Stainless Steel Sheet and Strip in Coils from Italy: Initiation of Countervailing Duty Changed Circumstances Review and Notice of Consideration of Revocation of Order, 329-331 [E5-8275]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 2 / Wednesday, January 4, 2006 / Notices
interest in the order, in whole or in part.
See section 782(h)(2) of the Act and
section 351.222(g)(1) of the
Department’s regulations.
The petitioners state that they are
producers of SSPC but do not identify
the percentage of production of the
domestic like product they represent. At
present, the Department has no
information on the record that the other
known domestic producers of SSPC
have no interest in maintaining the
countervailing duty order with respect
to the subject merchandise imported
from Italy. Therefore, the Department
does not have information on the record
of this changed circumstances review
that the petitioners account for
substantially all, or at least 85 percent,
of the production of the domestic like
product. See Certain Tin Mill Products
From Japan: Final Results of Changed
Circumstances Review, 66 FR 52109
(October 12, 2001); see also 19 CFR
351.208(c). Accordingly, we are not
combining this initiation with a
preliminary determination, pursuant to
19 CFR 351.221(c)(3)(ii). This notice of
initiation will accord all interested
parties an opportunity to address this
proposed revocation.
Pursuant to section 751(b)(1) of the
Act, the Department will conduct a
changed circumstances review upon
receipt of information concerning, or a
request from an interested party of, a
countervailing duty order which shows
changed circumstances sufficient to
warrant a review of the order. Therefore,
in accordance with section 751(b)(1) of
the Act, we are initiating a changed
circumstances review based upon the
request made by the petitioners.
If, as a result of this review, we revoke
the order, we intend to instruct U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (‘‘CBP’’)
to liquidate without regard to applicable
countervailing duties, and refund any
estimated countervailing duties
collected on all unliquidated entries of
the merchandise subject to the order, as
described above under the ‘‘Scope of the
Order’’ section, entered, or withdrawn
from warehouse, for consumption on or
after September 4, 1998, i.e., the
publication date of the Department’s
preliminary determination. See
Preliminary Affirmative Countervailing
Duty Determination and Alignment of
Final Countervailing Duty
Determination With Final Antidumping
Duty Determination: Stainless Steel
Plate in Coils from Italy, 63 FR 47246
(September 4, 1998). We will also
instruct CBP to pay interest on such
refunds with respect to the subject
merchandise entered, or withdrawn
from warehouse, for consumption on or
after May 11, 1999, the date of
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21:48 Jan 03, 2006
Jkt 208001
publication of the countervailing duty
order, in accordance with section 778 of
the Act. The current requirement for a
cash deposit of estimated countervailing
duties on the subject merchandise will
continue unless, and until, we publish
a final determination to revoke the
countervailing duty order on SSPC from
Italy.
Public Comment
Interested parties are invited to
comment on the initiation of this
changed circumstances review. Parties
who submit argument in this proceeding
are requested to submit with the
argument (1) a statement of the issue,
and (2) a brief summary of the
argument. All written comments may be
submitted by interested parties not later
than 14 days after the date of
publication of this notice in accordance
with 19 CFR 351.303, and shall be
served on all interested parties on the
Department’s service list.
The Department will publish in the
Federal Register a notice of preliminary
results of changed circumstances
review, in accordance with 19 CFR
351.221(c)(3), which will set forth the
factual and legal conclusions upon
which our preliminary results are based,
and a description of any action
proposed based on those results.
This notice is published in
accordance with section 751(b)(1) of the
Act and sections 351.216 and 351.222 of
the Department’s regulations.
Dated: December 23, 2005.
Stephen J. Claeys,
Acting Assistant Secretaryfor Import
Administration.
[FR Doc. E5–8276 Filed 1–3–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[C–475–825]
Stainless Steel Sheet and Strip in Coils
from Italy: Initiation of Countervailing
Duty Changed Circumstances Review
and Notice of Consideration of
Revocation of Order
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: On December 2, 2005,
Allegheny Ludlum Corporation and AK
Steel Corporation filed a request for a
countervailing duty changed
circumstances review. Specifically, they
requested that the Department of
Commerce revoke the countervailing
duty order on stainless steel sheet and
strip in coils from Italy. In response, the
AGENCY:
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
329
Department of Commerce is initiating a
changed circumstances review of the
countervailing duty order on stainless
steel sheet and strip in coils from Italy.
Interested parties are invited to
comment on this notice of initiation.
EFFECTIVE DATE: January 4, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brandon Farlander or Audrey R.
Twyman, AD/CVD Operations, Office 1,
Import Administration, International
Trade Administration, U.S. Department
of Commerce, 14th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20230; telephone (202) 482–0182
and (202) 482–3534, respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On August 6, 1999, the Department of
Commerce (the ‘‘Department’’)
published a countervailing duty order
on stainless steel sheet and strip in coils
(‘‘SSSS’’) from Italy. See Amended Final
Determination: Stainless Steel Sheet
and Strip in Coils from the Republic of
Korea; and Notice of Countervailing
Duty Orders: Stainless Steel Sheet and
Strip in Coils from France, Italy and the
Republic of Korea, 64 FR 42923 (August
6, 1999).
On December 2, 2005, the Department
received a request from Allegheny
Ludlum Corporation and AK Steel
Corporation, some of the petitioners in
the original investigation
(‘‘petitioners’’), that the Department
initiate a changed circumstances review
for purposes of revoking the
countervailing duty (‘‘CVD’’) order.
Also, it is the petitioners’ understanding
that, upon revocation of the CVD order,
the Department will fully refund any
countervailing duties deposited
pursuant to the order on unliquidated
entries. The petitioners state that they
are no longer interested in maintaining
the countervailing duty order or in the
imposition of CVD duties on the subject
merchandise.
Scope of the Order
The products covered by this order
are certain stainless steel sheet and strip
in coils. Stainless steel is an alloy steel
containing, by weight, 1.2 percent or
less of carbon and 10.5 percent or more
of chromium, with or without other
elements. The subject sheet and strip is
a flat–rolled product in coils that is
greater than 9.5 mm in width and less
than 4.75 mm in thickness, and that is
annealed or otherwise heat treated and
pickled or otherwise descaled. The
subject sheet and strip may also be
further processed (e.g., cold–rolled,
polished, aluminized, coated, etc.)
provided that it maintains the specific
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330
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 2 / Wednesday, January 4, 2006 / Notices
dimensions of sheet and strip following
such processing.
The merchandise subject to this order
is classified in the Harmonized Tariff
Schedule of the United States
(‘‘HTSUS’’) at the following
subheadings: 7219.13.00.30,
7219.13.00.50, 7219.13.00.70,
7219.13.00.80, 7219.14.00.30,
7219.14.00.65, 7219.14.00.90,
7219.32.00.05, 7219.32.00.20,
7219.32.00.25, 7219.32.00.35,
7219.32.00.36, 7219.32.00.38,
7219.32.00.42, 7219.32.00.44,
7219.33.00.05, 7219.33.00.20,
7219.33.00.25, 7219.33.00.35,
7219.33.00.36, 7219.33.00.38,
7219.33.00.42, 7219.33.00.44,
7219.34.00.05, 7219.34.00.20,
7219.34.00.25, 7219.34.00.30,
7219.34.00.35, 7219.35.00.05,
7219.35.00.15, 7219.35.00.30,
7219.35.00.35, 7219.90.00.10,
7219.90.00.20, 7219.90.00.25,
7219.90.00.60, 7219.90.00.80,
7220.12.10.00, 7220.12.50.00,
7220.20.10.10, 7220.20.10.15,
7220.20.10.60, 7220.20.10.80,
7220.20.60.05, 7220.20.60.10,
7220.20.60.15, 7220.20.60.60,
7220.20.60.80, 7220.20.70.05,
7220.20.70.10, 7220.20.70.15,
7220.20.70.60, 7220.20.70.80,
7220.20.80.00, 7220.20.90.30,
7220.20.90.60, 7220.90.00.10,
7220.90.00.15, 7220.90.00.60, and
7220.90.00.80. Although the HTSUS
subheadings are provided for
convenience and customs purposes, the
Department’s written description of the
merchandise covered by this order is
dispositive.
Excluded from the scope of this order
are the following: (1) sheet and strip that
is not annealed or otherwise heat treated
and pickled or otherwise descaled; (2)
sheet and strip that is cut to length; (3)
plate (i.e., flat–rolled stainless steel
products of a thickness of 4.75 mm or
more); (4) flat wire (i.e., cold–rolled
sections, with a prepared edge,
rectangular in shape, of a width of not
more than 9.5 mm); and (5) razor blade
steel. Razor blade steel is a flat–rolled
product of stainless steel, not further
worked than cold–rolled (cold–
reduced), in coils, of a width of not
more than 23 mm and a thickness of
0.266 mm or less, containing, by weight,
12.5 to 14.5 percent chromium, and
certified at the time of entry to be used
in the manufacture of razor blades. See
Chapter 72 of the HTSUS, ‘‘Additional
U.S. Note’’ 1(d).
In response to comments by interested
parties the Department has determined
that certain specialty stainless steel
products are also excluded from the
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17:18 Jan 03, 2006
Jkt 208001
scope of this order. These excluded
products are described below:
Flapper valve steel is defined as
stainless steel strip in coils containing,
by weight, between 0.37 and 0.43
percent carbon, between 1.15 and 1.35
percent molybdenum, and between 0.20
and 0.80 percent manganese. This steel
also contains, by weight, phosphorus of
0.025 percent or less, silicon of between
0.20 and 0.50 percent, and sulfur of
0.020 percent or less. The product is
manufactured by means of vacuum arc
remelting, with inclusion controls for
sulphide of no more than 0.04 percent
and for oxide of no more than 0.05
percent. Flapper valve steel has a tensile
strength of between 210 and 300 ksi,
yield strength of between 170 and 270
ksi, plus or minus 8 ksi, and a hardness
(Hv) of between 460 and 590. Flapper
valve steel is most commonly used to
produce specialty flapper valves in
compressors.
Also excluded is a product referred to
as suspension foil, a specialty steel
product used in the manufacture of
suspension assemblies for computer
disk drives. Suspension foil is described
as 302/304 grade or 202 grade stainless
steel of a thickness between 14 and 127
microns, with a thickness tolerance of
plus–or-minus 2.01 microns, and
surface glossiness of 200 to 700 percent
Gs. Suspension foil must be supplied in
coil widths of not more than 407 mm
and with a mass of 225 kg or less. Roll
marks may only be visible on one side,
with no scratches of measurable depth.
The material must exhibit residual
stresses of 2 mm maximum deflection
and flatness of 1.6 mm over 685 mm
length.
Certain stainless steel foil for
automotive catalytic converters is also
excluded from the scope of this order.
This stainless steel strip in coils is a
specialty foil with a thickness of
between 20 and 110 microns used to
produce a metallic substrate with a
honeycomb structure for use in
automotive catalytic converters. The
steel contains, by weight, carbon of no
more than 0.030 percent, silicon of no
more than 1.0 percent, manganese of no
more than 1.0 percent, chromium of
between 19 and 22 percent, aluminum
of no less than 5.0 percent, phosphorus
of no more than 0.045 percent, sulfur of
no more than 0.03 percent, lanthanum
of less than 0.002 or greater than 0.05
percent, and total rare earth elements of
more than 0.06 percent, with the
balance iron.
Permanent magnet iron–chromiumcobalt alloy stainless strip is also
excluded from the scope of this order.
This ductile stainless steel strip
contains, by weight, 26 to 30 percent
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
chromium and 7 to 10 percent cobalt,
with the remainder of iron, in widths
228.6 mm or less, and a thickness
between 0.127 and 1.270 mm. It exhibits
magnetic remanence between 9,000 and
12,000 gauss, and a coercivity of
between 50 and 300 oersteds. This
product is most commonly used in
electronic sensors and is currently
available under proprietary trade names
such as ‘‘Arnokrome III.’’1
Certain electrical resistance alloy steel
is also excluded from the scope of this
order. This product is defined as a non–
magnetic stainless steel manufactured to
American Society of Testing and
Materials (ASTM) specification B344
and containing, by weight, 36 percent
nickel, 18 percent chromium, and 46
percent iron, and is most notable for its
resistance to high–temperature
corrosion. It has a melting point of 1390
degrees Celsius and displays a creep
rupture limit of 4 kilograms per square
millimeter at 1000 degrees Celsius. This
steel is most commonly used in the
production of heating ribbons for circuit
breakers and industrial furnaces, and in
rheostats for railway locomotives. The
product is currently available under
proprietary trade names such as ‘‘Gilphy
36.’’2
Certain martensitic precipitation–
hardenable stainless steel is also
excluded from the scope of this order.
This high–strength, ductile stainless
steel product is designated under the
Unified Numbering System (UNS) as
S45500–grade steel, and contains, by
weight, 11 to 13 percent chromium and
7 to 10 percent nickel. Carbon,
manganese, silicon and molybdenum
each comprise, by weight, 0.05 percent
or less, with phosphorus and sulfur
each comprising, by weight, 0.03
percent or less. This steel has copper,
niobium, and titanium added to achieve
aging and will exhibit yield strengths as
high as 1700 Mpa and ultimate tensile
strengths as high as 1750 Mpa after
aging, with elongation percentages of 3
percent or less in 50 mm. It is generally
provided in thicknesses between 0.635
and 0.787 mm, and in widths of 25.4
mm. This product is most commonly
used in the manufacture of television
tubes and is currently available under
proprietary trade names such as
‘‘Durphynox 17.’’3
Finally, three specialty stainless steels
typically used in certain industrial
blades and surgical and medical
instruments are also excluded from the
scope of this order. These include
1 ‘‘Arnokrome III’’ is a trademark of the Arnold
Engineering Company.
2 ‘‘Gilphy 36’’ is a trademark of Imphy, S.A.
3 ‘‘Durphynox 17’’ is a trademark of Imphy, S.A.
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 2 / Wednesday, January 4, 2006 / Notices
stainless steel strip in coils used in the
production of textile cutting tools (e.g.,
carpet knives).4 This steel is similar to
AISI grade 420 but containing, by
weight, 0.5 to 0.7 percent of
molybdenum. The steel also contains,
by weight, carbon of between 1.0 and
1.1 percent, sulfur of 0.020 percent or
less, and includes between 0.20 and
0.30 percent copper and between 0.20
and 0.50 percent cobalt. This steel is
sold under proprietary names such as
‘‘GIN4 Mo.’’ The second excluded
stainless steel strip in coils is similar to
AISI 420–J2 and contains, by weight,
carbon of between 0.62 and 0.70
percent, silicon of between 0.20 and
0.50 percent, manganese of between
0.45 and 0.80 percent, phosphorus of no
more than 0.025 percent, and sulfur of
no more than 0.020 percent. This steel
has a carbide density on average of 100
carbide particles per 100 square
microns. An example of this product is
‘‘GIN5’’ steel. The third specialty steel
has a chemical composition similar to
AISI 420 F, with carbon of between 0.37
and 0.43 percent, molybdenum of
between 1.15 and 1.35 percent, but
lower manganese of between 0.20 and
0.80 percent, phosphorus of no more
than 0.025 percent, silicon of between
0.20 and 0.50 percent, and sulfur of no
more than 0.020 percent. This product
is supplied with a hardness of more
than Hv 500 guaranteed after customer
processing, and is supplied as, for
example, ‘‘GIN6.’’5
wwhite on PROD1PC61 with NOTICES
Initiation of Changed Circumstances
Review
Section 751(d)(1) of the Tariff Act of
1930, as amended (the ‘‘Act’’), and 19
CFR 351.222(g), provide that the
Department may revoke an antidumping
or countervailing duty order, in whole
or in part, after conducting a changed
circumstances review pursuant to
section 751(b) of the Act and concluding
from the available information that
changed circumstances exist sufficient
to warrant revocation or termination.
The Department may conclude that
changed circumstances sufficient to
warrant revocation (in whole or in part)
exist when producers accounting for
substantially all of the production of the
domestic like product to which the
order pertains have expressed a lack of
interest in the order, in whole or in part.
See section 782(h)(2) of the Act and
section 351.222(g)(1) of the
Department’s regulations.
4 This list of uses is illustrative and provided for
descriptive purposes only.
5 ‘‘GIN4 Mo,’’ ‘‘GIN5’’ and ‘‘GIN6’’ are the
proprietary grades of Hitachi Metals America, Ltd.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:14 Jan 03, 2006
Jkt 205001
The petitioners state that they are
producers of SSSS but do not identify
the percentage of production of the
domestic like product they represent. At
present, the Department has no
information on the record that the other
known domestic producers of SSSS
have no interest in maintaining the
countervailing duty order with respect
to the subject merchandise imported
from Italy. Therefore, the Department
does not have information on the record
of this changed circumstances review
that the petitioners account for
substantially all, or at least 85 percent,
of the production of the domestic like
product. See Certain Tin Mill Products
From Japan: Final Results of Changed
Circumstances Review, 66 FR 52109
(October 12, 2001); see also 19 CFR
351.208(c). Accordingly, we are not
combining this initiation with a
preliminary determination, pursuant to
19 CFR 351.221(c)(3)(ii). This notice of
initiation will accord all interested
parties an opportunity to address this
proposed revocation.
Pursuant to section 751(b)(1) of the
Act, the Department will conduct a
changed circumstances review upon
receipt of information concerning, or a
request from an interested party of, a
countervailing duty order which shows
changed circumstances sufficient to
warrant a review of the order. Therefore,
in accordance with section 751(b)(1) of
the Act, we are initiating a changed
circumstances review based upon the
request made by the petitioners.
If, as a result of this review, we revoke
the order, we intend to instruct U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (‘‘CBP’’)
to liquidate without regard to applicable
countervailing duties, and refund any
estimated countervailing duties
collected on all unliquidated entries of
the merchandise subject to the order, as
described above under the ‘‘Scope of the
Order’’ section, entered, or withdrawn
from warehouse, for consumption on or
after November 17, 1998, i.e., the
publication date of the Department’s
preliminary determination. See
Preliminary Affirmative Countervailing
Duty Determination and Alignment of
Final Countervailing Duty
Determination With Final Antidumping
Duty Determination: Stainless Steel
Sheet and Strip in Coils from Italy, 63
FR 63900 (November 17, 1998). We will
also instruct CBP to pay interest on such
refunds with respect to the subject
merchandise entered, or withdrawn
from warehouse, for consumption on or
after August 6, 1999, the date of
publication of the countervailing duty
order, in accordance with section 778 of
the Act. The current requirement for a
cash deposit of estimated countervailing
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
331
duties on the subject merchandise will
continue unless, and until, we publish
a final determination to revoke the
countervailing duty order on SSSS from
Italy.
Public Comment
Interested parties are invited to
comment on the initiation of this
changed circumstances review. Parties
who submit argument in this proceeding
are requested to submit with the
argument (1) a statement of the issue,
and (2) a brief summary of the
argument. All written comments may be
submitted by interested parties not later
than 14 days after the date of
publication of this notice in accordance
with 19 CFR 351.303, and shall be
served on all interested parties on the
Department’s service list.
The Department will publish in the
Federal Register a notice of preliminary
results of changed circumstances
review, in accordance with 19 CFR
351.221(c)(3), which will set forth the
factual and legal conclusions upon
which our preliminary results are based,
and a description of any action
proposed based on those results. This
notice is published in accordance with
section 751(b)(1) of the Act and sections
351.216 and 351.222 of the
Department’s regulations.
Dated: December 23, 2005.
Stephen J. Claeys,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration.
[FR Doc. E5–8275 Filed 1–3–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
Hydrographic Services Review Panel
Meeting
National Ocean Service,
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), Department of
Commerce.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Notice of open meeting.
SUMMARY: The Hydrographic Services
Review Panel (HSRP) was established
by the Secretary of Commerce to advise
the Under Secretary of Commerce for
Oceans and Atmosphere on matters
related to the responsibilities and
authorities set forth in section 303 of the
Hydrographic Services Improvement
Act of 1998, its amendments, and such
other appropriate matters that the Under
Secretary refers to the Panel for review
and advice.
E:\FR\FM\04JAN1.SGM
04JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 2 (Wednesday, January 4, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 329-331]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E5-8275]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[C-475-825]
Stainless Steel Sheet and Strip in Coils from Italy: Initiation
of Countervailing Duty Changed Circumstances Review and Notice of
Consideration of Revocation of Order
AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: On December 2, 2005, Allegheny Ludlum Corporation and AK Steel
Corporation filed a request for a countervailing duty changed
circumstances review. Specifically, they requested that the Department
of Commerce revoke the countervailing duty order on stainless steel
sheet and strip in coils from Italy. In response, the Department of
Commerce is initiating a changed circumstances review of the
countervailing duty order on stainless steel sheet and strip in coils
from Italy. Interested parties are invited to comment on this notice of
initiation.
EFFECTIVE DATE: January 4, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brandon Farlander or Audrey R. Twyman,
AD/CVD Operations, Office 1, Import Administration, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20230; telephone (202) 482-
0182 and (202) 482-3534, respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On August 6, 1999, the Department of Commerce (the ``Department'')
published a countervailing duty order on stainless steel sheet and
strip in coils (``SSSS'') from Italy. See Amended Final Determination:
Stainless Steel Sheet and Strip in Coils from the Republic of Korea;
and Notice of Countervailing Duty Orders: Stainless Steel Sheet and
Strip in Coils from France, Italy and the Republic of Korea, 64 FR
42923 (August 6, 1999).
On December 2, 2005, the Department received a request from
Allegheny Ludlum Corporation and AK Steel Corporation, some of the
petitioners in the original investigation (``petitioners''), that the
Department initiate a changed circumstances review for purposes of
revoking the countervailing duty (``CVD'') order. Also, it is the
petitioners' understanding that, upon revocation of the CVD order, the
Department will fully refund any countervailing duties deposited
pursuant to the order on unliquidated entries. The petitioners state
that they are no longer interested in maintaining the countervailing
duty order or in the imposition of CVD duties on the subject
merchandise.
Scope of the Order
The products covered by this order are certain stainless steel
sheet and strip in coils. Stainless steel is an alloy steel containing,
by weight, 1.2 percent or less of carbon and 10.5 percent or more of
chromium, with or without other elements. The subject sheet and strip
is a flat-rolled product in coils that is greater than 9.5 mm in width
and less than 4.75 mm in thickness, and that is annealed or otherwise
heat treated and pickled or otherwise descaled. The subject sheet and
strip may also be further processed (e.g., cold-rolled, polished,
aluminized, coated, etc.) provided that it maintains the specific
[[Page 330]]
dimensions of sheet and strip following such processing.
The merchandise subject to this order is classified in the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (``HTSUS'') at the
following subheadings: 7219.13.00.30, 7219.13.00.50, 7219.13.00.70,
7219.13.00.80, 7219.14.00.30, 7219.14.00.65, 7219.14.00.90,
7219.32.00.05, 7219.32.00.20, 7219.32.00.25, 7219.32.00.35,
7219.32.00.36, 7219.32.00.38, 7219.32.00.42, 7219.32.00.44,
7219.33.00.05, 7219.33.00.20, 7219.33.00.25, 7219.33.00.35,
7219.33.00.36, 7219.33.00.38, 7219.33.00.42, 7219.33.00.44,
7219.34.00.05, 7219.34.00.20, 7219.34.00.25, 7219.34.00.30,
7219.34.00.35, 7219.35.00.05, 7219.35.00.15, 7219.35.00.30,
7219.35.00.35, 7219.90.00.10, 7219.90.00.20, 7219.90.00.25,
7219.90.00.60, 7219.90.00.80, 7220.12.10.00, 7220.12.50.00,
7220.20.10.10, 7220.20.10.15, 7220.20.10.60, 7220.20.10.80,
7220.20.60.05, 7220.20.60.10, 7220.20.60.15, 7220.20.60.60,
7220.20.60.80, 7220.20.70.05, 7220.20.70.10, 7220.20.70.15,
7220.20.70.60, 7220.20.70.80, 7220.20.80.00, 7220.20.90.30,
7220.20.90.60, 7220.90.00.10, 7220.90.00.15, 7220.90.00.60, and
7220.90.00.80. Although the HTSUS subheadings are provided for
convenience and customs purposes, the Department's written description
of the merchandise covered by this order is dispositive.
Excluded from the scope of this order are the following: (1) sheet
and strip that is not annealed or otherwise heat treated and pickled or
otherwise descaled; (2) sheet and strip that is cut to length; (3)
plate (i.e., flat-rolled stainless steel products of a thickness of
4.75 mm or more); (4) flat wire (i.e., cold-rolled sections, with a
prepared edge, rectangular in shape, of a width of not more than 9.5
mm); and (5) razor blade steel. Razor blade steel is a flat-rolled
product of stainless steel, not further worked than cold-rolled (cold-
reduced), in coils, of a width of not more than 23 mm and a thickness
of 0.266 mm or less, containing, by weight, 12.5 to 14.5 percent
chromium, and certified at the time of entry to be used in the
manufacture of razor blades. See Chapter 72 of the HTSUS, ``Additional
U.S. Note'' 1(d).
In response to comments by interested parties the Department has
determined that certain specialty stainless steel products are also
excluded from the scope of this order. These excluded products are
described below:
Flapper valve steel is defined as stainless steel strip in coils
containing, by weight, between 0.37 and 0.43 percent carbon, between
1.15 and 1.35 percent molybdenum, and between 0.20 and 0.80 percent
manganese. This steel also contains, by weight, phosphorus of 0.025
percent or less, silicon of between 0.20 and 0.50 percent, and sulfur
of 0.020 percent or less. The product is manufactured by means of
vacuum arc remelting, with inclusion controls for sulphide of no more
than 0.04 percent and for oxide of no more than 0.05 percent. Flapper
valve steel has a tensile strength of between 210 and 300 ksi, yield
strength of between 170 and 270 ksi, plus or minus 8 ksi, and a
hardness (Hv) of between 460 and 590. Flapper valve steel is most
commonly used to produce specialty flapper valves in compressors.
Also excluded is a product referred to as suspension foil, a
specialty steel product used in the manufacture of suspension
assemblies for computer disk drives. Suspension foil is described as
302/304 grade or 202 grade stainless steel of a thickness between 14
and 127 microns, with a thickness tolerance of plus-or-minus 2.01
microns, and surface glossiness of 200 to 700 percent Gs. Suspension
foil must be supplied in coil widths of not more than 407 mm and with a
mass of 225 kg or less. Roll marks may only be visible on one side,
with no scratches of measurable depth. The material must exhibit
residual stresses of 2 mm maximum deflection and flatness of 1.6 mm
over 685 mm length.
Certain stainless steel foil for automotive catalytic converters is
also excluded from the scope of this order. This stainless steel strip
in coils is a specialty foil with a thickness of between 20 and 110
microns used to produce a metallic substrate with a honeycomb structure
for use in automotive catalytic converters. The steel contains, by
weight, carbon of no more than 0.030 percent, silicon of no more than
1.0 percent, manganese of no more than 1.0 percent, chromium of between
19 and 22 percent, aluminum of no less than 5.0 percent, phosphorus of
no more than 0.045 percent, sulfur of no more than 0.03 percent,
lanthanum of less than 0.002 or greater than 0.05 percent, and total
rare earth elements of more than 0.06 percent, with the balance iron.
Permanent magnet iron-chromium-cobalt alloy stainless strip is also
excluded from the scope of this order. This ductile stainless steel
strip contains, by weight, 26 to 30 percent chromium and 7 to 10
percent cobalt, with the remainder of iron, in widths 228.6 mm or less,
and a thickness between 0.127 and 1.270 mm. It exhibits magnetic
remanence between 9,000 and 12,000 gauss, and a coercivity of between
50 and 300 oersteds. This product is most commonly used in electronic
sensors and is currently available under proprietary trade names such
as ``Arnokrome III.''\1\
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\1\ ``Arnokrome III'' is a trademark of the Arnold Engineering
Company.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Certain electrical resistance alloy steel is also excluded from the
scope of this order. This product is defined as a non-magnetic
stainless steel manufactured to American Society of Testing and
Materials (ASTM) specification B344 and containing, by weight, 36
percent nickel, 18 percent chromium, and 46 percent iron, and is most
notable for its resistance to high-temperature corrosion. It has a
melting point of 1390 degrees Celsius and displays a creep rupture
limit of 4 kilograms per square millimeter at 1000 degrees Celsius.
This steel is most commonly used in the production of heating ribbons
for circuit breakers and industrial furnaces, and in rheostats for
railway locomotives. The product is currently available under
proprietary trade names such as ``Gilphy 36.''\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ ``Gilphy 36'' is a trademark of Imphy, S.A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Certain martensitic precipitation-hardenable stainless steel is
also excluded from the scope of this order. This high-strength, ductile
stainless steel product is designated under the Unified Numbering
System (UNS) as S45500-grade steel, and contains, by weight, 11 to 13
percent chromium and 7 to 10 percent nickel. Carbon, manganese, silicon
and molybdenum each comprise, by weight, 0.05 percent or less, with
phosphorus and sulfur each comprising, by weight, 0.03 percent or less.
This steel has copper, niobium, and titanium added to achieve aging and
will exhibit yield strengths as high as 1700 Mpa and ultimate tensile
strengths as high as 1750 Mpa after aging, with elongation percentages
of 3 percent or less in 50 mm. It is generally provided in thicknesses
between 0.635 and 0.787 mm, and in widths of 25.4 mm. This product is
most commonly used in the manufacture of television tubes and is
currently available under proprietary trade names such as ``Durphynox
17.''\3\
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\3\ ``Durphynox 17'' is a trademark of Imphy, S.A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, three specialty stainless steels typically used in certain
industrial blades and surgical and medical instruments are also
excluded from the scope of this order. These include
[[Page 331]]
stainless steel strip in coils used in the production of textile
cutting tools (e.g., carpet knives).\4\ This steel is similar to AISI
grade 420 but containing, by weight, 0.5 to 0.7 percent of molybdenum.
The steel also contains, by weight, carbon of between 1.0 and 1.1
percent, sulfur of 0.020 percent or less, and includes between 0.20 and
0.30 percent copper and between 0.20 and 0.50 percent cobalt. This
steel is sold under proprietary names such as ``GIN4 Mo.'' The second
excluded stainless steel strip in coils is similar to AISI 420-J2 and
contains, by weight, carbon of between 0.62 and 0.70 percent, silicon
of between 0.20 and 0.50 percent, manganese of between 0.45 and 0.80
percent, phosphorus of no more than 0.025 percent, and sulfur of no
more than 0.020 percent. This steel has a carbide density on average of
100 carbide particles per 100 square microns. An example of this
product is ``GIN5'' steel. The third specialty steel has a chemical
composition similar to AISI 420 F, with carbon of between 0.37 and 0.43
percent, molybdenum of between 1.15 and 1.35 percent, but lower
manganese of between 0.20 and 0.80 percent, phosphorus of no more than
0.025 percent, silicon of between 0.20 and 0.50 percent, and sulfur of
no more than 0.020 percent. This product is supplied with a hardness of
more than Hv 500 guaranteed after customer processing, and is supplied
as, for example, ``GIN6.''\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ This list of uses is illustrative and provided for
descriptive purposes only.
\5\ ``GIN4 Mo,'' ``GIN5'' and ``GIN6'' are the proprietary
grades of Hitachi Metals America, Ltd.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initiation of Changed Circumstances Review
Section 751(d)(1) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (the
``Act''), and 19 CFR 351.222(g), provide that the Department may revoke
an antidumping or countervailing duty order, in whole or in part, after
conducting a changed circumstances review pursuant to section 751(b) of
the Act and concluding from the available information that changed
circumstances exist sufficient to warrant revocation or termination.
The Department may conclude that changed circumstances sufficient to
warrant revocation (in whole or in part) exist when producers
accounting for substantially all of the production of the domestic like
product to which the order pertains have expressed a lack of interest
in the order, in whole or in part. See section 782(h)(2) of the Act and
section 351.222(g)(1) of the Department's regulations.
The petitioners state that they are producers of SSSS but do not
identify the percentage of production of the domestic like product they
represent. At present, the Department has no information on the record
that the other known domestic producers of SSSS have no interest in
maintaining the countervailing duty order with respect to the subject
merchandise imported from Italy. Therefore, the Department does not
have information on the record of this changed circumstances review
that the petitioners account for substantially all, or at least 85
percent, of the production of the domestic like product. See Certain
Tin Mill Products From Japan: Final Results of Changed Circumstances
Review, 66 FR 52109 (October 12, 2001); see also 19 CFR 351.208(c).
Accordingly, we are not combining this initiation with a preliminary
determination, pursuant to 19 CFR 351.221(c)(3)(ii). This notice of
initiation will accord all interested parties an opportunity to address
this proposed revocation.
Pursuant to section 751(b)(1) of the Act, the Department will
conduct a changed circumstances review upon receipt of information
concerning, or a request from an interested party of, a countervailing
duty order which shows changed circumstances sufficient to warrant a
review of the order. Therefore, in accordance with section 751(b)(1) of
the Act, we are initiating a changed circumstances review based upon
the request made by the petitioners.
If, as a result of this review, we revoke the order, we intend to
instruct U.S. Customs and Border Protection (``CBP'') to liquidate
without regard to applicable countervailing duties, and refund any
estimated countervailing duties collected on all unliquidated entries
of the merchandise subject to the order, as described above under the
``Scope of the Order'' section, entered, or withdrawn from warehouse,
for consumption on or after November 17, 1998, i.e., the publication
date of the Department's preliminary determination. See Preliminary
Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination and Alignment of Final
Countervailing Duty Determination With Final Antidumping Duty
Determination: Stainless Steel Sheet and Strip in Coils from Italy, 63
FR 63900 (November 17, 1998). We will also instruct CBP to pay interest
on such refunds with respect to the subject merchandise entered, or
withdrawn from warehouse, for consumption on or after August 6, 1999,
the date of publication of the countervailing duty order, in accordance
with section 778 of the Act. The current requirement for a cash deposit
of estimated countervailing duties on the subject merchandise will
continue unless, and until, we publish a final determination to revoke
the countervailing duty order on SSSS from Italy.
Public Comment
Interested parties are invited to comment on the initiation of this
changed circumstances review. Parties who submit argument in this
proceeding are requested to submit with the argument (1) a statement of
the issue, and (2) a brief summary of the argument. All written
comments may be submitted by interested parties not later than 14 days
after the date of publication of this notice in accordance with 19 CFR
351.303, and shall be served on all interested parties on the
Department's service list.
The Department will publish in the Federal Register a notice of
preliminary results of changed circumstances review, in accordance with
19 CFR 351.221(c)(3), which will set forth the factual and legal
conclusions upon which our preliminary results are based, and a
description of any action proposed based on those results. This notice
is published in accordance with section 751(b)(1) of the Act and
sections 351.216 and 351.222 of the Department's regulations.
Dated: December 23, 2005.
Stephen J. Claeys,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
[FR Doc. E5-8275 Filed 1-3-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-DS-S