted for nearly all (95
percent) of the softwood processed in the Province
during the POR. Thus, we find that the data in
Exhibit 120 provide a reasonable summary of the
consumption patterns of Quebec’s softwood
sawmills in operation during 2003.
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum.
Provinces of Manitoba and
Saskatchewan
With respect to Manitoba and
Saskatchewan, the provincial
governments did not supply private
market timber prices upon which to
base a first–tier benchmark arising from
those provinces.
Private Stumpage Prices in New
Brunswick and Nova Scotia May Serve
as a First–Tier Benchmarks in the
Subject Provinces
As in the first administrative review,
private stumpage prices for New
Brunswick and Nova Scotia (together,
the Maritimes) were submitted on the
record of this review by the GONB and
GONS, respectively. These prices are
contained in separate price surveys
prepared by AGFOR, Inc. Consulting
(AGFOR) for each of the Maritimes’
governments. See New Brunswick
AGFOR Report at Exhibit 1 of the
GONB’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response. See Nova Scotia
AGFOR Report at Exhibit 4 of the
GONS’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response.
In the first administrative review, we
determined that private stumpage prices
in the Maritimes constituted market
determined, in–country prices
consistent with the first–tier of the
adequate remuneration hierarchy of 19
CFR 351.511(a)(2). Therefore, we used
these prices to assess the adequacy of
remuneration of the Crown stumpage
provided by the GOA, GOM, GOO,
GOQ, and GOS. See Preliminary Results
of 1st Review, 69 FR at 33218. See also
‘‘Private Stumpage Prices in New
Brunswick and Nova Scotia’’ section of
the Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum and at Comments 34, 35,
37, and 38.
As explained in the first
administrative review, Maritimes’
stumpage price reports were prepared
by AGFOR on behalf of the Maritimes’
governments to establish the bases for
their administered stumpage rates and
not for the purpose of this proceeding.
Id. Record evidence further indicated
that in establishing their Crown
stumpage rates, the Maritimes consider
the prevailing prices for stumpage in the
private market and the calculations for
the Crown stumpage rates are thus
directly linked to actual market–based
transactions in the private market. Id. In
addition, in the first administrative
review, we found that the private
supply standing timber constitutes a
significant portion of the overall market
in the Maritimes. See Preliminary
PO 00000
Frm 00049
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33103
Results of 1st Review, 69 FR at 33218.
During the POR of this administrative
review, private supply accounts for 49.2
percent of the total harvest in New
Brunswick and over 89.4 percent in
Nova Scotia. See Exhibit 1 of the
GONB’s May 2, 2005 submission; see
page 2 of the GONS’s November 23,
2004 submission.
Although interested parties have
contested our use of Maritimes’ private
stumpage prices in this review, we find
their comments do not contain any new
evidence or argument which would
warrant a reconsideration of our prior
finding. For example, the argument that
Maritimes’ private stumpage prices do
not reflect prevailing market conditions
in the subject provinces is fully
addressed in the first review. See Final
Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comment 38. Thus, we
preliminarily determine that the
Maritimes’ private prices are market–
determined prices in Canada, and are
therefore usable under the first tier of
our adequate remuneration hierarchy,
and consistent with our approach in the
first administrative review, we have
used Maritimes’ private prices to
measure the adequacy of remuneration
of the stumpage programs administered
by the GOA, GOS, GOM, GOO, and
GOQ.16
Comparability of Maritimes Standing
Timber to Standing Timber in Alberta,
Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, and
Saskatchewan
The Nova Scotia and New Brunswick
Reports contain prices for the general
timber species category of eastern SPF.17
The species included in eastern SPF
are also the primary and most
commercially significant species
reported in the SPF groupings for
Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba,
Saskatchewan and a portion of Alberta,
accounting for over 90 percent of the
entire timber harvest across these
provinces.18
In the first administrative review, we
found that although there is some minor
variation of the relative concentration of
16 In the first administrative review, we
determined that Maritimes’ private prices were not
the most appropriate benchmark for British
Columbia. See ‘‘Benchmark Prices for B.C.’’ section
of the Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum. We have continued to adopt this
approach in the current review. See ‘‘Maritimes
Prices are not the most appropriate Benchmark for
British Columbia’’ section of these preliminary
results for further discussion.
17 This category includes, among other species,
white spruce, black spruce, red spruce, jack pine,
and balsam fir which represents the vast majority
of the species harvested in the Maritimes.
18 98 percent for Quebec, 94 percent for Ontario,
99 percent for Saskatchewan, 99 percent for
Manitoba, and 99 percent for Alberta.
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33104
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
individual species across provinces, this
does not affect comparability for
benchmark purposes. See, e.g.,
Preliminary Results of 1st Review, 69
FR at 33219; and ‘‘Private Stumpage
Prices in New Brunswick and Nova
Scotia’’ section of the Final Results of
1st Review Decision Memorandum and
at Comment 38. We further found that
the provinces themselves do not
generally differentiate between these
species; rather, they tend to group all
eastern SPF species into one category
for data collection and pricing, e.g.,
Quebec charges one stumpage price for
‘‘SPF.’’ Id.
In this review, petitioners contend
that it is not appropriate to measure the
adequacy of the GOA’s administered
stumpage system because a significant
portion of Alberta’s Crown harvest
consists of species that are made into
Western ‘‘SPF’’ lumber, which is
superior and, therefore, not comparable
to the Eastern ‘‘SPF’’ lumber produced
from standing timber harvested in the
Maritimes. See page 63 through 69 of
petitioners’ April 29, 2005, submission.
Petitioners further argue that it is not
appropriate to compare Maritimes’
stumpage prices to Alberta’s Crown
stumpage prices because there is little
commonality between western and
eastern softwood species. Id.19
We note that petitioners’ contentions
are premised on the notion that there is
a premium attached to Western ‘‘SPF’’
lumber, which results in a premium for
Western ‘‘SPF’’ logs. On this point, we
note that petitioners have themselves
asserted the opposite. In a submission to
the Department regarding the ruling of
the NAFTA dispute settlement panel,
petitioners urged the Department to
measure the adequacy of remuneration
of the subject provinces’ administered
stumpage system using a U.S.-based log
benchmark. See petitioners’ August 27,
2003 submission, a public document on
file in the CRU. In support of their
argument that the use of a U.S.-based
log benchmark would be feasible,
petitioners contended that minimal
adjustments would be necessary to
calculate the subsidy benefits for the
subject provinces:
Any comparisons based on log prices
should be species–specific. With
the exception of the BC Coast,
19 Petitioners made similar contentions regarding
the dissimilarity of logs and lumber from the
Maritimes and Alberta during their April 14 and
May 5 meetings with members of the Import
Administration staff. See the attachments in the
April 14 and May 6, 2005 memorandums to the file
from Eric B. Greynolds, Program Manager, Office of
AD/CVD Enforcement III, entitled, ‘‘Meeting with
Counsel to the Coalition for Fair Lumber Imports
Concerning the Upcoming Preliminary Results.’’
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
however, the large majority of
Canadian timber falls into the
spruce–pine-fir (‘‘SPF’’) category,
which is generally recognized as
commercially interchangeable.
See page 72 of petitioners’ August 27,
2003 submission. They further stated
that because, ’’. . . most Canadian
lumber . . . is sold as part of the
undifferentiated SPF lumber grouping,
timber harvests are largely simply SPF
as well.’’ Id. Petitioners went on to cite
a statement made by a major Canadian
lumber company, Abitibi–Consolidated,
Inc., in the context of the antidumping
investigation in which it also attested to
the interchangeability of eastern and
western SPF lumber. Id. On this basis,
petitioners concluded that in calculating
a U.S.-based log benchmark,
‘‘adjustments for species within the SPF
group, therefore, are not necessary.’’ Id.
Further, in the context of the
antidumping proceeding, the
Department also found eastern and
western SPF to be interchangeable. See
Notice of Preliminary Determination of
Sales at Less Than Fair Value and
Postponement of Final Determination:
Certain Softwood Lumber Products from
Canada, 66 FR 56062 (November 6,
2001), where, in reference to lumber, the
Department stated:
. . . Eastern and Western Spruce–PineFir are identical from the
viewpoints of the markets and with
respect to end–use. The ‘‘eastern’’
and ‘‘western’’ designations are
simply a regional distinction which
is irrelevant for purposes of product
comparison in this investigation.
Regarding the comparability of the
Maritimes to the subject provinces, in
the first administrative review we also
determined that the species maps for
SPF demonstrate that the species
group’s range of growth stretches from
the Maritimes to Alberta. See Final
Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comment 38. We
further determined that record evidence
demonstrated that SPF trees are
comparable across their entire growing
range as demonstrated by tree diameter,
which is one of the most important
characteristics in terms of lumber use.
Id. For example, we found comparable
diameters among SPF trees grown from
the Maritimes to Alberta. Id. In
particular, we found that at the
easternmost portion of their range, SPF’s
average diameter at breast height (DBH)
in New Brunswick is 7.78 inches, at the
westernmost portion of their range in
Alberta, the DBH is 8.00 inches, and in
Quebec, which accounts for the largest
overall harvest, the DBH is 7.91. Id.
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
In their April 29, 2005 submission,
petitioners contend that the diameter
information the Department relied on in
the first administrative review
overstated the average diameter of the
Maritimes’ standing timber and
understated the diameter of the subject
provinces, namely that of Alberta. They
argue that if the Department accounts
for biases in the diameter data, it will
find that, regardless of the
preponderance of SPF, the Maritimes
logs are too small relative to those of the
subject provinces to be used as
stumpage benchmark.
The Department continues to rely on
the diameter data it relied on in the first
review. We note that petitioners
previously stated that:
. . .for sawlog sizes up to the 10–inch
diameter class—the vast bulk of
relevant logs in both the U.S. and
Canada, outside of the B.C. Coast—
log prices do not substantially vary
on a per–unit-basis, as long as the
logs are of a sufficient size and
quality to be sold to sawmills for
milling into lumber.
Id. at 73.
For these reasons, we preliminarily
determine that Maritimes’ prices for
eastern SPF are comparable to Crown
stumpage prices for the SPF species
groupings in Quebec,20 Ontario,
Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta.
Accordingly, consistent with 19 CFR
351.511(a)(2)(i), we have compared
these market–determined, in–country
prices to the Crown stumpage prices in
each of the provinces to determine
whether the Crown prices were for less
than adequate remuneration.
Application of Maritimes Prices
Having preliminarily found that the
Maritimes’ prices are in–country,
market–determined prices, we next
consider how to apply these prices in
our benefit calculations.
1. Indexing
The Nova Scotia Report contains price
data from 1999. The New Brunswick
Report contains price data for the period
July 1, 2002, to November 30, 2002. In
the first administrative review, we
indexed the data in the Nova Scotia
Report using using a lumber–specific
index reported for the Atlantic Region
by STATCAN. See Preliminary Results
20 Consistent with our approach in the first
administrative review, we continue to find that
Quebec’s SPF basket includes larch. Accordingly,
we constructed an SPF benchmark which includes
larch for Quebec for this review. See, e.g., Final
Results of 1st Review Decision Memorandum at
Comment 40.
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
33105
of 1st Review, 69 FR at 33218.21 In the
current administrative review,
petitioners have argued that it is
incorrect to index stumpage prices using
a lumber price index, especially since
the evidence they submitted on the
record purportedly indicates diverging
lumber and log prices. See page 89 of
petitioners’ April 29, 2005 submission.
Petitioners contend that we should
instead rely on indices derived from log
price data from the Atlantic Forestry
Review (AFR), a Maritimes–based
publication that reports softwood
sawlog prices on a bi–annual basis, to
index the pricing data from Nova Scotia
and New Brunswick. They further argue
that if we continue to use the STATCAN
index for Nova Scotia, then we should
index the private pricing data in the
New Brunswick Report using a
constructed lumber price index derived
from lumber pricing data reported by
Madison’s Canadian Lumber Reporter
(Madison’s), a British Columbia–based
lumber reporting publication, on the
grounds that record evidence indicates
that the GONB uses the Madison’s
publication to set their administered
stumpage prices.
During the POR, the AFR published
price information in July 2003 and
January 2004. See the May 31, 2005,
Memorandum to the File from Maura
Jeffords, Case Analyst, AD/CVD
Enforcement, Office 3 (AFR
Memorandum). The July 2003
publication covered a one-week period
in May 2003, while the January
publication covered a one-week period
in late November 2003. Id. According to
officials at the AFR, their softwood log
price surveys cover approximately 20
respondents, with five to ten percent of
the selection varying between
publications. Id. Regarding Madison’s,
officials from the publication stated that
it does not collect lumber prices from
entities in the Maritime provinces. See
the May 31, 2005, Memorandum to the
File from Maura Jeffords, Case Analyst,
AD/CVD Enforcement, Office 3
(Madison’s Memorandum).
For purposes of these preliminary
results, we have determined to index
the private price data from the New
Brunswick and Nova Scotia Reports
using the lumber–specific index
reported for the Atlantic Region by
STATCAN. First, information from
Madison’s indicates that it does not
collect lumber price information for the
Maritimes. We further note that the AFR
and Madison’s simply contain price
information and are not indices in and
of themselves. Thus, to use the
publications in the manner requested by
petitioners requires that the Department
construct an index based on limited
data. In contrast, the lumber index from
STATCAN is prepared and maintained
in the ordinary course of business and
can be incorporated into our
calculations without the added steps
that would be necessary to construct an
index using the data from AFR and
Madison’s. See the May 31, 2005,
Memorandum to the File from Eric B.
Greynolds, Program Manager, AD/CVD
Enforcement, Office 3, ‘‘Data on the
Statistics Canada Obtained from the
Internet and Placed on the Record.’’
Further, STATCAN produces its lumber
index using an established and
consistent methodology from year to
year that involves mandatory
respondents, including a group of ‘‘must
take’’ respondents that are included in
every survey period. Id. In addition,
STATCAN employs commodity
specialists to conduct follow–up
inquiries of outlier, incorrect, or
suspicious prices. Id.
Thus, we acknowledge that, in an
ideal situation, we would use a pre–
existing stumpage or log index to adjust
for price changes in the Maritime price
data. However, in light of the evidence
submitted on the record of this review,
we preliminary determine that the
constructed log index proposed by
petitioners remains inferior to the
lumber price index from STATCAN.
2. Costs That Must Be Paid in Order to
Harvest Private Standing Timber in New
Brunswick and Nova Scotia
In the first administrative review, we
found that the pricing data for New
Brunswick and Nova Scotia reflect the
prices paid by harvesters for standing
timber and include the value of the
timber being purchased in addition to
any landowner costs. See Final Results
of 1st Review Decision Memorandum at
Comment 39. We also found that
harvesters in the Maritimes incur
additional costs that must be paid in
order to be able to acquire private
timber. Specifically, we found that
harvesters in New Brunswick are
required to pay silviculture fees as well
as administrative fees to the marketing
board operating within the region. In
Nova Scotia, in order to be able to
acquire the standing timber, the
registered buyer must either pay for or
perform in–kind activities equal to
C$3.00 for every cubic meter of private
wood harvested. Id.22 For purposes of
3. Weighting of Studwood in the Nova
Scotia Benchmark
The GONS does not collect harvest
volume data by log type (i.e., studwood
log, sawlog, or treelength log). Thus, in
its Nova Scotia Report, AGFOR used a
methodology which allowed it to
allocate prices to the corresponding log
type. Specifically, AGFOR, when it
constructed the weighted prices found
on page 23 of the AGFOR Nova Scotia
Report, allocated an equal share of the
volume to all of the log types harvested
in a given region within Nova Scotia.
See, e.g., page 13 and 14 of the October
1, 2004 memorandum to Melissa G.
Skinner, Director, Office of AD/CVD
Enforcement 3, from Maura Jeffords,
Case Analyst, Office of AD/CVD
Enforcement 3, regarding, ‘‘Verification
of the Questionnaire Responses
Submitted by Governments of New
Brunswick (GONB) and Nova Scotia
(GONS) and AGFOR Reports Submitted
in Reference to Private Prices in New
Brunswick and Nova Scotia,’’
(Maritimes Verification Report), which
was placed on the record of this review
in the GOC’s March 15, 2005
submission. In the first administrative
review, we determined that it was
reasonable to accept AGFOR’s
methodology for reporting the Nova
Scotia stumpage prices. See Final
Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comment 37.
Petitioners contend that it is not
appropriate to weight the studwood
prices in the manner described above.
They argue that lumber production
capacity data for Nova Scotia sawmills
contained in a 2003 United States Forest
Service (USFS) Survey demonstrate that
the Department’s approach in the first
administrative review vastly overstates
the amount of studwood in Nova Scotia.
They assert that the data in the USFS
survey demonstrate that a weight of 10.3
percent should be attributed to the
studwood prices contained in the Nova
Scotia Report. See petitioners’ April 29,
2005 submission at page 97.
First, we acknowledge the difficulty
involved in attaching a weight to the
studwood prices contained in the
21 It was not necessary to index the pricing data
in the New Brunswick Report because it coincided
with the POR of the first administrative review.
22 In the final results of the first review, we also
confirmed that harvesters of private standing timber
in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick do not incur
any other charges (i.e., road building/maintenance
costs, fire prevention costs, or land-owner related
costs).
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
these preliminary results, we find there
has been no new information or
arguments from interested parties that
would warrant a reconsideration of
these findings. Therefore, we added
these costs to the indexed stumpage
prices to obtain the average stumpage
price for softwood logs from New
Brunswick and Nova Scotia.
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33106
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
AGFOR report. In light of this fact, in
these preliminary results we continue to
rely on the approach adopted by
AGFOR in the Nova Scotia Report. As
noted in Final Results of 1st Review
Decision Memorandum, AGFOR
developed this approach in the ordinary
course of business prior to the initiation
of the CVD investigation. Moreover, the
Department found AGFOR’s approach to
be reasonable in the first administrative
review. Second, regarding the studwood
weight that petitioners derived using
mill capacity data from the USFS
survey, we note that it is based on only
8 sawmills and, thus, does not account
for dozens of additional mills in Nova
Scotia that produce significant
commercial quantities of lumber.
Benchmark Prices Used for British
Columbia
Maritimes’ Stumpage Prices Are Not the
Most Appropriate Benchmarks for
British Columbia
In the final results of the first review,
we concluded that the Maritimes’
private stumpage prices were not
suitable as benchmarks for British
Columbia because of the lack of
commercial interchangeability between
the species in British Columbia and the
eastern SPF species in the Maritimes.
See ‘‘Maritimes Benchmarks Are Not the
Most Appropriate for B.C.’’ section of
the Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum. We preliminarily
determine that the record does not
contain any new evidence which would
warrant a reconsideration of our finding
from the final results of the first review.
B.C. Log Prices Are Not An Appropriate
Benchmark
In the final results of the first review,
we found that stumpage and log markets
in British Columbia were closely
intertwined and therefore Crown
stumpage prices affected both stumpage
and log prices. See ‘‘B.C. Log Prices Are
Not An Appropriate Benchmark’’
section of the Final Results of 1st
Review Decision Memorandum. We
further found that Crown logs were, in
fact, sold in substantial quantities on the
log market. Id. For example, we found
that the great majority of wood sold in
B.C. (apart from allocated Crown wood)
was purchased by large integrated
tenure–holding producers who purchase
wood for their sawmills following
standard purchase contracts that were
structured as log or stumpage purchases.
Thus, we determined that these
producers were indifferent as to which
form of wood, i.e., either timber or logs,
they purchased for use in softwood
lumber production and that the decision
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
to purchase either timber or logs would
instead ultimately depend on price.
In the final results of the first
administrative review, we further
determined that, because these
companies simultaneously purchased
and used both forms of wood, they must
in principle view the cost of stumpage
and logs as equivalent, i.e., stumpage
price plus the cost of harvesting should
equate to the cost of a log. In addition,
we explained that the fact these
producers used both timber and logs
throughout the period of the first review
to produce softwood lumber meant that
stumpage–log price equivalence was
maintained throughout that review
period and that this, in turn, suggested
that the timber and log prices were
linked (e.g., low (or high) timber prices
means low (or high) log prices). Id. On
this basis, in the final results of the first
review, we determined that there was
sufficient record evidence to conclude
that subsidized prices in the Crown
stumpage market would result in price
suppression in the sales of Crown logs.
Id. For these reasons, we also
determined that B.C. log prices are not
market–determined prices independent
from the effects of the underlying Crown
stumpage prices and, therefore, cannot
be used to assess the adequacy of
remuneration of B.C.’s stumpage
program. For purposes of these
preliminary results, we find that the
record does not contain any new
evidence which would warrant a
reconsideration of our finding from the
final results of the first review.
U.S. Stumpage Prices Are Not the Most
Appropriate Benchmark for British
Columbia
In the first administrative review, we
explained that we were cognizant of the
fact that a NAFTA Panel, considering
the B.C. benchmark employed in the
underlying investigation, found that
standing timber is not a good that is
commonly traded across borders. See
‘‘World Market Prices’’ in Final Results
of 1st Review Decision Memorandum.
We also explained, in considering U.S.
stumpage prices as a benchmark under
our regulatory hierarchy, that using
those prices would require complex
adjustments to the available data. We
therefore turned our analysis to U.S. log
prices. Id. For purposes of these
preliminary results, we find that the
record of this review does not contain
any new evidence that would warrant a
reconsideration of our finding from the
final results of the first review.
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
U.S. Log Prices Are a More Appropriate
Benchmark
In the final results of the first
administrative review, we found that
U.S. log prices may constitute third–tier
benchmarks when determining the
adequacy of remuneration of the
GOBC’s administered stumpage program
(i.e., a benchmark that is consistent with
market principles under 19 CFR
351.511(a)(2)(iii)). See ‘‘U.S. Log Prices
Are a More Appropriate Benchmark’’ in
Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum. In the final results of the
first review, we stated that a market
principles analysis by its very nature
depends on the available information
concerning the market sector at issue,
and must, therefore, be developed on a
case–by-case basis. In this case, we
found that using U.S. log prices is
consistent with a market principles
analysis, because (1) stumpage values
are largely derived from the demand for
logs produced from a given tree; (2) the
timber species in the U.S. Pacific
Northwest and British Columbia are
very similar and, therefore, U.S. log
prices, properly adjusted for market
conditions in British Columbia, are
representative of prices for timber in
British Columbia; and (3) U.S. log prices
are market determined. Id. For purposes
of these preliminary results, we find
that the record of the current review
does not contain any new evidence
which would warrant a reconsideration
of our finding from the final results of
the first review. We also continue to
make the same adjustments to derive the
market stumpage prices for British
Columbia. See ‘‘Calculation of the
‘‘Derived Market Stumpage Price’’
section below.
Application of U.S. Log Prices
1. Selection of Data Sources
In the final results of the first review,
our U.S. log benchmark for the B.C.
Coast consisted of Log Lines prices for
Washington and Oregon, as well as
Oregon prices from the Oregon
Department of Forestry. Our U.S. log
benchmark prices for the B.C. Interior
consisted of prices from Northwest
Management Inc.’s Log Market Report
covering eastern Washington and
Northern Idaho (Area 1) and western
Montana (Area 4) as well as prices from
the University of Montana’s Montana
Sawlog & Veneer Log Report that
contains log prices for western Montana.
In this review, interested parties have
submitted updated U.S. log prices from
the four sources covering the same
regions listed above. Interested parties
have also submitted additional U.S. log
price data for the current review period
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
from the following sources: Oregon Log
Market Report, Washington Log Market
Report, Pacific Rim Wood Market
Report, Timber Data Company, and
Idaho Department of Lands.
We preliminarily determine to
continue to use the U.S. log price
sources listed above for the B.C. Coast
and Interior, as updated for the current
POR. In addition, we preliminarily
determine to include the following
additional U.S. log price data sources
for the B.C. coast: Oregon Log Market
Report, Washington Log Market Report,
and Pacific Rim Wood Market Report
(which cover the coast, northwest, and
southwest Oregon and Washington). For
the B.C. interior, we preliminarily
determine to include the following
additional U.S. log price data sources:
Oregon Log Market Report and
Washington Log Market Report (which
cover eastern Oregon, eastern
Washington, Idaho, and Montana). We
have preliminarily decided not to use
the Western Washington log prices
reported by the Timber Data Company
and the Idaho Department of Lands’
‘‘pond value’’ log prices, as prepared by
the Timber Data Company. For
additional information concerning our
selection of the additional data sets, see
the May 31, 2005, Memorandum to the
File regarding the Preliminary
Calculations for the Province of British
Columbia.
2. Derivation of U.S. Log Prices on a Per
Unit Basis For Use in Comparison to
Log Prices on the B.C. Coast and Interior
a. Weighting of U.S. Log Price Sources
As explained above, in the final
results of the first review, we used a
total of four sources to derive our U.S.
log price benchmarks (i.e., two sources
for the B.C. Coast and two sources for
the B.C. Interior). For both the B.C.
Coast and Interior, we derived the U.S.
log benchmark prices by taking the
average unit price of the two respective
data sources. See the February 28, 2005,
Memorandum to the File regarding the
Amended Final Results Calculations for
B.C. at Table 3A.
The GOBC argues that if the
Department continues to use U.S. logs
as the benchmark for British Columbia,
it should calculate simple averages
using a different methodology from the
one it employed in the first
administrative review. See GOBC and
BCLTC’s February 28, 2005 Factual
Submission at Vol. 1, p.76. The GOBC
asserts that the methodology employed
by the Department in the final results of
the first review overstates the
significance of log price data in certain
states based on nothing other than the
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
availability of data for those states. They
argue that it is more appropriate to
develop a simple average for each state
within each benchmark area, and then
calculate a simple average of those
prices. Id.
We preliminarily find that the GOBC’s
proposed simple–averaging
methodology creates additional
complications and we have not made
the requested changes. For example,
some U.S. log data sources report log
prices for regions or areas which
include two U.S. states. However, we
welcome comments from interested
parties on the simple–average
methodology previously employed and
on the GOBC and BCLTC comments on
this issue. We will continue to examine
the manner in which we average the
benchmark U.S. log prices used in
measuring the adequacy of
remuneration of the GOBC’s stumpage
programs on the B.C. Coast and Interior.
b.Conversion of U.S. Log Prices into
Canadian Dollar (CAD) / cubic meter
The U.S. log price data was expressed
in U.S. dollars (USD) per thousand
board feet (mbf). Therefore, it was
necessary to convert our benchmark
data so that they were expressed in the
same currency and unit of measure as
the B.C. administered stumpage prices.
In the final results of the first review, we
converted U.S. log price data for the
B.C. Coast using a conversion factor of
6.76 USD / cubic meter. For the B.C.
Interior, we used a conversion factor of
5.93 USD / cubic meter. We then
converted the benchmark prices into
Canadian currency based on the average
of the daily USD / CAD daily exchange
rate, as published by the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York. For
purposes of these preliminary results,
we find that the record does not contain
any new evidence which would warrant
a reconsideration of our approach from
the final results of the first review.
Therefore, we continue to apply the
same conversion factors and exchange
approach that was employed in the final
results of the first review.
33107
agreement) and those costs that are
necessary to access the standing timber
for harvesting (but that may differ
substantially depending on the location
of the timber). Where such costs are
incurred by harvesters in either the
Maritimes or the subject provinces, we
included them in our benefit
calculations. We did not, however,
make adjustments for costs that might
be necessary to access the standing
timber for harvesting but that do not
differ substantially based on the
location of the timber (e.g., costs for
tertiary road construction and
harvesting). Because the Maritimes data
reflect prices at the point of harvest, we
also did not include post–harvest
activities such as scaling and delivering
logs to mills or market. Id. In this
manner, we adjusted the unit stumpage
prices of the GOA, GOS, GOM, GOO,
and GOQ such that they were on the
same ‘‘level’’ as the private stumpage
prices we obtained from the Maritimes.
We preliminarily determine that the
record does not contain any new
evidence which would warrant a
reconsideration of our finding from the
final results of the first review.
1. Province of Alberta
a. Derivation of Administered Stumpage
Unit Prices
To derive Alberta’s administratively
established stumpage rate, we divided
the total timber dues charged to tenure
holders during the POR for each species
by the total softwood stumpage billed
under each tenure for each species. In
this manner, we obtained a weighted–
average stumpage price per species that
was paid by tenure holders during the
POR.
Adjustment to Administrative Stumpage
Unit Price
b. Adjustments to Administered
Stumpage Unit Price
Pursuant to the methodology
established in the final results of the
first review, we have added the
following costs to Alberta’s
administered stumpage unit price:23
• Costs for Primary and Secondary
Roads (e.g., Permanent Road Costs
in Road Classes 1 Through 4)
• Basic Reforestation
• Forest Management Planning
• Holding and Protection
In the final results of the first review,
we established a methodology for
adjusting the unit prices of the Crown
stumpage programs administered by the
GOA, GOS, GOM, GOO, and GOQ. See,
e.g., Final Results of 1st Review
Decision Memorandum at Comment 39.
Under this methodology, we focused on
those costs that are assumed under the
timber contract (e.g., the Crown tenure
23 For a description of the derivation of the unit
costs added to the GOA’s administered stumpage
price, see the May 31, 2005, Preliminary
Calculations Memorandum for Alberta. The
derivation of the unit costs for the GOS, GOM,
GOO, and GOQ are also described in this
calculation memorandum. The categories of costs
added to the administered stumpage prices of the
GOA, GOS, GOM, GOO, and GOQ are the same as
those used in the final results of the review. See
Final Results of 1st Review Decision Memorandum
at Comment 39.
Calculation of Provincial Benefits
PO 00000
Frm 00053
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33108
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
• Environmental Protection
• Forest Inventory
• Reforestation Levy
• Fire, Insect, and Disease Protection
c. Calculation of the Benefit
To calculate the unit benefit under
this program, we compared the species–
specific benchmark prices (the
Maritimes private stumpage prices
described above) to the GOA’s
corresponding adjusted administered
stumpage prices. In this manner, we
calculated a unit benefit for each species
group. Next, we calculated the species–
specific unit benefit by the total
species–specific softwood timber billed
volume in Alberta during the POR.
Regarding the softwood timber billed
volume used in the benefit calculations,
the GOA claims that its stumpage
classification system does not allow the
province to isolate the wood volumes
going strictly to sawmills and used to
produce lumber. Thus, it is necessary to
derive the volume of softwood Crown
logs that entered and were processed by
Alberta’s sawmills during the POR (i.e.,
logs used in the lumber production
process). We performed a similar
calculation in the first administrative
review. However, upon identifying
additional information discussed below,
we determined that it is necessary to
alter our approach to the calculations
for Alberta.
The GOA argues that this volume
amount harvested by non–sawmillowning tenure holders should not be
included in our calculations. However,
by the GOA’s own admission, this
volume amount includes logs that were
subsequently sold to sawmills. See, e.g.,
page 8 of the GOA’s May 2, 2005
supplemental questionnaire response.
Further, with respect to this volume
amount, the GOA provided no means by
which we could identify the portion of
the volume that went to sawmills and
the portion that was exported or went to
non–sawmills. Thus, because there is no
way to break out this volume amount
and because the GOA has offered no
information on whether any subsidies
attributable to this softwood timber did
or did not pass through to any sawmills,
we have, as a starting point, included
the entire timber volume in question
when determining the volume of Crown
logs to include in the numerator of
Alberta’s provincial subsidy rate
calculation.
In order to determine the volume of
Crown logs that went to sawmills
(a.k.a., ‘‘net–down’’ approach), we have
slightly revised the methodology that
was used in the first administrative
review. Specifically, we have used the
GOA’s Section 80/81 timber data from
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
Table 39, Exhibit AB–S–87 that has not
been ‘‘netted down’’ as the basis for
Alberta’s benefit calculation. This data
differs from the data set reported in the
first review (Alberta Verification
Exhibit, GOA–3, AR Table 43, Exhibit
AB–S–70) because it represents the
Section 80/81 basket category of timber
which has not been ‘‘netted down’’ to
exclude the volumes from tenure
holders who do not own sawmills.
We subsequently added the volumes
of certain non–lumber categories to the
Crown Section 80/81 data to capture the
universe of timber going to sawmills
which corresponds to the provincial
softwood billed volume identified in the
PwC survey and reported by the GOA in
Exhibit AB–S–107. The resulting
aggregate Crown softwood billed
volume was then ‘‘netted down’’ using
the ‘‘percentage of survey billed volume
as lumber’’ reported in the PwC survey
results. This calculation enabled the
Department to derive the Alberta’s total
Crown stumpage billed volume on a
species–specific basis, which reflects
the volume of provincial stumpage cut
by tenure holders and sent to sawmills
for processing into lumber and co–
products. For further discussion, see the
Preliminary Calculation Memorandum.24
Finally, we summed the species–
specific benefits to calculate the total
stumpage benefit for the province.
d. Calculation of Provincial and
Country–Wide Rate
To calculate the province–specific
subsidy rate, we divided the total
stumpage benefit by Alberta’s POR
stumpage program denominator. For a
discussion of the denominator used to
derive the provincial rate for stumpage
programs, see ‘‘Numerator and
Denominator Used for Calculating the
Stumpage Programs’ Net Subsidy Rates’’
in these preliminary results. As
explained in ‘‘Aggregate Subsidy Rate
Calculation,’’ we weight–averaged the
benefit from this provincial subsidy
program by Alberta’s relative share of
total exports of softwood lumber to the
United States during the POR. The total
countervailable subsidy for the
provincial stumpage programs can be
found in ‘‘Country–Wide Rate for
Stumpage.’’
24 We note that this volume of timber is separate
from the volume of timber included in the GOA’s
pass through claim. For further information
regarding the GOA’s pass through claim, see the
‘‘Pass Through’’ section of these preliminary
results.
PO 00000
Frm 00054
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
2. Province of Manitoba
a. Adjustments to Administered
Stumpage Unit Price
The GOM reported average, per unit
stumpage prices for the POR. Thus, our
next step was to adjust the per unit
stumpage prices pursuant to the
methodology described above in
‘‘Calculation of Provincial Benefits.’’
Specifically, we have added the
following costs to Manitoba’s
administered stumpage unit price:
• Forest Renewal Charge
• Forest Management License
Silviculture
• Costs for Permanent Roads (e.g.,
Primary and Secondary Roads)
• Forest Inventory
• Forest Management Planning
• Environmental Protection
• Fire Protection.
b. Calculation of the Benefit
To calculate the unit benefit conferred
under the GOM’s administered
stumpage program, we subtracted from
the species–specific benchmark prices
the cost–adjusted weighted average
stumpage price per species. Next, we
calculated the species–specific benefit
by multiplying the species–specific unit
benefit by the total softwood timber
harvest volume for that species during
the POR. We then summed the species–
specific benefits to calculate the total
stumpage benefit for the province.
c. Calculation of Provincial and
Country–Wide Rate
To calculate the province–specific
subsidy rate, we divided the total
stumpage benefit for Manitoba by the
POR stumpage program denominator.
For a discussion of the denominator
used to derive the provincial rate for
stumpage programs, see ‘‘Numerator
and Denominator Used for Calculating
the Stumpage Programs’ Net Subsidy
Rates.’’ As explained in ‘‘Aggregate
Subsidy Rate Calculation,’’ we weight–
averaged the benefit from this provincial
subsidy program by Manitoba’s relative
share of total exports of softwood
lumber to the United States during the
POR. The total countervailable subsidy
for the provincial stumpage programs
can be found in ‘‘Country–Wide Rate for
Stumpage.’’
3. Province of Saskatchewan
a. Derivation of Administered Stumpage
Unit Prices
To derive Saskatchewan’s
administratively established stumpage
rate, we divided the total stumpage
collections for each species by the
corresponding volume of Crown
softwood timber destined to sawmills.
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
In this manner, we obtained a
weighted–average stumpage price per
species that was paid by tenure holders
during the POR.
b. Adjustments to Administered
Stumpage Unit Price
Next, we adjusted the administered
stumpage unit prices pursuant to the
methodology describe above in
‘‘Calculation of Provincial Benefits.’’
Specifically, we have added the
following costs to Saskatchewan’s
administered stumpage unit price:
• Forest Management Fee
• Processing Facilities License Fee
• Forest Product Permit Application
Fee
• Forest Management Activities
• Costs for Permanent Roads (e.g.,
Primary and Secondary Roads).
c. Calculation of the Benefit
To calculate the unit benefit conferred
under the GOS’s administered stumpage
program, we subtracted from the
species–specific benchmark prices the
cost–adjusted weighted average
stumpage price per species. Next, we
calculated the species–specific benefit
by multiplying the species–specific unit
benefit by the total softwood timber
harvest volume for that species during
the POR. We then summed the species–
specific benefits to calculate the total
stumpage benefit for the province.
d.Calculation of Provincial and
Country–Wide Rate
To calculate the province–specific
subsidy rate, we divided the total
stumpage benefit for Saskatchewan by
the POR stumpage program
denominator. For a discussion of the
denominator used to derive the
provincial rate for stumpage programs,
see ‘‘Numerator and Denominator Used
for Calculating the Stumpage Programs’
Net Subsidy Rates.’’ As explained in
‘‘Aggregate Subsidy Rate Calculation,’’
we weight–averaged the benefit from
this provincial subsidy program by
Ontario’s relative share of total exports
of softwood lumber to the United States
during the POR. The total
countervailable subsidy for the
provincial stumpage programs can be
found in ‘‘Country–Wide Rate for
Stumpage.’’
4. Province of Ontario
a. Derivation of Administered Stumpage
Unit Prices
To derive Ontario’s administratively
established stumpage rate, we divided
the total stumpage collections for each
species by the corresponding volume of
Crown softwood timber destined to
sawmills. In this manner, we obtained a
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
weighted–average stumpage price per
species that was paid by tenure holders
during the POR.
33109
b. Adjustments to Administered
Stumpage Unit Price
Next, we adjusted the administered
stumpage unit prices pursuant to the
methodology describe above in the
‘‘Calculation of Provincial Benefits’’
section of these preliminary results.
Specifically, we have added the
following costs to Ontario’s
administered stumpage unit price:
• Forest Management Planning
• Construction and Maintenance of
Primary and Secondary Roads
• Fire Protection.
Next, we adjusted the administered
stumpage unit prices pursuant to the
methodology describe above in
‘‘Calculation of Provincial Benefits.’’
Specifically, we have added the
following costs to Quebec’s
administered stumpage unit price:
• Forest Fund
• Administrative Forest Planning
• Non–Credited Silviculture
• Construction and Maintenance of
Primary and Secondary Roads
• Fire and Insect Protection
• Logging Camps
• Silviculture Credits for Non–
Mandatory Activities (Negative
Adjustment).
b Calculation of the Benefit
b Calculation of the Benefit
b. Adjustments to Administered
Stumpage Unit Price
To calculate the unit benefit conferred
under the GOO’s administered
stumpage program, we subtracted from
the species–specific benchmark prices
the cost–adjusted weighted average
stumpage prices per species. Next, we
calculated the species–specific benefit
by multiplying the species–specific unit
benefit by the total softwood timber
harvest volume for that species during
the POR. We then summed the species–
specific benefits to calculate the total
stumpage benefit for the province.
c. Calculation of Provincial and
Country–Wide Rate
To calculate the province–specific
subsidy rate, we divided the total
stumpage benefit for Ontario by the POR
stumpage program denominator. For a
discussion of the denominator used to
derive the provincial rate for stumpage
programs, see ‘‘Numerator and
Denominator Used for Calculating the
Stumpage Programs’ Net Subsidy
Rates.’’ As explained in ‘‘Aggregate
Subsidy Rate Calculation,’’ we weight–
averaged the benefit from this provincial
subsidy program by Ontario’s relative
share of total exports of softwood
lumber to the United States during the
POR. The total countervailable subsidy
for the provincial stumpage programs
can be found in ‘‘Country–Wide Rate for
Stumpage.’’
5. Province of Quebec
To derive Quebec’s administratively
established stumpage rate, we divided
the total stumpage collections for each
species by the corresponding volume of
Crown softwood timber destined to
sawmills. In this manner, we obtained a
weighted–average stumpage price per
species that was paid by tenure holders
during the POR.
PO 00000
Frm 00055
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
To calculate the unit benefit conferred
under the GOQ’s administered
stumpage program, we subtracted from
the species–specific benchmark prices
the cost–adjusted weighted average
stumpage prices per species. Next, we
calculated the species–specific benefit
by multiplying the species–specific unit
benefit by the total softwood timber
harvest volume for that species during
the POR. We then summed the species–
specific benefits to calculate the total
stumpage benefit for the province.
c. Calculation of Provincial and
Country–Wide Rate
To calculate the province–specific
subsidy rate, we divided the total
stumpage benefit for Quebec by the POR
stumpage program denominator. For a
discussion of the denominator used to
derive the provincial rate for stumpage
programs, see ‘‘Numerator and
Denominator Used for Calculating the
Stumpage Programs’ Net Subsidy
Rates.’’ As explained in ‘‘Aggregate
Subsidy Rate Calculation,’’ we weight–
averaged the benefit from this provincial
subsidy program by Ontario’s relative
share of total exports of softwood
lumber to the United States during the
POR. The total countervailable subsidy
for the provincial stumpage programs
can be found in ‘‘Country–Wide Rate for
Stumpage.’’
6. Province of British Columbia
a. Derivation of Administered Stumpage
Unit Prices
To derive British Columbia’s
administratively established stumpage
rate, we divided the total stumpage
collections for each species for the Coast
and Interior by the corresponding
Crown softwood sawlog volume. In this
manner, we obtained a weighted–
average stumpage price per species.
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33110
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
b. Calculation of the ‘‘Derived Market
Stumpage Price’’
Consistent with our approach from
the final results of the first review, we
calculated a ‘‘derived market stumpage
price’’ for each species by using U.S. log
prices as the benchmark for standing
timber prices to measure the adequacy
of remuneration of B.C.’s administered
stumpage system. See supra section on
use of U.S. log prices as B.C.
benchmarks. Specifically, we deducted
from the U.S. log prices all B.C.
harvesting costs, including costs
associated with Crown tenure for
calendar year 2003. As in the final
results of the first review, we relied on
cost data from surveys of major tenure
holders prepared by PwC. Specifically,
PwC was engaged by the B.C. Ministry
of Forests (MOF) to collect calendar year
2003 logging and forest management
cost data for the Coast and Interior
regions of British Columbia. The cost
data presented by PwC was derived
from three separate surveys the MOF’s
2004 annual Coast survey and two
surveys (one for the Coast and the other
for the Interior) conducted by PwC
itself.
In these preliminary results, we have
subtracted the following unit costs from
the U.S. log price benchmarks used for
the B.C. Coast:
• Tree–to-Truck
• Hauling
• Dump, Sort, Boom, and Rehaul
• Crew Transportation Labor
• Road Maintenance
• Towing/Barging
• Helicopter Logging
• Camp Operations and Overhead
• Road Construction
• Head Office, General Administration
• Logging Fees and Taxes
• Forestry, Engineering, and Fire
Protection.
In these preliminary results, we have
subtracted the following unit costs from
the U.S. log price benchmarks used for
the B.C. Interior:
• Tree–to-Truck
• Hauling
• Dump, Sort, and Boom
• Towing/Barging
• On–Block Road and Bridge
Maintenance
• Mainline/Secondary Road and
Bridge Maintenance
• Post Logging Treatment
• Administration/Overhead
• Camp Operation
• Depreciation, Depletion, and
Amortization
• Mainline/Secondary Road and
Bridge Construction
• Mainline/Secondary Road and
Bridge Deactivation
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
• On–Block Road and Bridge
Construction
• On–Block Road and Bridge
Deactivation
• Protection (Fire, Insect, and Disease
Control)
• Silviculture and Reforestation.
In the final results of the first review,
we subtracted a per unit profit
component from the ‘‘derived market
stumpage prices’’ used in the benefit
calculations for the B.C. Coast and
Interior. Our decision to include a profit
component for the B.C. Coast and
Interior was based on the assumption
that our cost data from the PwC survey
report of B.C. logging and forest
management costs did not account for
any profit that may have been incurred
by independent harvesters. Therefore,
based on a 2001 study entitled, ‘‘Ready
for Change: Crisis and Opportunity in
the Coast Forest Industry,’’ by Dr. Peter
H. Pearse (Pearse Study), we estimated
that half of the reported costs for the
B.C. Coast was based on payments from
integrated sawmills to independent
contractors acting has harvesters.25
Because the ‘‘fee for service’’ payments
made by the sawmills already included
the independent harvesters’ profit, we
only added a profit adjustment for half
of the reported costs. In other words, we
reduced the profit rate applied to the
‘‘derived market stumpage price’’ by 50
percent to reflect our finding that half of
the reported survey costs on the B.C.
Coast (e.g., those costs attributable to
independent harvesters) already
included a profit component. For the
B.C. Interior, we treated the profit
component in a similar manner.
As for the profit rate applied to the
‘‘derived market stumpage prices,’’ in
the final results of the first review, we
calculated the adjustment through the
average of two profit figures on the
record in the first administrative review:
a five (5) percent profit figure for New
Brunswick reported by the Atlantic
Canada Opportunities Agency and a ten
(10) percent profit figure for Southeast
Alaska that was included in a
submission by the GOBC. Id.
Information available on the record of
the current review has led us to revise
the profit methodology employed in the
final results of the first review. In our
initial questionnaire, we asked the
GOBC to report for each of the ten
largest tenure holders whether any of
them hired independent contractors to
conduct any basic silviculture, road
building, forest management, or
25 The Pearse Study was placed on the record of
this review by the GOBC in its November 11, 2004,
questionnaire response at Volume 6, Exhibit BC-S–
20.
PO 00000
Frm 00056
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
harvesting activities. See page IV–21 of
the Department’s September 8, 2004
questionnaire. In response, the GOBC
stated:
In British Columbia, the vast bulk of
logging activity, including road
construction, basic silviculture, and
other forest management
obligations, is undertaken by
independent contractors. In the
Interior, company crews are
virtually non–existent—all work is
done by contract and the tenure
holders do not perform the work
themselves. On the Coast, there are
some company crews for some
activities, but much of the work is
done by contractors. Therefore, the
cost report prepared by
PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) . . .
already reflects contractor costs for
the Interior and contractor and
some limited company costs for the
Coast.
See page BC–VI–22, Volume I of the
GOBC’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response.
Based on the GOBC’s statements (e.g.,
that all work is done by contract and
that the tenure holders do not perform
the work themselves), we find that the
cost data contained in the PwC’s survey
of the B.C. Interior reflect ‘‘fee for
service’’ costs and, thus, already include
a profit component. Therefore, we
preliminarily determine that no profit
adjustment is appropriate for U.S. log
benchmark prices used in the benefit
calculation of the B.C. Interior.
As for the B.C. Coast, we note that the
Pearse Study states that the ‘‘Forest Act
requires licensees to employ contractors
to log at least 50 percent of their
harvests under Tree Farm Licenses and
a variable percentage—usually 50
percent also—under Forest Licenses.’’
See Pearse Study at 15. Further, the
GOBC stated in its initial questionnaire
response that logging and harvesting
costs attributable to company crews are
‘‘limited’’ and that ‘‘. . .much of the
work is done by contractors.’’ See
GOBC’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response. Based on the
fact the Forest Act dictates that at least
50 percent of the harvesting activities
must be conducted by independent
contractors on the Coast, and in light of
the GOBC’s statements that company
crew costs for logging activities on the
B.C. Coast are limited (information that
was not on the record of the first
administrative review), we preliminarily
determine that it is no longer
appropriate to assume that tenure
holders harvested half of the logs on the
B.C. Coast. Lacking any other
information and, based on the GOBC’s
characterization of company crew
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
harvesting costs as being ‘‘limited,’’ we
preliminarily determine that in–house
company crews employed by tenure
holders are used 25 percent of the time
on the B.C. Coast and that the remaining
amount is performed by independent
contractors. Accordingly, we are
assuming that 75 percent of the costs
contained in the PwC survey for the B.C.
Coast already contain a profit
component and, thus, no profit
adjustment is necessary for those costs.
We have, however, applied a profit
component to the remaining 25 percent
of the costs contained in the PwC survey
for the B.C. Coast. Based on new
information not available on the record
of the first review, we have revised the
manner in which we calculated the
profit amount.
In our initial questionnaire, we asked
the GOBC to provide the allowance for
profit and risk for each tenure
arrangement in effect which utilizes an
appraisal system. See pages IV–12 and
IV–13 of our September 8, 2004 initial
questionnaire. In response, the GOBC
stated:
There is no allowance for profit and
risk in the CVP system. All tables
and formulas used for estimating
costs are based upon average
experienced licensee costs, without
any additions for profit or risk.
There is no allowance for profit and
risk in the MPS. The system is
based on bids from auction sales.
See page BC–IV–26 of the GOBC’s
November 22, 2004 questionnaire
response. Further in the Log Export
Restraint section of our initial
questionnaire, for both domestic and
export sales of softwood logs, we asked
the GOBC to provide:
. . . a weighted average value for each
of the costs associated with
harvesting and selling the logs
during the POR (i.e., logging costs,
inventory, selling expenses,
administrative and general
expenses, transportation, marketing,
etc.). In addition, what is the
weighted average profit on the sale
of softwood logs?
See pages 3—4 of the Log Export Ban
Appendix of our September 8, 2004
initial questionnaire. In response, the
GOBC stated that, ‘‘the ministry does
not have information on the average
profit on the sale of softwood sawlogs.’’
However, in spite of the GOBC’s
apparent inability to obtain any
information on logging profit, we have
managed to obtain publicly available
profit data for the B.C. logging industry
from ‘‘Industry Canada,’’ a department
of the Canadian federal government,
through its business and consumer site
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
entitled ‘‘strategis.gc.ca.’’26 Specifically,
we obtained a 3.7 percent profit figure
for the B.C. logging industry. This profit
figure is an average calculated from
financial data for the year 2002 (the
most recent year for which data is
available) from all small businesses
(incorporated and unincorporated) in
the B.C. logging industry.27 Given that
the data are specific to the industry and
province in question, we find it more
appropriate to use the profit data from
Industry Canada rather than continuing
to use the profit figures from Southeast
Alaska and New Brunswick. Thus, in
keeping with the approach described
above, we have multiplied the per unit
B.C. logging profit figure from Industry
Canada by 25 percent and subtracted the
resulting product from the per unit
‘‘derived market stumpage price’’ for the
B.C. Coast.
c. Calculation of the Benefit
To calculate the unit benefit per
species conferred under the GOBC’s
administered stumpage program, we
subtracted from the cost–adjusted,
‘‘derived market stumpage prices’’ the
corresponding average administered
stumpage prices. Consistent with our
approach in the final results of the first
review, we reduced the total Crown
harvest to capture that volume of logs
destined to sawmills. Specifically, we
multiplied the Coast and Interior Crown
volumes by their respective percentage
of logs entering sawmills for the
calendar year 2003, i.e., 58.1 percent
and 85.2 percent, respectively. See
GOBC’s November 22, 2004
questionnaire response at BC–I–5. Next,
we multiplied the species–specific unit
benefit by the Crown volume destined
to sawmills. We then summed the
species–specific benefits for the Coast
and the Interior to calculate the
provincial benefit.
d. Calculation of Provincial and
Country–Wide Rate
To calculate the province–specific
subsidy rate, we divided the total
stumpage benefit for British Columbia
by the POR stumpage program
denominator. For a discussion of the
denominator used to derive the
provincial rate for stumpage programs,
see ‘‘Numerator and Denominator Used
for Calculating the Stumpage Programs’
Net Subsidy Rates.’’ As explained in
‘‘Aggregate Subsidy Rate Calculation,’’
26 Strategis (www.strategis.gc.ca) offers
interactive financial applications, e.g., building
industry profiles for specific provinces via
Performance Plus, a software tool.
27 Logging: industry classification # 1133 under
the North American Industry Classification System
(NAICS).
PO 00000
Frm 00057
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33111
we weight–averaged the benefit from
this provincial subsidy program by
British Columbia’s relative share of total
exports of softwood lumber to the
United States during the POR. The total
countervailable subsidy for the
provincial stumpage programs can be
found in ‘‘Country–Wide Rate for
Stumpage.’’
Country–Wide Rate for Stumpage
The preliminary country–wide
subsidy rate for the provincial stumpage
programs is 7.97 percent ad valorem.
II. Other Programs Determined to Confer
Subsidies
Non–Stumpage Programs Determined
To Confer Subsidies
Programs Administered by the
Government of Canada
1. Western Economic Diversification
Program: Grants and Conditionally
Repayable Contributions
Introduced in 1987, the Western
Economic Diversification program
(WDP) is administered by the GOC’s
Department of Western Economic
Diversification headquartered in
Edmonton, Alberta, whose jurisdiction
encompasses the four western provinces
of B.C., Alberta, Saskatchewan and
Manitoba. The program supports
commercial and non–commercial
projects that promote economic
development and diversification in the
region.
In the first administrative review, we
found that the provision of grants under
the WDP constitutes a government
financial contribution and confers a
benefit within the meaning of sections
771(5)(D)(i) and 771(5)(E) of the Act,
respectively. See Preliminary Results of
1st Review, 69 FR at 33228 and
‘‘Western Economic Diversification
Program Grants and Conditionally
Repayable Contributions’’ section of the
Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum. Further, we determined
that the WDP is specific under section
771(5A)(D)(iv) of the Act, because
assistance under the program is limited
to designated regions in Canada. On this
basis, we found recurring and non–
recurring grants provided to softwood
lumber producers under the WDP to be
countervailable subsidies. No new
information has been placed on the
record of this review to warrant a
change in our finding that the WDP is
countervailable.
During the current POR, the WDP
provided grants to softwood lumber
producers or associations under two
‘‘sub–programs,’’ the International
Trade Personnel Program (ITPP) and
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33112
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
‘‘Other WDP Projects.’’28 Under the
ITPP and ‘‘Other WDP Projects,’’
companies were reimbursed for certain
salary expenses in Alberta, British
Columbia, Manitoba, Saskatchewan.
Consistent with our approach in the
first administrative review, where the
employee’s activities were directed
towards exports of softwood lumber to
all markets, we attributed the subsidy to
total softwood lumber exports. See Final
Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comment 46 and
‘‘Western Economic Diversification
Program Grants and Conditionally
Repayable Contributions.’’ Where the
employee’s activities were directed
towards exports of softwood lumber to
the United States, we attributed the
subsidy to U.S. exports. Id. Where the
personnel promoted exports to non–U.S.
markets, we did not attribute any of the
benefit to U.S. sales. Id. In accordance
with 19 CFR 351.524(b)(2), we
determine that all ITPP and ‘‘Other
WDP Project’’ grants were less than 0.5
percent of their corresponding
denominator in the year of receipt.29
Therefore, we are expensing all grants
received during the POR under this
program to the year of receipt.
To calculate the countervailable
subsidy rate for this program, we
summed the rates for the ITPP and
‘‘Other WDP’’ sub–projects. Next, as
explained in ‘‘Aggregate Subsidy Rate
Calculation,’’ we multiplied this amount
by the four provinces’ relative share of
total exports of softwood lumber to the
United States. We adjusted the
provinces’ total exports of softwood
lumber to the United States to account
for any excluded company sales. Using
this methodology, we determine the
countervailable subsidy from this
program to be less than 0.005 percent ad
valorem.
2. Natural Resources Canada (NRCAN)
Softwood Marketing Subsidies
In 2002, the GOC approved a total of
C$75 million in grants to target new and
existing export markets for wood
products and to provide increased
research and development to
supplement innovation in the forest
products sector. This total was allocated
to three sub–programs: Canada Wood
Export Program (Canada Wood), Value
to Wood Program (VWP), and the
National Research Institutes Initiative
(NRII). The programs were placed under
28 These are the same two sub-programs analyzed
in the first administrative review.
29 We reduced these denominators, where
appropriate, to account for any excluded company
sales.
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
the administration of NRCAN, a part of
the Canadian Forest Service.30
The VWP is a five-year research and
technology transfer initiative supporting
the value–added wood sector,
specifically through partnerships with
academic and private non–profit
entities. In particular, during the POR,
NRCAN entered into research
contribution agreements with Forintek
Canada Corp. (Forintek) to do research
on efficient resource use, manufacturing
process improvements, product
development, and product access
improvement.
In the first administrative review, we
found that grants provided to Forintek
under the VWP constitute a government
financial contribution and confer a
benefit to softwood lumber producers
within the meaning of sections
771(5)(D)(i) and 771(5)(E) of the Act,
respectively. See Preliminary Results of
1st Review, 69 FR at 33229 and ‘‘Natural
Resources Canada (NRCAN) Softwood
Marketing Subsidies’’ in the Final
Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum. We also determined that,
because VWP grants are limited to
Forintek, which conducted research
related to softwood lumber and
manufactured wood products, the
program is specific within the meaning
of section 771(5A)(D)(i) of the Act. Id.
Consequently, we found the grants
under the NRCAN program to be
countervailable.
The NRII is a two-year program that
provides salary support to three national
research institutes: the Forest
Engineering Research Institute of
Canada (FERIC), Forintek, and the Pulp
& Paper Research Institute of Canada
(PAPRICAN). In the first administrative
review, we found that research
undertaken by FERIC constitutes a
government financial contribution to
commercial users of Canada’s forests
within the meaning of section
771(5)(D)(i) of the Act. Id. Further, we
found that FERIC’s research covers
harvesting, processing, and
transportation of forest products,
silviculture operations, and small–scale
operations and, thus, we determined
that government–funded R&D by FERIC
benefits, inter alia, producers of
softwood lumber within the meaning of
section 771(5)(E) of the Act.
Similarly, we found that Forintek’s
NRII operations, which pertain to
resource utilization, tree and wood
quality, and wood physics, also
constitute a government financial
contribution and confer a benefit, inter
alia, upon the softwood lumber industry
within the meaning of sections
771(5)(D)(i) and 771(5)(E) of the Act. Id.
In the first administrative review, we
determined that because grants offered
under the NRII are limited to Forintek
and FERIC, institutions that conducted
research related to the forestry and
logging industry, the wood products
manufacturing industry, and the paper
manufacturing industry, the program is
specific within the meaning of
771(5A)(D)(i) of the Act. Id. On this
basis, we found the Forintek and FERIC
grants offered under the NRII are
countervailable.31 No new information
has been placed on the record of this
review to warrant a change in our
finding that grants under the VWP and
NRII programs are countervailable.
Consistent with our approach in the
first administrative review and in
accordance with section 19 CFR
351.524(b)(2), we first examined
whether the non–recurring grants under
the VWP and NRII programs should be
expensed to the year of receipt. Id., 69
FR 33229. We summed the funding
approved for Forintek during the POR
under the VWP and NRII programs, and
divided this sum by the total sales of the
wood products manufacturing industry
during the POR. We also divided the
funding approved for FERIC under the
NRII program during the POR by the
total sales of the wood products
manufacturing and paper industries
during the POR. In both cases, we
adjusted the denominators to account
for sales of excluded companies.
Combining these two amounts, we
preliminarily determine that the benefit
under the NRCAN softwood marketing
subsidies program should be expensed
in the year of receipt.
Consistent with our approach in the
first administrative review, we then
calculated the countervailable subsidy
rate during the POR by dividing the
amounts received by Forintek during
the POR under the VWP and NRII
programs by Canada’s total sales of the
wood products manufacturing industry
during the POR. We also divided the
funding received by FERIC under the
NRII during the POR by Canada’s total
sales of the wood products
manufacturing and paper industries
during the POR. We adjusted these sales
amounts to account for any excluded
company sales. See Preliminary Results
of 1st Review, 69 FR at 33229.
Combining these two amounts, we
30 We found the Canada Wood program to be not
countervailable in the first administrative review.
See Preliminary Results of 1st Review, 69 FR at
33229.
31 We found NRII’s support of PAPRICAN to be
not countervailable in the first administrative
review. See Preliminary Results of 1st Review, 69
FR at 33229.
PO 00000
Frm 00058
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
preliminarily determine the net subsidy
rate from the NRCAN softwood
marketing subsidies program to be 0.02
percent ad valorem.
Programs Administered by the
Government of British Columbia
1. Forestry Innovation Investment
Program (FIIP)
The Forestry Innovation Investment
Program came into effect on April 1,
2002. On March 31, 2003, FIIP was
incorporated as Forestry Innovation
Investment Ltd. (FII). FII funds are used
to support the activities of universities,
research and educational organizations,
and industry associations producing a
wide range of wood products. FII’s
strategic objectives are implemented
through three sub–programs addressing:
research, product development and
international marketing.
In the first administrative review, we
determined that the FII grants provided
to support product development and
international marketing and, thus,
constitute a government financial
contribution and confer a benefit within
the meaning of sections 771(5)(D)(i) and
771(5)(E) of the Act, respectively. See
Preliminary Results of 1st Review, 69 FR
at 33230. Further, we found that the
grants are specific within the meaning
of section 771(5A)(D)(i) of the Act
because they are limited to institutions
and associations conducting projects
related to wood products generally and
softwood lumber, in particular. Id. No
new information has been placed on the
record of this review to warrant a
change in our finding that grants FIIP
are countervailable.
To calculate the benefit from this
program, we first determined whether
these non–recurring subsidies should be
expensed in the year of receipt. See 19
CFR 351.524(b)(2). For grants given to
support product development for
softwood lumber, we divided the
amounts approved by total sales of
softwood lumber (i.e., lumber from
primary and secondary mills as well as
‘‘residual’’ products from primary mills)
for B.C. during the POR. For grants to
support international marketing, we
divided the grants approved by exports
of softwood lumber from B.C. to the
United States during the POR. See 19
CFR 351.525(b)(4). As explained in the
first review, the GOBC did not report
grants tied to other export markets. See
Preliminary Results of 1st Review, 69 FR
at 33230. For research grants, we
divided the grants approved by total
sales of the wood products
manufacturing and paper industries
from B.C. during the POR. Combining
these three amounts, we have
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
preliminarily determined that the FII
benefit should be expensed in the POR.
Consistent with our approach in the
first administrative review, we then
calculated the countervailable subsidy
rate during the POR by dividing the
amounts disbursed during the POR by
their corresponding sales denominator.
For grants given to support product
development for softwood lumber, we
divided the amounts disbursed by total
sales of softwood lumber for B.C. during
the POR. For grants to support
international marketing, we divided the
amounts disbursed by exports of
softwood lumber from B.C. to the
United States during the POR. For
research grants, we divided the amounts
disbursed by total sales of the wood
products manufacturing and paper
industries for B.C. during the POR. See
Preliminary Results of 1st Review, 69 FR
at 33230–33231. We combined these
three amounts and, as explained in
‘‘Aggregate Subsidy Rate Calculation,’’
we multiplied this total by B.C.’s
relative share of total exports to the
United States. On this basis, we have
preliminarily determined the
countervailable subsidy from the FIIP to
be 0.08 percent ad valorem.
2. British Columbia Private Forest
Property Tax Program
B.C.’s property tax system has two
classes of private forest land—class 3,
‘‘unmanaged forest land,’’ and Class 7,
‘‘managed forest land’’ that incurred
different tax rates in the 1990s through
the POR. In the first review, we found
that property tax rates for Class 7 were
generally lower than for Class 3 land at
all levels of tax authority for most,
though not all, taxes. See ‘‘British
Columbia Private Forest Property Tax
Program’’ section of Final Results of 1st
Review Decision Memorandum. We
further found that the various municipal
and district (a.k.a. regional) level
authorities imposed generally lower
rates for Class 7 than for Class 3 land.
Id.
The tax program is codified in several
laws, of which the most salient is the
1996 Assessment Act (and subsequent
amendments). Section 24(1) of the
Assessment Act contains forest land
classification language expressly
requiring that, inter alia, Class 7 land be
‘‘used for the production and harvesting
of timber.’’ Additionally, Section 24(3)
or 24(4) of the Assessment Act,
depending on the edition of the statute,
requires the assessor to declassify all or
part of Class 7 land if ‘‘the assessor is
not satisfied. . .that the land meets all
requirements’’ for managed forest land
classification. Amendments to the
provision, enacted from 1996 through
PO 00000
Frm 00059
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33113
2003, retained the same language stating
these two conditions. Thus, the law as
published during the POR required that,
for private forest land to be classified
and remain classified as managed forest
land, it had to be ‘‘used for the
production and harvesting of timber.’’
In the first review, we found that
because the tax authorities impose two
different tax rates on private forest land,
the governments are foregoing revenue
when they collect taxes at the lower
rate, and we therefore determined that
the program constitutes a government
financial contribution as defined in
section 771(5)(D)(ii) of the Act. Id. We
also determined that the program
confers a benefit in the form of tax
savings within the meaning of section
771(5)(E) of the Act. Id. Further, we
determined that because the Assessment
Act expressly requires that Class 7 land
be ‘‘used for the production and
harvesting of timber,’’ and additionally
requires the assessor to declassify any
Class 7 land not meeting all the Class 7
conditions (of which timber use was
one), the B.C. private forest land tax
program is specific as a matter of law
(i.e., de jure specific) within the
meaning of section 771(5A)(D)(i) of the
Act. Id. No new information has been
placed on the record of this review to
warrant a change in our finding that the
B.C. private forest land tax program is
countervailable.
Consistent with our approach in the
first review, and in accordance with 19
CFR 351.509(a), we find that the benefit
received under this program is the sum
of the tax savings enjoyed by Class 7
sawmill landowners at the provincial,
regional, and sub–provincial (or. local)
levels of tax authority in B.C. Id. With
regard to the provincial tax, the assessed
value is calculated as the sum of the
land value and a formulaic valuation of
the timber harvested from the land in
the prior year. The tax is levied by
applying the tax rate to this assessed
value. The GOBC did not submit data on
the timber value. Accordingly, the
Department calculated the tax benefit at
the provincial level based solely on the
tax savings conferred upon Class 7 land
with sawmills.
We determined the tax benefit at the
local level using the data submitted by
the GOBC on local tax rates, and on the
value and acreage of Class 3 and Class
7 land held by sawmill landowners in
the various jurisdictions. Only those
jurisdictions with both Class 3 and Class
7 land in the assessment rolls for 2003
and 2004, and whose tax differential
resulted in a tax savings for Class 7
sawmill landowners, were included in
the benefit calculation.
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33114
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
With regard to a number of regional
and hospital district jurisdictions that
are between the provincial and local
levels, in the first review we explained
that the GOBC submitted data on their
Class 3 and Class 7 tax rates, but did not
provide assessment data on land value
and acreage. Id. Consequently, in the
first review, to the extent that any
benefit may have accrued at that level,
we did not include it in our calculation.
Id. We went on to state that we would
re–examine this aspect of the program
in any subsequent review. In this
review, we have sought and obtained
assessment data on land value and
acreage for the relevant regions that are
between the provincial and local levels.
Using this data, we have determined the
benefit at the regional and hospital
districts. However, while the GOBC was
able to provide Class 3 and Class 7 tax
rates and the value for Class 7 land
value for the relevant regional and
hospital districts, it was unable to
provide the land values for Class land
7 with sawmills within those areas.
Therefore, we derived the share of value
of Class 7 land with sawmills at the
provincial level for 2003 and 2004 and
applied the ratios to the corresponding
Class 7 land values of the regional and
hospital districts. In this manner, we
derived the portion of benefit
attributable to Class 7 land with
sawmills in the regional and hospital
districts during the POR.
The provincial, regional, and local
level benefit amounts were summed to
produce an overall POR benefit amount.
Consistent with our approach in the first
review, we used the POR total value of
B.C. sawmill softwood product
shipments (i.e., lumber, co–products,
and ‘‘residual’’ products from primary
sawmills) as the denominator, and,
adjusting for B.C.’s share of the total
exports to the United States, we
determined the countervailable subsidy
under this program to be 0.11 percent ad
valorem during the POR.
Programs Administered by the
Government of Quebec
Private Forest Development Program
In the first administrative review, we
determined that the provision of grants
to producers of softwood lumber under
the Private Forest Development Program
(PFDP) constitutes a government
financial contribution and confers a
benefit under sections 771(5)(D)(i) and
771(5)(E) of the Act, respectively. See
‘‘Private Forest Development Program’’
in Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum. In addition, we
determined that assistance provided
under this program is specific under
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
innovation, and trade in Northern
Ontario. A considerable portion of the
GOC assistance under FEDNOR is
provided to Community Futures
Development Corporations (CFDCs),
non–profit community organizations
providing small business advisory
services and offering commercial loans
to small and medium enterprises
(SMEs). Assistance in the form of grants
is also provided under the FEDNOR
program.
In the underlying investigation and
first administrative review, we
determined that grants and loans under
the FEDNOR program constitute
government financial contributions to
softwood lumber producers within the
meaning of section 771(5)(D)(i) of the
Act. See Preliminary Results of 1st
Review, 69 FR at 33228. In addition, we
found that grants under the program
confer a benefit to softwood lumber
producers under section 771(5)(E) of the
Act and that CFDC loans confer a
benefit to softwood lumber producers
under section 771(5)(E)(ii) of the Act to
the extent that the amount they pay on
CFDC loans are less than the amount
they would pay on a comparable
commercial loan that they could
actually obtain on the market. Id.
Furthermore, we found that the grants
and loans provided under the FEDNOR
program are specific within the meaning
of section 771(5A)(D)(iv) of the Act,
because assistance under the program is
limited to certain regions in Ontario. Id.
On this basis, we found the program to
be countervailable. No new information
has been placed on the record of this
review to warrant a change in our
findings.
In this administrative review, the
GOC claims that no grants were
disbursed during the POR. However, it
reported several long and short–term
CFDC loans that were outstanding
during the POR.
Consistent with our approach in the
first administrative review, to determine
the benefit attributable to loans offered
under the FEDNOR program, we
compared the long–term and short–term
interest rates charged on these loans
during the POR to the long–term and
short–term benchmark interest rates. Id.
Our benchmark interest rates are
described in ‘‘Benchmarks for Loans &
Programs Determined Not to Confer a
Discount Rates.’’ As the interest
Benefit
amounts paid on the loans under the
FEDNOR program were greater than
Government of Canada
what would have been paid on a
1. Federal Economic Development
comparable commercial loan, as
Initiative in Northern Ontario (FEDNOR) indicated by our benchmark interest
rate, we preliminarily determine that
FEDNOR is an agency of Industry
this program did not confer a benefit
Canada, a department of the GOC,
upon softwood lumber producers in
which encourages investment,
section 771(5A)(D)(i) of the Act because
assistance is limited to private woodlot
owners. Id.
Every holder of a wood processing
plant operating permit must pay the fee
of C$1.20 for every cubic meter of
timber acquired from a private forest.
These fees fund, in part, the PFDP. The
recipients of payments under the PFDP
are owners of private forest land. Thus,
the sawmill operators that received
assistance under the PFDP received
assistance because they owned private
forest land. Therefore, in the first
administrative review, we determined
that the fees paid to harvest timber from
private land do not qualify as an offset
to the grants received under the PFDP
pursuant to section 771(6) of the Act. Id.
Section 771(6) of the Act specifically
enumerates the only adjustments that
can be made to the benefit conferred by
a countervailable subsidy and fees paid
by processing facilities do not qualify as
an offset against benefits received by
private woodlot owners. Id. Consistent
with our treatment of the PFDP in the
first administrative review, we treated
these payments as recurring in
accordance with 19 CFR 351.524(c). Id.
Consistent with our approach in the
first administrative review, to calculate
the countervailable subsidy under the
PFDP, we first summed the reported
amount of grants provided to sawmills
that produce softwood lumber (and
other products) during the POR. Next,
we reduced the total benefit amount to
account for any PFDP benefits received
by companies in Quebec that have been
excluded from the countervailing duty
order. We then divided the net benefit
amount by total sales of softwood
lumber (i.e., lumber from primary mills
and in–scope lumber from
remanufacturers), hardwood lumber,
and softwood co–products. Id. We
adjusted the sales denominator to
account for sales of excluded companies
from Quebec. Next, as explained in
‘‘Aggregate Subsidy Rate Calculation,’’
we multiplied this amount by Quebec’s
relative share of exports to the United
States, adjusted for sales of excluded
companies. On this basis, we
preliminary determine the
countervailable subsidy from this
program to be less than 0.005 percent ad
valorem.
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
accordance with section 771(5)(E)(ii) of
the Act during the POR.
2. Payments to the Canadian Lumber
Trade Alliance (CLTA) & Independent
Lumber Remanufacturing Association
(ILRA)
In March 2003, the GOC’s Department
of Foreign Affairs and International
Trade (DFAIT) approved a total of C$15
million in grants under separate
agreements with the CLTA and ILRA to
underwrite the administrative and
communications costs incurred by these
forest products industry associations as
a result of the Canada–U.S. softwood
lumber dispute. The GOC reports that
the CLTA is composed of companies
located in Alberta, B.C., Ontario and
Quebec, which produce not only lumber
but all types of forest products, while
the membership of the ILRA is made up
entirely of value–added wood product
manufacturers in B.C. Of the approved
sums, the DFAIT disbursed C$14.85
million to the CLTA and C$75,000 to
the ILRA during the POR.
In the first administrative review, we
determined that grants under this
program constitute a government
financial contribution and confer a
benefit within the meaning of sections
771(5)(D)(i) and 771(5)(E) of the Act,
respectively. Further, because the
program provided grants to two
associations, CLTA and ILRA, we
determined that it was specific within
the meaning of section 771(5A)(D)(i) of
the Act. See Preliminary Results of 1st
Review, 69 FR at 33229. Accordingly,
we determined that the GOC grants to
CLTA and ILRA provided a
countervailable subsidy to the softwood
lumber industry. Id. No new
information has been placed on the
record of this review to warrant a
change in our finding that grants under
the CLTA and ILRA programs are
countervailable.
According to the GOC, all grants
bestowed under the CLTA and ILRA
were received prior to the POR of the
current review. Therefore, we first
examined whether the non–recurring
grants should be expensed to the year of
receipt. See 19 CFR 351.524(b)(2).
Consistent with the first administrative
review, because the grants underwrote
the associations’ costs related to the
softwood lumber dispute, we
preliminarily determine that the benefit
is tied to anticipated exports to the
United States. See 19 CFR 351.514(a);
see also Preliminary Results of 1st
Review, 69 FR at 33229. Therefore, we
divided the amount approved by total
exports of softwood lumber to the
United States during the year of
approval. We adjusted this sales amount
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
to account for any exports of softwood
lumber to the United States during the
POR by excluded companies. See 19
CFR 351.525(b)(4). Because the resulting
amount was less than 0.5 percent, we
have expensed the benefit in the year of
receipt, which prior to the POR. On this
basis, we preliminary determine that the
CLTA and ILRA programs did not
confer provide countervailable benefits
during the POR of the instant review.
Government of British Columbia
Forest Renewal B.C. Program
The Forest Renewal program was
enacted by the GOBC in the Forest
Renewal Act in June 1994 to renew the
forest economy of British Columbia by,
among other things, improving forest
management of Crown lands, supporting
training for displaced forestry workers,
and promoting enhanced community
and First Nations involvement in the
forestry sector. To achieve these goals,
the Forest Renewal Act created Forest
Renewal B.C., a Crown corporation. The
corporation’s strategic objectives were
implemented through three business
units: the Forests and Environment
Business Unit, the Value–Added
Business Unit, and the Communities
and Workforce Business Unit.
The Forest Renewal B.C. program
provides funds to community groups
and independent financial institutions,
which may in turn provide loans and
loan guarantees to companies involved
in softwood lumber production.32
Effective March 31, 2002, the B.C.
legislature terminated the Forest
Renewal B.C. program. However, during
the POR, there remained active Forest
Renewal B.C. loans, with interest
payments outstanding during the POR.
According to the GOBC, Forest
Renewal B.C. provided blanket
guarantees with respect to all loans
outstanding under the program during
the POR. See page BC–FRBC–19,
Volume 33 of the GOBC’s November 22,
2004 questionnaire response.
Accordingly, we find that the loan
guarantees provided under the program
constitutes a government financial
contribution within the meaning of
section 771(5)(D)(i) of the Act. Further,
in the first administrative review we
found that because assistance under the
Forest Renewal B.C. program was
limited to the forest products industry,
the program was specific within the
meaning of section 771(5A)(D) of the
Act. No new information has been
32 Grants have also been provided directly to
softwood lumber producers. However, the GOBC
has reported that no such grants were provided
during the POR.
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33115
placed on the record of this review to
warrant a change in our findings.
To determine whether the active
Forest Renewal loans provided benefits
to the softwood lumber industry, in
accordance with section 771(5)(E)(ii) of
the Act, we compared the interest rates
charged on the Forest Renewal loans to
the benchmark interest rates described
in ‘‘Benchmarks for Loans and Discount
Rates.’’ Using this methodology, we
have preliminarily determined that no
benefit was provided by the Forest
Renewal loans because the interest rates
charged under this program were equal
to or higher than the interest rates
charged on comparable commercial
loans.
Government of Quebec
1. Assistance Under Article 28 of
Investment Quebec
Assistance under Article 28 is
administered by Investissement Quebec,
a government corporation. In the
underlying investigation, the
Department investigated assistance from
the GOQ under Article 7, which was
administered by the Societe de
Developpement Industriel du Quebec
(SDI). Article 28 supplanted Article 7 in
1998. Under Article 7, SDI provided
financial assistance in the form of loans,
loan guarantees, grants, assumption of
interest expenses, and equity
investments to projects that would
significantly promote the development
of Quebec’s economy. According to the
GOQ’s response, prior to authorizing
assistance, SDI would review a project
to ensure that it had strong profit
potential and that the recipient business
possessed the necessary financial
structure, adequate technical and
management personnel, and the means
of production and marketing required to
complete the proposed project. The
Article 28 program operates
fundamentally in the same manner as
Article 7.
During the POR, there was one
outstanding loan under Article 28.
There were no outstanding loans under
Article 7. No other assistance was
provided to softwood lumber companies
under Article 7 or Article 28.
To determine whether this loan
provided a benefit to the softwood
lumber industry, in accordance with
section 771(5)(E)(ii) of the Act, we
compared the interest rates charged on
the Article 28 loan to the benchmark
interest rates described in ‘‘Benchmarks
for Loans and Discount Rates.’’ Using
this methodology, we have
preliminarily determined that no benefit
was provided by this loan because the
interest rates and fees charged under
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
33116
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 108 / Tuesday, June 7, 2005 / Notices
POR and, thus, provides no
countervailable subsidy.
this program were equal to or higher
than the interest rates charged on
comparable commercial loans.
2. Assistance from the Societe de
Recuperation d’Exploitation et de
Developpement Forestiers du Quebec
(Rexfor)
SGF Rexfor, Inc. (Rexfor) is a
corporation all of whose shares are
owned by the Societe Generale de
Financement du Quebec (SGF). SGF is
an industrial and financial holding
company that finances economic
development projects in cooperation
with industrial partners. Rexfor is SGF’s
vehicle for investment in the forest
products industry.
Rexfor receives and analyzes
investment opportunities and
determines whether to become an
investor either through equity or
participative subordinated debentures.
Debentures are used as an investment
vehicle when Rexfor determines that a
project is worthwhile, but is not large
enough to necessitate more complex
equity arrangements. Consistent with
our approach in the underlying
investigation, we have not analyzed
equity investments by Rexfor because
(1) there was no allegation that Rexfor’s
equity investments were inconsistent
with the usual investment practice of
private investors, and (2) there is no
evidence on the record indicating that
Rexfor’s equity investments conferred a
benefit.
Also, consistent with our approach in
the underlying investigation, we
examined whether Rexfor’s participative
subordinated debentures, i.e., loans,
conferred a subsidy. Because assistance
from Rexfor is limited to companies in
the forest products industry, we have
preliminarily determined that this
program is specific under section
771(5A)(D)(i) of the Act. The long–term
loans provided by Rexfor qualify as a
financial contribution under section
771(5)(D)(i) of the Act. To determine
whether the single loan outstanding to
a softwood lumber producer during the
POR provided a benefit, we compared
the interest rates on the loan from
Rexfor to the benchmark interest rates as
described in ‘‘Benchmarks for Loans
and Discount Rates.’’ See 771(5)(E)(ii) of
the Act. Using this methodology, we
have preliminarily determined that no
benefit was provided by this loan
because the interest rates charged under
this program were higher than the
interest rates charged on comparable
commercial loans.
On this basis, we have preliminarily
found that the debt forgiveness by
Rexfor did not confer a benefit in the
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:54 Jun 06, 2005
Jkt 205001
hearing will be held at the U.S.
Department of Commerce, 14th Street
and Constitution Avenue, NW,
Preliminary Results of Review
Washington, DC 20230. Individuals who
In accordance with 777A(e)(2)(B) of
wish to request a hearing must submit
the Act, we have calculated a single
a written request within 30 days of the
country–wide subsidy rate to be applied publication of this notice in the Federal
to all producers and exporters of the
Register to the Assistant Secretary for
subject merchandise from Canada, other Import Administration, U.S. Department
than those producers that have been
of Commerce, Room 1870, 14th Street
excluded from this order. This rate is
and Constitution Avenue, NW,
summarized in the table below:
Washington, DC 20230.
Requests for a public hearing should
contain: (1) The party’s name, address,
and telephone number; (2) the number
Producer/Exporter
Net Subsidy Rate
of participants; and, (3) to the extent
practicable, an identification of the
All Producers/Exporters
8.18 percent ad arguments to be raised at the hearing.
valorem
An interested party may make an
affirmative presentation only on
If the final results of this review
arguments included in that party’s case
remain the same as these preliminary
or rebuttal briefs.
results, the Department intends to
This administrative review is issued
instruct CBP to assess countervailing
and published in accordance with
duties as indicated above. The
section 751(a)(1) and 777(i)(1) of the
Department also intends to instruct CBP Act.
to collect cash deposits of estimated
Dated: May 31, 2005.
countervailing duties of 8.18 percent of
Susan Kuhbach,
the f.o.b. invoice price on all shipments
Acting Assistant Secretary for Import
of the subject merchandise from
Administration.
reviewed companies, entered, or
[FR Doc. E5–2884 Filed 6–6–05; 8:45 am]
withdrawn from warehouse, for
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–S
consumption on or after the date of
publication of the final results of this
review.
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Public Comment
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Pursuant to 19 CFR 351.224(b), the
Administration
Department will disclose to parties to
the proceeding any calculations
performed in connection with these
preliminary results within five days
after the date of publication of this
notice. Pursuant to 19 CFR 351.309,
interested parties may submit written
comments in response to these
preliminary results. Case briefs must be
submitted within 30 days after the date
of publication of this notice, and
rebuttal briefs, limited to arguments
raised in case briefs, must be submitted
no later than seven days after the time
limit for filing case briefs. Parties who
submit argument in this proceeding are
requested to submit with the argument:
(1) a statement of the issues, and (2) a
brief summary of the argument. Case
and rebuttal briefs must be served on
interested parties in accordance with 19
CFR 351.303(f). Please note that an
interested party may still submit case
and/or rebuttal briefs even though the
party is not going to participate in the
hearing.
In accordance with 19 CFR 351.310,
we will hold a public hearing, if
requested, to afford interested parties an
opportunity to comment on these
preliminary results. Any requested
PO 00000
Frm 00062
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
[Docket No. 040511147–5142–02; I.D.
042804B]
Listing Endangered and Threatened
Species and Designating Critical
Habitat: 12–Month Finding on Petition
to List the Cherry Point Stock of
Pacific Herring as an Endangered or
Threatened Species
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of 12–month petition
finding.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: We (NMFS) have completed
an updated Endangered Species Act
(ESA) status review of Pacific herring
(Clupea pallasi), inclusive of the Cherry
Point herring stock (Strait of Georgia,
Washington). We initiated this status
review update in response to a petition
received on May 14, 2004, to list the
Cherry Point stock of Pacific herring as
a threatened or endangered species. We
have determined that the Cherry Point
herring stock does not qualify as a
‘‘species’’ for consideration under the
ESA. Based upon the best available
E:\FR\FM\07JNN1.SGM
07JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 108 (Tuesday, June 7, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 33088-33116]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E5-2884]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
(C-122-839)
Notice of Preliminary Results of Countervailing Duty
Administrative Review: Certain Softwood Lumber Products from Canada
AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce (the Department) is conducting an
administrative review of the countervailing duty order on certain
softwood lumber products from Canada for the period April 1, 2003,
through March 31, 2004. If the final results remain the same as these
preliminary results of administrative review, we will instruct U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to assess countervailing duties as
detailed in the ``Preliminary Results of Review'' section of this
notice. Interested parties are invited to comment on these preliminary
results. (See Public Comment section of this notice.)
EFFECTIVE DATE: June 7, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stephanie Moore at (202) 482-3692, or
Robert Copyak at (202) 482-2209, AD/CVD Operations, Office 3, Import
Administration, International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, Room 4012, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue, NW,
Washington, DC 20230.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On May 22, 2002, the Department published in the Federal Register
(67 FR 36070) the amended final affirmative countervailing duty (CVD)
determination and CVD order on certain softwood lumber products from
Canada (67 FR 37775, May 30, 2002). On May 3, 2004, the Department
published a notice of opportunity to request an administrative review
of this CVD order.
[[Page 33089]]
See Antidumping or Countervailing Duty Order, Finding, or Suspended
Investigation; Opportunity to Request Administrative Review, 69 FR
24117 (May 3, 2004). The Department received requests that it conduct
an aggregate review from, among others, the Coalition for Fair Lumber
Imports Executive Committee (petitioners) and the Government of Canada
(GOC), as well as requests for review covering an estimated 263
individual companies.\1\ On June 25, 2004, we initiated the review
covering the period April 1, 2003, through March 31, 2004. See 69 FR
39409.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Of these 263 company-specific requests, 116 were for zero/de
minimis rate reviews under 19 CFR 351.213(k)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On July 30, 2004, we determined to conduct this administrative
review on an aggregate basis consistent with section 777A(e)(2)(B) of
the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (the Act). See the memorandum to
James J. Jochum, Assistant Secretary for Import Administration, from
Jeffrey May, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Import Administration,
entitled, ``Methodology for Conducting the Review,'' dated July 30,
2004, which is a public document on file in the Central Records Unit
(CRU) in room B-099 of the main Commerce building. The Department
further determined that it was not practicable to conduct any form of
company-specific review. Id.
On September 8, 2004, we issued our initial questionnaire to the
GOC as well as to the Provincial Governments of Alberta (GOA), British
Columbia (GOBC), Manitoba (GOM), New Brunswick (GONB), Newfoundland
(GON), Nova Scotia (GONS), Ontario (GOO), Prince Edward Island (GOPEI),
Quebec (GOQ), and Saskatchewan (GOS).
On September 30, 2004, we extended the period for completion of
these preliminary results until May 31, 2005, pursuant to section
751(a)(3)(A) of the Act. See Certain Softwood Lumber Products From
Canada: Extension of Time Limit for Preliminary Results of
Countervailing Duty Administrative Review, 69 FR 58394 (September 30,
2004).
On November 22, 2004, the GOC, GOA, GOBC, GOM, GONB, GON, GONS,
GOO, GOPEI, GOQ, and GOS submitted their initial questionnaire
responses.
From February through May 2005, we issued a series of supplemental
questionnaires to the GOC, GOBC, GOA, GOS, GOM, GOO, GOQ, GONS, and
GONB. The Federal and Provincial Governments of Canada responded to all
supplemental questionnaires in a timely manner.
Pursuant to 19 CFR 351.301, the deadline for interested parties to
submit factual information is 140 days after the last day of the
anniversary month. However, both petitioners' and the Canadian parties
requested that the Department extend this due date. After a series of
extensions, we established that the deadline for interested parties to
submit factual information would be March 2, 2005. Accordingly, the due
date for submitting rebuttal and/or clarifying information was extended
to March 15, 2005. Both petitioners and the Canadian parties submitted
factual information by the March 2 and March 15 deadlines.
Period of Review
The period of review (POR) for which we are measuring subsidies is
April 1, 2003, through March 31, 2004.
Scope of the Review
The products covered by this order are softwood lumber, flooring
and siding (softwood lumber products). Softwood lumber products include
all products classified under headings 4407.1000, 4409.1010, 4409.1090,
and 4409.1020, respectively, of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the
United States (HTSUS), and any softwood lumber, flooring and siding
described below. These softwood lumber products include:
(1) Coniferous wood, sawn or chipped lengthwise, sliced or peeled,
whether or not planed, sanded or finger-jointed, of a thickness
exceeding six millimeters;
(2) Coniferous wood siding (including strips and friezes for
parquet flooring, not assembled) continuously shaped (tongued, grooved,
rabbeted, chamfered, v-jointed, beaded, molded, rounded or the like)
along any of its edges or faces, whether or not planed, sanded or
finger-jointed;
(3) Other coniferous wood (including strips and friezes for parquet
flooring, not assembled) continuously shaped (tongued, grooved,
rabbeted, chamfered, v-jointed, beaded, molded, rounded or the like)
along any of its edges or faces (other than wood moldings and wood
dowel rods) whether or not planed, sanded or finger-jointed; and
(4) Coniferous wood flooring (including strips and friezes for
parquet flooring, not assembled) continuously shaped (tongued, grooved,
rabbeted, chamfered, v-jointed, beaded, molded, rounded or the like)
along any of its edges or faces, whether or not planed, sanded or
finger-jointed.
Although the HTSUS subheadings are provided for convenience and
customs purposes, the written description of the merchandise subject to
this order is dispositive.
As specifically stated in the Issues and Decision Memorandum
accompanying the Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value: Certain Softwood Lumber Products from Canada, 67 FR 15539
(April 2, 2002) (see comment 53, item D, page 116, and comment 57, item
B-7, page 126), available at www.ia.ita.doc.gov, drilled and notched
lumber and angle cut lumber are covered by the scope of this order.
The following softwood lumber products are excluded from the scope
of this order provided they meet the specified requirements detailed
below:
(1) Stringers (pallet components used for runners): if they have at
least two notches on the side, positioned at equal distance from the
center, to properly accommodate forklift blades, properly classified
under HTSUS 4421.90.98.40.
(2) Box-spring frame kits: if they contain the following wooden
pieces--two side rails, two end (or top) rails and varying numbers of
slats. The side rails and the end rails should be radius-cut at both
ends. The kits should be individually packaged, they should contain the
exact number of wooden components needed to make a particular box
spring frame, with no further processing required. None of the
components exceeds 1'' in actual thickness or 83'' in length.
(3) Radius-cut box-spring-frame components, not exceeding 1'' in
actual thickness or 83'' in length, ready for assembly without further
processing. The radius cuts must be present on both ends of the boards
and must be substantial cuts so as to completely round one corner.
(4) Fence pickets requiring no further processing and properly
classified under HTSUS heading 4421.90.70, 1'' or less in actual
thickness, up to 8'' wide, 6' or less in length, and have finials or
decorative cuttings that clearly identify them as fence pickets. In the
case of dog-eared fence pickets, the corners of the boards should be
cut off so as to remove pieces of wood in the shape of isosceles right
angle triangles with sides measuring 3/4 inch or more.
(5) U.S. origin lumber shipped to Canada for minor processing and
[[Page 33090]]
imported into the United States, is excluded from the scope of this
order if the following conditions are met: 1) the processing occurring
in Canada is limited to kiln-drying, planing to create smooth-to-size
board, and sanding, and 2) if the importer establishes to the
satisfaction of CBP that the lumber is of U.S. origin.
(6) Softwood lumber products contained in single family home
packages or kits,\2\ regardless of tariff classification, are excluded
from the scope of this order if the importer certifies to items 6 A, B,
C, D, and requirement 6 E is met:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ To ensure administrability, we clarified the language of
exclusion number 6 to require an importer certification and to
permit single or multiple entries on multiple days as well as
instructing importers to retain and make available for inspection
specific documentation in support of each entry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. The imported home package or kit constitutes a full package of
the number of wooden pieces specified in the plan, design or blueprint
necessary to produce a home of at least 700 square feet produced to a
specified plan, design or blueprint;
B. The package or kit must contain all necessary internal and
external doors and windows, nails, screws, glue, sub floor, sheathing,
beams, posts, connectors, and if included in the purchase contract,
decking, trim, drywall and roof shingles specified in the plan, design
or blueprint.
C. Prior to importation, the package or kit must be sold to a
retailer of complete home packages or kits pursuant to a valid purchase
contract referencing the particular home design plan or blueprint, and
signed by a customer not affiliated with the importer;
D. Softwood lumber products entered as part of a single family home
package or kit, whether in a single entry or multiple entries on
multiple days, will be used solely for the construction of the single
family home specified by the home design matching the entry.
E. For each entry, the following documentation must be retained by
the importer and made available to CBP upon request:
i. A copy of the appropriate home design, plan, or blueprint
matching the entry;
ii. A purchase contract from a retailer of home kits or packages
signed by a customer not affiliated with the importer;
iii. A listing of inventory of all parts of the package or kit
being entered that conforms to the home design package being entered;
iv. In the case of multiple shipments on the same contract, all
items listed in E(iii) which are included in the present shipment shall
be identified as well.
Lumber products that CBP may classify as stringers, radius cut box-
spring-frame components, and fence pickets, not conforming to the above
requirements, as well as truss components, pallet components, and door
and window frame parts, are covered under the scope of this order and
may be classified under HTSUS subheadings 4418.90.45.90, 4421.90.70.40,
and 4421.90.97.40.
Finally, as clarified throughout the course of the investigation,
the following products, previously identified as Group A, remain
outside the scope of this order. They are:
1. Trusses and truss kits, properly classified under HTSUS 4418.90;
2. I-joist beams;
3. Assembled box spring frames;
4. Pallets and pallet kits, properly classified under HTSUS
4415.20;
5. Garage doors;
6. Edge-glued wood, properly classified under HTSUS item
4421.90.98.40;
7. Properly classified complete door frames;
8. Properly classified complete window frames;
9. Properly classified furniture.
In addition, this scope language has been further clarified to now
specify that all softwood lumber products entered from Canada claiming
non-subject status based on U.S. country of origin will be treated as
non-subject U.S.-origin merchandise under the countervailing duty
order, provided that these softwood lumber products meet the following
condition: upon entry, the importer, exporter, Canadian processor and/
or original U.S. producer establish to CBP's satisfaction that the
softwood lumber entered and documented as U.S.-origin softwood lumber
was first produced in the United States as a lumber product satisfying
the physical parameters of the softwood lumber scope.\3\ The
presumption of non-subject status can, however, be rebutted by evidence
demonstrating that the merchandise was substantially transformed in
Canada.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See the scope clarification message ( 3034202),
dated February 3, 2003, to CBP, regarding treatment of U.S. origin
lumber on file in the CRU.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subsidies Valuation Information
Allocation Period
In the underlying investigation and pursuant to 19 CFR
351.524(d)(2), the Department allocated, where applicable, all of the
non-recurring subsidies provided to the producers/exporters of subject
merchandise over a 10-year average useful life (AUL) of renewable
physical assets for the industry concerned, as listed in the Internal
Revenue Service's (IRS) 1977 Class Life Asset Depreciation Range
System, as updated by the Department of the Treasury. See Notice of
Preliminary Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, Preliminary
Affirmative Critical Circumstances Determination, and Alignment of
Final Countervailing Duty Determination With Final Antidumping
Determination: Certain Softwood Lumber Products From Canada, 66 FR
43186 (August 2001) (Preliminary Determination); see also Notice of
Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination and Final Negative
Critical Circumstances Determination: Certain Softwood Lumber Products
From Canada, 67 FR 15545 (April 2, 2002) (Final Determination). No
interested party challenged the 10-year AUL derived from the IRS
tables. Thus, in this review, we have allocated, where applicable, all
of the non-recurring subsidies provided to the producers/exporters of
subject merchandise over a 10-year AUL.
Recurring and Non-Recurring Benefits
The Department has previously determined that the sale of Crown
timber by Canadian provinces confers countervailable benefits on the
production and exportation of the subject merchandise under
771(5)(E)(iv) of the Act because the stumpage fees at which the timber
is sold are for less than adequate remuneration. See, e.g., ``Recurring
and Non-Recurring Benefits'' section of the March 21, 2002, Issues and
Decision Memorandum the accompanied the Final Determination (Final
Determination Decision Memorandum); see also Notice of Preliminary
Results of Countervailing Duty Administrative Review: Certain Softwood
Lumber Products from Canada, 69 FR 33204 (June 14, 2004) (Preliminary
Results of 1st Review). For the reasons described in the program
sections, below, the Department continues to find that Canadian
provinces sell Crown timber for less than adequate remuneration to
softwood lumber producers in Canada. Pursuant to 19 CFR 351.524(c)(1),
subsidies conferred by the government provision of a good or service
normally involve recurring benefits. Therefore, consistent with our
regulations and past practice, benefits conferred by the provinces'
administered Crown stumpage programs
[[Page 33091]]
have, for purposes of these preliminary results, been expensed in the
year of receipt.
In this review the Department is also investigating other programs
that involve the provision of grants to producers and exporters of
subject merchandise. Under 19 CFR 351.524, benefits from grants can
either be classified as providing recurring or non-recurring benefits.
Recurring benefits are expensed in the year of receipt, while grants
providing non-recurring benefits are allocated over time corresponding
to the AUL of the industry under review. However, under 19 CFR
351.524(b)(2), grants which provide non-recurring benefits will also be
expensed in the year of receipt if the amount of the grant under the
program is less than 0.5 percent of the relevant sales during the year
in which the grant was approved (referred to as the 0.5 percent test).
We have preliminarily determined to expense all grants under non-
stumpage programs in the year of receipt.
Benchmarks for Loans and Discount Rate
In selecting benchmark interest rates for use in calculating the
benefits conferred by the various loan programs under review, the
Department's normal practice is to compare the amount paid by the
borrower on the government provided loans with the amount the firm
would pay on a comparable commercial loan actually obtained on the
market. See section 771(5)(E)(ii) of the Act; 19 CFR 351.505(a)(1) and
(3)(i). However, because we are conducting this review on an aggregate
basis and we are not examining individual companies, for those programs
requiring a Canadian dollar-denominated, short-term or long-term
benchmark interest rate, we used for these preliminary results the
national average interest rates on commercial short-term or long-term
Canadian dollar-denominated loans as reported by the GOC.
The information submitted by the GOC was for fixed-rate short-term
and long-term debt. For short-term debt, the GOC provided monthly
weight-averaged short-term interest rates based on the prime business
rate, small and medium enterprise (SME) rate, three-month corporate
paper rate, and one-month bankers' acceptance rate, as reported by the
Bank of Canada. For long-term debt, the GOC provided quarterly implied
rates calculated from long-term debt and the interest payments made on
long-term debt as reported by Statistics Canada (STATCAN). Based on
these rates, we derived simple averaged POR rates for both short-term
and long-term debt.
Some of the reviewed programs provided long-term loans to the
softwood lumber industry with variable interest rates instead of fixed
interest rates. Because we were unable to gather information on
variable interest rates charged on commercial loans in Canada, we have
used as our benchmark for those variable loans the rate applicable to
long-term fixed interest rate loans for the POR as reported by the GOC.
Aggregate Subsidy Rate Calculation
As noted above, this administrative review is being conducted on an
aggregate basis. We have used the same methodology to calculate the
country-wide rate for the programs subject to this review that we used
in the Final Determination and Notice of Final Results of
Countervailing Duty Administrative Review and Rescission of Certain
Company-Specific Reviews: Certain Softwood Lumber Products from Canada,
69 FR 75917 (December 20, 2004) (Final Results of 1st Review).
Provincial Crown Stumpage Programs
For stumpage programs administered by the Canadian provinces
subject to this review, we first calculated a provincial subsidy rate
by dividing the aggregate benefit conferred under each specific
provincial stumpage program by the total stumpage denominator
calculated for that province. For further information regarding the
stumpage denominator, see ``Numerator and Denominator Used for
Calculating the Stumpage Programs' Net Subsidy Rates'' section, below.
As required by section 777A(e)(2)(B) of the Act, we next calculated a
single country-wide subsidy rate. To calculate the country-wide subsidy
rate conferred on the subject merchandise from all stumpage programs,
we weight-averaged the subsidy rate from each provincial stumpage
program by the respective provinces' relative shares of total exports
to the United States during the POR. As in Final Determination and the
Final Results of the 1st Review, these weight-averages of the subject
merchandise do not include exports from the Maritime Provinces or sales
of companies excluded from the countervailing duty order.\4\ We then
summed these weight-average subsidy rates to determine the country-wide
rate for all provincial Crown stumpage programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ The Maritime provinces are Nova Scotia, New Brunswick,
Newfoundland, and Prince Edward Island.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other Programs
We also examined a number of non-stumpage programs administered by
the Canadian Federal Government and certain Provincial Governments in
Canada. To calculate the country-wide rate for these programs, we used
the same methodology employed in the first administrative review. For
federal programs that were found to be specific because they were
limited to certain regions, we calculated the countervailable subsidy
rate by dividing the benefit by the relevant denominator (i.e., total
production of softwood lumber in the region or total exports of
softwood lumber to the United States from that region), and then
multiplying that result by the relative share of total softwood exports
to the United States from that region. For federal programs that were
not regionally specific, we divided the benefit by the relevant
country-wide sales (i.e., total sales of softwood lumber, total sales
of the wood products manufacturing industry (which includes softwood
lumber), or total sales of the wood products manufacturing and paper
industries).
For provincial programs, we calculated the countervailable subsidy
rate by dividing the benefit by the relevant sales amount for that
province (i.e., total exports of softwood lumber from that province to
the United States, total sales of softwood lumber in that province, or
total sales of the wood products manufacturing and paper industries in
that province). That result was then multiplied by the relative share
of total softwood exports to the United States from that province.
Where the countervailable subsidy rate for a program was less than
0.005 percent, the program was not included in calculating the country-
wide countervailing duty rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The denominators used for non-stumpage programs are
discussed below in the individual program write-ups.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Numerator and Denominator Used for Calculating the Stumpage Programs'
Net Subsidy Rates\5\
1. Aggregate Numerator and Denominator
As noted above, the Department is determining the stumpage
subsidies to the production of softwood lumber in Canada on an
aggregate basis. The methodology employed to calculate the ad valorem
subsidy rate requires the use of a compatible numerator and
denominator. In the final results of the first review, the Department
explained that in the numerator of the net subsidy rate calculation,
the Department
[[Page 33092]]
included only the benefit from those softwood Crown logs that entered
and were processed by sawmills during the POR (i.e., logs used in the
lumber production process). See ``Denominator'' section of the December
13, 2004, Issues and Decision Memorandum that accompanied the Final
Results of 1st Review (Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum). Accordingly, the denominator used for the final
calculation included only those products that result from the softwood
lumber manufacturing process. Id. For purposes of these preliminary
results, we continue to calculate the numerator and denominator using
the approach adopted in the final results of the first review.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ In the case of Alberta and British Columbia, it was
necessary to derive the volume of softwood Crown logs that entered
and were processed by sawmills during the POR (i.e., logs used in
the lumber production process). Our methodology for deriving those
volumes is described in the Calculation of Provincial Benefits
section of these preliminary results.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with the Department's previously established
methodology, we included the following in the denominator: softwood
lumber, including softwood lumber that undergoes some further
processing (so-called ``remanufactured'' lumber), softwood co-products
(e.g., wood chips and sawdust) that resulted from softwood lumber
production at sawmills, and residual products produced by sawmills that
were the result of the softwood lumber manufacturing process,
specifically, softwood fuelwood and untreated softwood ties.
We would have included in the denominator those softwood co-
products produced by lumber remanufacturers that resulted from the
softwood lumber manufacturing process. However, the GOC failed to
separate softwood co-products that resulted from the softwood lumber
manufacturing process of lumber remanufacturers from those resulting
from the myriad of other production processes performed by producers in
the remanufacturing category that have nothing to do with the
production of subject merchandise. Lacking the information necessary to
determine the value of softwood co-products that resulted from the
softwood lumber manufacturing process of lumber remanufacturers during
the softwood lumber manufacturing process, we have preliminarily
determined not to include any softwood co-product values from the non-
sawmill category. See Final Results of 1st Review Decision Memorandum
at Comment 16.
2. Adjustments to Account for Companies Excluded from the
Countervailing Duty Order
In the investigation, we deducted from the denominator sales by
companies that were excluded from the countervailing duty order. The
Department has since also concluded expedited reviews for a number of
companies, pursuant to which a number of additional companies have been
excluded from the countervailing duty order. See Final Results of
Countervailing Duty Expedited Reviews: Certain Softwood Lumber Products
from Canada: Notice of Final Results of Countervailing Duty Expedited
Reviews, 68 FR 24436, (May 7, 2003); see also Notice of Final Results
of Countervailing Duty Expedited Reviews of the Order on Certain
Softwood Lumber from Canada, 69 FR 10982 (March 9, 2004). In the final
results of the first review, we removed the sales of companies excluded
from the countervailing duty order from the relevant sales denominators
of our country-wide rate calculations. See ``Excluded Companies''
section of the Final Results of 1st Review Decision Memorandum.
In its case briefs submitted for consideration in the final results
of the first review, the GOC argued for the first time in that
proceeding that, for the numerator and denominator to match, the
Department must also reduce the numerator to account for any de minimis
benefits received by the excluded companies.\7\ See, e.g., Final
Results of 1st Review Decision Memorandum at Comment 15. We agreed with
the GOC in principle. Id. However, because the GOC first raised the
issue in its case briefs, the Department was unable to solicit the
information from the excluded Canadian parties regarding the
appropriate numerator. Thus, we placed the exclusion calculations from
the underlying investigation and expedited reviews on the record of the
first review. Id. We then multiplied the countervailable volumes of
logs and lumber reported by the excluded companies by each subject
provinces' weight-average unit benefit. The resulting products were
then removed from provincial stumpage benefit of each of the
corresponding province. See Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comment 15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Though excluded from the countervailing duty order, many
companies involved in the exclusion and/or expedited review
processes received de minimis levels of countervailable benefits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the current review, we requested benefit and sales data, on an
aggregate basis for each province, as they pertained to the excluded
companies during the POR. [bsol] page 2 of our April 8, 2005
supplemental questionnaire. The GOC, GOO, and GOQ responded that they
did not have the requested POR sales data. See page 2 of the GOC's
April 28, 2005 questionnaire response. Regarding the benefit
information we requested, the GOQ and GOO stated that the excluded
companies in their respective provinces did not harvest Crown timber
during the POR. The GOC stated the same with respect to the excluded
companies in the Yukon Territories. Id. at page 6. The GOC, GOO and GOQ
further claimed they did not have any information regarding the volume
of lumber and/or Crown logs purchased by the excluded companies during
the POR.
Pursuant to our prior practice and, as discussed above, we have
deducted the sales of all companies excluded from the countervailing
duty order from the relevant sales denominators used to calculate the
country-wide subsidy rates. Because we lack POR sales data from the
excluded companies, we have, consistent with our approach in the final
results of first review, indexed the excluded companies' sales data to
the POR using province-specific lumber price indices obtained from
STATCAN. We then subtracted the indexed sales data of the excluded
companies from the corresponding provincial denominators. See
Preliminary Results of 1st Review, 69 FR at 33207 and the ``Excluded
Companies'' section of the Final Results of 1st Review Decision
Memorandum.
Because the Canadian parties have stated that the excluded
companies did not acquire Crown timber during the POR and because they
have not provided any other additional benefit data from the companies,
we have not adjusted the aggregate numerator data from the relevant
provinces.
3. Pass-through
In the first administrative review, the Canadian parties claimed
that a portion of the Crown timber processed by sawmills was purchased
by the mills in arm's-length transactions with independent harvesters.
The Canadian parties further claimed that such transactions must not be
included in the subsidy calculation unless the Department determines
that the benefit to the independent harvester passed through to the
lumber producers. In the first review, we determined that Alberta,
British Columbia (B.C.), Manitoba, Ontario, and Saskatchewan each
failed
[[Page 33093]]
to substantiate this claim. See Preliminary Results of 1st Review, 69
FR at 33208, 33209 and Comments 10 and 11 of the Final Results of 1st
Review Decision Memorandum.
The basis of our determination in the first administrative review
was that transactions cannot be considered arm's-length transactions if
they are characterized by limitations that constrain buyers and sellers
of harvested Crown timber or other conditions that render those sales
ineligible for the pass-through analysis. The limitations and other
conditions we identified include (1) government-imposed appurtenancy
and local processing requirements; (2) government-mandated wood supply
agreements; (3) the structure of certain log purchase agreements; (4)
fiber exchanges between Crown tenure holders; and (5) the payment of
Crown stumpage fees by sawmills for logs purchased from independent
harvesters. Thus, the starting point of our analysis was to examine
whether in these log sale transactions the ability of a buyer or seller
to bargain freely with whomever they chose was encumbered by government
mandates or other conditions that render those sales not at arm's-
length or otherwise ineligible for the pass-through analysis. If a
transaction was conducted under the constraint(s) of one or more of
these factors, we determined that it was not conducted at arm's-length
or otherwise is ineligible for a pass-through analysis, and no
adjustment to the stumpage calculation was warranted. For example,
where we found that the sawmills paid the Crown for stumpage fees for
logs acquired from so-called independent harvesters, no pass-through
analysis was warranted because any benefits go directly to the sawmill.
Id.
In anticipation of a similar claim in this administrative review,
we requested in the initial questionnaire that each of the Canadian
provinces report, by species, the volume and value of Crown logs sold
by independent harvesters to unrelated parties during the POR. See
e.g., page III-22 of the Department's September 8, 2004, initial
questionnaire. In response to the Department's original questionnaire,
the Canadian parties provided two sets of information for us to
analyze. The GOA, GOBC, British Columbia Lumber Trade Counsel (BCLTC),
and GOO each provided an ``aggregate'' claim (with accompanying
information) of the amount of Crown timber that was obtained by the
sawmills through arm's-length transactions. The Ontario Lumber
Manufacturers Association (OLMA) also provided company-specific
transaction data and supporting information for us to analyze with
respect to Ontario and Manitoba. Regarding Quebec, the GOQ asserted
that the Department would have to conduct a pass-through analysis
before it included any softwood log volumes harvested under Forest
Management Contracts (FMCs) and Forest Management Agreements (FMAs).\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ The GOM and GOS did not claim that their sawmills purchased
Crown logs in arm's length transactions. See page MB-69 of the GOM's
November 22, 2004 questionnaire response and page SK-99 of the GOS's
November 22, 2004 questionnaire response. Therefore, we have
preliminarily concluded that a pass-through analysis is not
warranted for Manitoba and Saskatchewan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We have reviewed and considered all of the information provided on
the record of this administrative review. We determine that none of the
provinces or parties provided any new information regarding their
aggregate claims which warrants a change in or departure from the
methodology we used in the first administrative review. As in the first
administrative review, we determine that Alberta, B.C., Manitoba,
Ontario, and Saskatchewan each failed to provide the information
necessary to demonstrate that the transactions included in their
respective ``aggregate'' claims were in fact conducted at arm's length.
Consistent with our determination in the first administrative review,
we also determine that no pass-through analysis is warranted for many
of the transactions, e.g., where the sawmill paid the stumpage fee
directly to the Crown, and for fiber exchanges between Crown tenure
holders. We therefore preliminarily determine that changes to the
subsidy calculation based on the provinces' ``aggregate'' claims are
not warranted.
However, for purposes of these preliminary results, we
preliminarily determine that, based our analysis of the company-
specific data and information provided by the OLMA, a reduction in the
Ontario subsidy benefit is warranted. Our analysis and preliminary
findings with respect to these claims are detailed, by province, below.
a. Alberta
In the first review, the GOA claimed that the numerator of
Alberta's provincial subsidy rate calculation should be reduced to
account for fair-market, arm's length sales of Crown logs between
unrelated parties. The GOA based its claim on a survey of TDA
transactions that was conducted by a private consulting firm hired by
the GOA. See Preliminary Results of 1st Review, 69 FR at 33208. In the
final results of the first review, the Department found that it is
common for sawmills in Alberta to enter into agreements where a tenure-
holding independent harvester will supply timber to the sawmills but
the sawmill will pay the stumpage directly to the GOA. Id.; see also
Final Results of 1st Review Decision Memorandum at Comment 11.
Accordingly, we found that in such transactions, known as ``delegation
of signing authority'' or SA agreements, any stumpage benefit would go
directly to the sawmill paying the stumpage fee, just as if the sawmill
were drawing from its own tenure and contracting out for harvesting and
hauling services. We therefore found that the GOA failed to
substantiate that the volumes in the TDA survey were free of any
volumes associated with SA agreements and, thus, the GOA's pass-through
claim was not warranted. Id.
In the current review, we stated that for any pass-through claim,
the GOA had to provide a breakdown by species of the total volume and
value that it claims did not pass-through to the purchasing sawmill.
See page III-22 of our September 8, 2004 questionnaire. We also
instructed the GOA not to include in its pass-through claim any
purchases for which the mills paid the stumpage fee to the Crown. Id.
The GOA claimed in its initial questionnaire response that ``at
least by 1.7 million cubic meters of softwood logs were purchased by
Alberta mills in arm's length, cash only transactions with unrelated
parties.'' See page XII-1 and AB-S-76 of the GOA's November 22, 2004
questionnaire response. As in the first review, the GOA based its
contention on the TDA survey, as updated for the POR. We note that the
updated TDA survey and the GOA's questionnaire responses do not
indicate whether the volumes it analyzed were subject to SA agreements.
See page 45 of the GOA's April 8, 2005 supplemental questionnaire
response.
In fact, regarding the TDA survey, the GOA stated that ``Alberta
does not have access to the detailed information on log sales collected
on a company-by-company basis by the independent private consultant . .
.'' hired by the GOA to conduct the TDA survey. See page XII-2 of the
GOA's November 22, 2004 questionnaire response.
Given the GOA's failure to indicate whether the sales in the TDA
survey were made pursuant to SA agreements, and the GOA's statement
that it lacked access to company-specific data collected by the
consultant it hired to conduct the TDA survey, we asked the GOA to
respond to the pass-through
[[Page 33094]]
questions contained in our initial questionnaire without reliance on
the TDA survey. See page 9 of our March 16, 2005 supplemental
questionnaire. In particular, we instructed the GOA to:
. . . breakout all data on arm's length log transactions and
include information regarding the volume, value, species, corporate
affiliations of the parties subject to the transaction, {as well
as{time} a chart identifying whether or not the transaction is subject
to a delegation of signing authority (SA) agreement.
Id. The GOA responded that it did not maintain or collect such
information as any part of its normal function and that it had no means
on its own to respond to our pass-through questions aside from the TDA
survey. See page 45 of the GOA's April 8, 2005 supplemental
questionnaire response.
In our subsequent supplemental questionnaire, we noted the GOA's
claims regarding its inability to respond to our pass-through questions
without reliance on the TDA survey and pointed out that in the
concurrent Section 129 proceeding the GOA was, indeed, able to report
company-specific data separate from the TDA survey in response to the
same pass-through questions.\9\ We therefore asked the GOA to provide
in this review the same type of company-specific data, updated for the
POR. See page 2 of the Department's April 21, 2005 supplemental
questionnaire. In response to our request for company-specific pass-
through information that was not reliant on the TDA survey, the GOA
answered that the Province ``does not keep the information requested
here'' and it reiterated its assertion that the Department should
conduct its pass-through analysis for Alberta using the TDA survey. See
page 2 of its May 2, 2005 questionnaire response.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ In our April 21, 2005 supplemental questionnaire, we
inadvertently referred to the first administrative review of the
countervailing duty order when we should have instead referred to
the Section 129 proceeding concerning the pass-through issue in the
underlying investigation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The GOA further stated that, ``in an effort to provide some
additional information,'' it contacted PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC)
to provide a ``limited'' update of the survey that was included in the
pass-through claim the GOA made in the context of the Section 129
proceeding. Id. PWC performed this update of the Section 129 data using
information held by the GOA on volumes of section 80/81 wood
purportedly transferred to tenure-holding sawmills from unrelated
parties. Id.
In regard to the volume represented in the TDA survey, we note that
the GOA failed to indicate whether the sales in the TDA survey were
made pursuant to SA agreements and the GOA explained that it lacks
access to the underlying company-specific data. Regarding the claimed
lack of access, the GOA has been unable or unwilling to demonstrate
that it made reasonable efforts to obtain the necessary company-
specific data. Consequently, we preliminarily find that we are unable
to rely on the TDA survey as a basis for the GOA's pass-through claim.
Regarding the data supplied by the PwC, we note that, by the GOA's
own admission, the data constitutes a ``limited'' survey population
and, thus, does not reflect the total volumes included in the pass-
through claim made by the GOA in this review. See page 2 and Exhibit
AB-S-102 of the GOA's May 2, 2005 supplemental questionnaire response.
Further, the information from PwC does not include any documentation
regarding purchase agreements, as requested in our April 21, 2005
questionnaire.\10\ See pages 1-3 and Exhibit AB-S-102 of the GOA's May
2, 2005 supplemental questionnaire response. Moreover, the information
from PwC lacks any corresponding value information that would enable
the Department to conduct its pass-through analysis on a transaction-
specific basis. Id. The GOA has been unable or unwilling to explain why
it has not supplied the necessary information. Therefore, we
preliminarily determine to reject the information from the PwC as a
basis for the GOA's pass-through claim.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ As explained above, it is necessary to examine purchase
contacts in order to determine whether they were structured as SA
agreements. In addition, it is necessary to review the purchase
contracts to ensure that the transactions were made at arm's length,
i.e., were not affected by any additional factors we previously
identified, including: (1) limitations on log sales that may be
contained in Crown tenure contracts such as appurtenancy
requirements (2) local processing requirements, or (3) fiber
exchanges between Crown tenureholders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, based on our findings above, we preliminarily determine
that a pass-through analysis for Alberta is not warranted.
b. British Columbia
The GOBC claims that 14.7 million cubic meters of Crown timber, or
22 percent of the total Crown softwood log harvest, was harvested by
so-called independent harvesters, i.e., harvesters that do not own and
are not affiliated with sawmills during the POR. The GOBC further
claims that no subsidy that may be attributable to this harvest volume
passed through to purchasing sawmills and, thus, the volumes should not
be included in the numerator of British Columbia's provincial subsidy
rate calculation. See page BC-XIV-2 of the GOBC's November 22, 2004
questionnaire response. In support of this claim, the GOBC provided
survey data on what were purported to be B.C.'s primary sawmills'
arm's-length log purchases. These data, covering the prior review
period, were originally placed on the record of the first review by the
BCLTC. See ``Norcon Forestry Ltd. Survey of Primary Sawmills' Arm's
Length Log Purchases in the Province of British Columbia,'' which was
placed on the record of this review at Volume IV, Exhibit 24 A, B of
the BCLTC's February 24, 2005 submission (Norcon Study).\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ In its initial questionnaire response, the GOBC claimed
that the BCLTC would provide a Norcon Study updated for the POR of
this review. See page BC-XIV-1 of the GOBC's November 22, 2004
questionnaire response.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the first review, the Department found that the transactions in
the Norcon Study involved sales of Crown logs through Section 20
auctions as well as sales to mills by small woodlot owners. See e.g.,
Preliminary Results of 1st Review, 69 FR 33208 and Final Results of 1st
Review Decision Memorandum at Comment 10. In the first review, we
further found that most of the Section 20 transactions are structured
under standard contracts called ``Log Purchase Agreements'' in which
sawmills purchasing the Crown timber are billed for the Crown stumpage
fee directly by the B.C. Ministry of Forests. Id. As explained above,
in the first review, we determined that no pass-through analysis is
warranted where the sawmill or some third-party company pays Crown
stumpage fees for logs purchased from independent harvesters. See Final
Results of 1st Review Decision Memorandum at Comment 10.
In addition to the information in the Norcon Study, evidence
obtained in this review further supports our finding that sawmills pay
the stumpage fee directly to the Crown for logs purchased from so-
called independent harvesters. See Exhibits BC-S-245, 246, and 247 of
the GOBC's April 21, 2005 questionnaire response, which contain source
documents illustrating how sawmills pay for stumpage on Section 20
sales. Thus, under such arrangements, any stumpage benefit would go
directly to the sawmills paying the stumpage fee, just as if the
sawmill were drawing from its own tenure and contracting out for
harvesting and hauling services, thereby eliminating the need for a
pass-through analysis.
[[Page 33095]]
In the prior review, we determined that log sales cannot be
considered to be arm's-length transactions where there are restrictive
government-imposed appurtenancy and local processing requirements that
dictate to the harvester those entities to whom it may sell, thereby
severely hampering the ability of the harvesters to bargain freely with
willing purchasers in the marketplace. See Final Results of 1st Review
Decision Memorandum at Comment 10. However, in this review the GOBC has
stated that amendments to the Forest Act, effective November 2003,
nullified the timber processing and appurtenancy clauses for
replaceable and non-replaceable licenses older than 10 years. For
licenses in effect fewer than 10 years, the timber processing and
appurtenancy clauses will expire with the licenses or be nullified upon
the license's tenth anniversary. Further, the GOBC claims that no new
licenses advertised after November 4, 2003 contain any of these
clauses. See GOBC's November 22, 2004 questionnaire response at BC-III-
11 and GOBC's April 13, 2005 questionnaire response at page 60.
In light of the GOBC's new legislation and because pre-existing
licenses continued to retain the appurtenancy clauses we identified in
the prior review, we requested that the GOBC demonstrate that none of
the tenure agreements for which it claimed no benefits passed through
from the independent harvesters to the sawmills contained any of these
restrictive clauses. In response, the GOBC claimed that the timber
processing and appurtenancy clauses have no impact on the arm's length
transactions and are therefore irrelevant to the Department's pass-
through analysis. As to our request that it demonstrate that none of
the tenure agreements included in its pass-through claim contained any
restrictive clauses, the GOBC claimed that it could not provide such
information because it would be burdensome. See page 61 of the GOBC's
April 13, 2005 questionnaire response. Instead, the GOBC provided some
copies of the types of tenure agreements that may have been held by so-
called independent harvesters during the POR. However, regarding these
agreements, the GOBC provided no information linking the tenure
agreements it submitted to those transactions included in its no-pass-
through claim (e.g., several of the submitted agreements were merely
blank templates). Therefore, for purposes of these preliminary results,
we find that the GOBC has failed to demonstrate that the restrictive
clauses were eliminated as a consequence of the amendments to the
Forest Act. We also continue to disagree with the GOBC that these
restrictions are irrelevant to the pass-through analysis. These
government-imposed restrictions severely limit the ability of buyers
and sellers of logs to bargain freely with whomever they choose or to
bargain on terms that are not encumbered by government mandates.
For the reasons explained above, and the fact that the GOBC has not
submitted any new information that warrants reconsideration of the
Department's prior findings, we preliminarily conclude that the GOBC
has failed to adequately substantiate its pass-through claim, and no
adjustment to the provincial numerator has been made.
c. Ontario
As mentioned above, in response to the Department's initial
questionnaire, the GOO submitted an ``aggregate'' claim of the portion
of the Crown timber processed by Ontario sawmills that was purchased in
arm's-length transactions. The GOO made a claim of no pass-through for
2,459,812 cubic meters or 23.55 percent of the total invoiced volume of
Crown timber entering the largest 25 sawmills in Ontario during the
POR. In support of this claim, the GOO provided a breakdown of log
transactions between the 25 largest mills in Ontario and tenure holders
that do not own a sawmill, and certifications from officials of three
mills each stating that their mill is not affiliated with its timber
suppliers. The OLMA separately submitted company-specific information
for one harvester and eight mills. The information included
transaction-specific data, statements and certification of non-
affiliation, and additional supporting documentation.
For the reasons described below, we preliminarily determine that
the GOO failed to substantiate its ``aggregate'' no-pass-through claim.
Although the Department accepts the three certifications of non-
affiliation provided by the GOO, the GOO's submission is lacking
certifications for the other mills it included in its claim.
Furthermore, in the initial questionnaire, we requested that the GOO
``not include (as part of its claim) any transactions that were made
pursuant to wood supply commitments or purchases for which the mills
paid the stumpage to the Crown rather than the harvester.'' page VI-22
of the Initial Questionnaire at ``Section VI: Questionnaire for the
Province of Ontario. However, the GOO did not delineate the
transactions in which the mills paid the stumpage fees directly to the
Crown or the transactions that were made under a wood supply commitment
letter or a wood supply agreement. See pages ON-237 and ON-238 of Vol.
1 of 19 and exhibit ON-PASS-1 of Vol. 17 of 19 of the GOO's November
22, 2004, initial questionnaire response. Due to these deficiencies, we
are unable to conduct a pass-through analysis using the ``aggregate''
data provided by the GOO. We therefore preliminarily determine that
changes to the subsidy calculation based on the GOO's ``aggregate'' no-
pass-through claim are not warranted.
With respect to the company-specific data and information provided
by the OLMA, we preliminarily determine that these are sufficient for
purposes of conducting a pass-through analysis. We accept the
certifications by the companies that the transactions they reported
were between unaffiliated parties. In addition, the company-specific
data clearly identified those transactions for which the harvesters
(rather than the mills) paid the stumpage fees and those that were not
subject to other restrictions, such as government-mandated wood supply
commitments or fiber exchange agreements. Accordingly, we determine
that a portion of the log sale transactions reported by the OLMA were
conducted at arm's-length and were otherwise not affected by other
conditions during the POR.
For these transactions, we then performed the next step of our
pass-through analysis by examining whether the mill received a
competitive benefit from the purchase of the subsidized logs. This
competitive benefit analysis is guided by the provisions of the
Department's regulation on upstream subsidies. See 19 CFR 351.523.
Under this analysis, a competitive benefit exists when the price for
the input is lower than the price for a benchmark input price. The
Department's regulations provide for the use of actual or average
prices for unsubsidized input products, including imports, or an
appropriate surrogate as the benchmark input price.
We have previously determined that the record in the first
administrative review did not contain any private prices in Ontario
that were suitable for use as benchmarks to measure the adequacy of
remuneration for Crown provided stumpage. See ``Private Provincial
Market Prices'' section and Final Results of 1st Admin Review at
Comments 20, 21. As explained in ``Provincial Stumpage Programs''
below, we have reached the same conclusion
[[Page 33096]]
based on the record in this proceeding. We have also explained in the
first administrative review with respect to British Columbia, that
``stumpage and log markets are closely intertwined and therefore Crown
stumpage prices affect both stumpage and log prices, `` and that
subsidized prices in the stumpage market would result in price
suppression in log markets. Id. at ``B.C. Log Prices Are Not An
Appropriate Benchmark.'' We have reached the same conclusion with
respect to the log markets in Ontario. In Ontario, Crown timber
supplies a dominant portion of the market, and the unit cost of this
supply effectively determines the market prices of logs in Ontario. As
shown on the record in this review and the prior review, the prices
harvesters charge for logs are derived directly from the prices they
pay for stumpage plus harvesting costs. Because of the relationship
between timber (stumpage) and log prices, prices for logs in Ontario
would be suppressed by the subsidized prices in the timber markets. As
such, log prices in Ontario are unsuitable for purposes of measuring
whether a competitive benefit has passed-through in transactions
involving sales of Crown logs.
Instead, we have turned to private stumpage prices in the
Maritimes, which we have determined are market-determined, in-country
prices. However, because we are measuring the competitive benefit for
the sale of subsidized logs, we have derived species-specific benchmark
log prices by combining the unsubsidized Maritimes stumpage prices with
the various harvest, haul, road, and management costs reported by the
GOO.
We then compared the per unit prices listed for each transaction
reported by the OLMA that we determined was eligible for a competitive
benefit analysis with our benchmark log prices. If the price per cubic
meter was equal to or higher than the benchmark price, we determined
that no competitive benefit passed through and the corresponding volume
was excluded from the numerator of our calculations. Where the per unit
price was lower than the benchmark price, and where the difference
between the benchmark and actual log prices was greater than that
province-specific per-unit stumpage benefit (e.g., C$8.74 for Ontario
SPF), we capped the amount of the subsidy considered to have ``passed-
through'' by the province-specific per-unit stumpage benefit. As such,
the amount of the competitive benefit that calculated as was not passed
though in the transaction was never greater than the subsidy granted by
the Crown. The result of these calculations is that only a small
portion of the Crown harvest volume originally included in the
numerator is excluded from the numerator of our revised subsidy
calculations. Accordingly, a small reduction in the Ontario subsidy
benefit is warranted. The calculations are business proprietary. See
the May 31, 2005, Preliminary Calculations Memorandum for Ontario. As
noted above, if we were unable to determine that the transaction
qualified as an arm's-length transaction or was subject to other
conditions (e.g., the stumpage for the log was paid by the harvester),
we did not conduct a competitive benefit analysis and the corresponding
volume associated with these transactions was not excluded from the
subsidy calculation.
d. Manitoba
The Canadian parties and the GOM did not make an ``aggregate''
claim of the portion of the Crown timber processed by Manitoba sawmills
that was purchased in arm's-length transactions. Rather, the OLMA
submitted company-specific information on behalf of Tembec Inc.
We determine that the company-specific data and information
provided by the OLMA are sufficient for purposes of our analysis and
that a portion of the transactions in Manitoba constitute arm's-length
sales of logs by independent harvesters to unaffiliated sawmills during
the POR. We accept the statement that ``with respect to its operations
in Manitoba, Tembec is an independent harvester.'' See page 4 of Volume
1 of the OLMA''s November 22, 2004, submission. In addition, the
information and data provided indicate that the transactions were not
characterized by the limitations which constrain buyers and sellers of
harvested Crown timber from free negotiation, described above.
Accordingly, we determine that a portion of the transactions in
Manitoba constitute arm's-length sales of logs by independent
harvesters to unaffiliated sawmills during the POR.
We applied the same methodology as described above in the Ontario
pass-through section when conducting our competitive benefit analysis.
Because the GOM did not submit any log pricing data on the record, we
derived the species-specific benchmark log price by combining the
private market-determined, in-country Maritime stumpage prices with the
various costs reported by the GOM. Because the GOM did not report
certain harvesting costs and hauling costs, we used, where necessary,
harvesting and hauling costs placed on the record by the GOO as
surrogates. The result of these calculations is that none of the Crown
harvest volume originally included in the numerator is excluded from
the numerator of our revised subsidy calculations. Accordingly, no
reduction in the Manitoba subsidy benefit is warranted. The
calculations contain business proprietary information and, thus, cannot
be discussed in further detail in these preliminary results. Therefore,
for further details, see the May 31, 2005, Preliminary Calculations
Memorandum for Manitoba.
e. Quebec
In the first review, the Department did not include Crown timber
harvested by FMC and FMA licensees in the numerator of Quebec's
provincial subsidy rate calculation. While we acknowledged that
evidence on the record of the first review demonstrated that some of
the timber harvested under FMCs was sold to sawmills during the POR,
such transactions may have included sales of logs from non-sawmill
owning tenure holders to sawmills and, thus, would have required a
pass-through analysis. SeeFinal Results of the 1st Review Decision
Memorandum at Comment 13. Because in the first review we did not
examine the relationship between the harvesters and sawmills or the
terms and conditions of the timber sales in the context of a pass-
through analysis, we found that we were unable to reach a determination
as to whether the volume of timber harvested under FMCs should be
included in the numerator. Id. However, we indicated that we would
reconsider the issue in the course of the second review. Id.
In this review, petitioners assert that the Department must include
in the numerator of the Quebec provincial subsidy rate calculation the
volumes of Crown timber harvested by FMC and FMA licensees on the
grounds that the GOQ has refused to answer the Department's questions
concerning these licensees. See page 112 through 114 of petitioners'
April 29, 2005 submission.
For purposes of these preliminary results, we have included the
volume of Crown timber harvested under the FMC license program in the
numerator of Quebec's provincial subsidy rate calculation. In our
initial questionnaire, we explained to the GOQ that if it wished to
claim that any portion of the reported volume of Crown timber harvested
under the FMC and FMA licences was sold in arm's length transactions
and that any subsidies provided for that portion of timber of the Crown
harvest did not ``pass-
[[Page 33097]]
through'' to purchasing sawmill(s), it had to provide a breakdown, by
species, of the total volume and value of this harvested timber during
the POR. In addition, we instructed the GOQ to respond to a series of
questions regarding the terms and conditions of the transactions
covered by any pass-through claim and to identify any affiliations
between the buyer and seller of the logs in question. See VII-30 of our
September 8, 2005 questionnaire. In its response, the GOQ stated:
At this time, the Gouvernment of Quebec is not claiming that any
portion of the reported volume of Crown harvest was sold in arms'
length transactions. This is not to suggest that there are no such
transactions. To the contrary, the volumes of Crown timber harvested
pursuant to FMCs and FMAs, and subsequently sold in open market
transactions are undoubtedly arm's length transactions. . . Because the
volume of standing timber harvested under FMCs and FMAs is negligible,
the Department's consistent practice has been to base its calculations
on the volumes harvested pursuant to TSFMAs. Adherence to this practice
obviates the need for pass-through analysis in Quebec.
See page QC-157 through QC-158 of the GOQ's November 22, 2004
questionnaire response. The GOQ added that if the Department decided to
include FMC and FMA volumes in its calculations, then it would have to
undertake a pass-through analysis. Id.
In our initial questionnaire, we further asked the GOQ to indicate
the total volume and value of Crown timber billed to any person or
company that did not own or operate a sawmill and was not affiliated
with a sawmill that the GOQ permitted to harvest Crown timber during
the POR. See page VII-6 of our September 8, 2004 questionnaire. In
response, the GOQ provided a list of FMC holders that it claimed did
not own or operate sawmills during the POR. See Exhibit 50 of its
November 22, 2004 questionnaire response. Many of the FMC holders
identified in Exhibit 50 were municipalities. The GOQ also provided
consolidated volume and value harvest data for FMC holders that ``paid
no stumpage'' and those that ``paid stumpage.'' See Exhibit 57 of the
GOQ's November 22, 2004 questionnaire response. However, this exhibit
did not list the volume and value data separately for each FMC holder,
as instructed by our initial questionnaire.
In our initial questionnaire, we also asked the GOQ to identify the
volume and value, by species and grade, of Crown log sales by FMC
holders to companies th