Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam: Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 53387-53400 [E6-15003]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 175 / Monday, September 11, 2006 / Notices
review, or the original less than fair
value investigation, but the
manufacturer is, the cash deposit rate
will be the rate established for the most
recent final results for the manufacturer
of the merchandise; and (4) if neither
the exporter nor the manufacturer is a
firm covered in these or any previous
review conducted by the Department,
the cash deposit rate will be 36.00
percent, the ‘‘All Others’’ rate
established in the underlying
investigation.13 These cash deposit
requirements, when imposed, shall
remain in effect until publication of the
final results of the next administrative
review.
Notification to Importers
This notice serves as a preliminary
reminder to importers of their
responsibility under 19 CFR
351.402(f)(2) 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
Secretary’s presumption that
reimbursement of antidumping duties
occurred and the subsequent assessment
of double antidumping duties.
These preliminary results of this
administrative review are issued and
published in accordance with sections
751(a)(1) and 777(i)(1) of the Act and 19
CFR 351.221(b)(4).
Dated: August 31, 2006.
David M. Spooner,
Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration.
[FR Doc. E6–15008 Filed 9–8–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
A–552–801
Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam:
Preliminary Results of Antidumping
Duty Administrative Review
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce
(the ‘‘Department’’) is conducting an
administrative review of the
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AGENCY:
13 Antidumping Duty Orders and Amendments to
Final Determinations of Sales at Less Than Fair
Value: Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat
Products, Certain Cold-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat
Products, Certain Corrosion-Resistant Carbon Steel
Flat Products, and Certain Cut-To-Length Carbon
Steel Plate From Germany, 58 FR 44170 (August 19,
1993).
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antidumping duty order on certain
frozen fish fillets from the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam (‘‘Vietnam’’). See
Notice of Antidumping Duty Order:
Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 68 FR
47909 (August 12, 2003) (‘‘Order’’). We
preliminarily find that QVD Food
Company Ltd. (‘‘QVD’’) sold subject
merchandise at less than normal value
(‘‘NV’’) during the period of review
(‘‘POR’’), August 1, 2004, through July
31, 2005. If these preliminary results are
adopted in our final results of review,
we will instruct U.S. Customs and
Border Protection (‘‘CBP’’) to assess
antidumping duties on all appropriate
entries.
EFFECTIVE DATE: September 11, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Julia
Hancock, AD/CVD Operations, Office 9,
Import Administration, International
Trade Administration, U.S. Department
of Commerce, 14th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington,
DC 20230; telephone: (202) 482–1394.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Case History
General
On August 1, 2005, the Department
published a notice of opportunity to
request an administrative review on the
antidumping duty order on certain
frozen fish fillets from Vietnam. See
Antidumping or Countervailing Duty
Order, Finding, or Suspended
Investigation; Opportunity To Request
Administrative Review, 70 FR 44085
(August 1, 2005). On August 26, 2005,
we received a request for review from
Phan Quan Trading Co., Ltd. (‘‘Phan
Quan’’). On August 31, 2005, we
received requests for review from An
Giang Agriculture and Foods Import–
Export Company (‘‘Afiex’’); Vinh Hoan
Company, Ltd. (‘‘Vinh Hoan’’); Can Tho
Agricultural and Animal Products
Import Export Company (‘‘Cataco’’);
QVD; and Nam Viet Company, Ltd.
(‘‘Navico’’). Also on August 31, 2005,
we received a request from Catfish
Farmers of America and individual U.S.
catfish processors (‘‘Petitioners’’) to
conduct an administrative review of
twenty–nine Vietnamese exporters and/
or producers.1 Petitioners’ August 31,
1 Petitioners requested a review on the following
companies: (1) Afiex, which also requested a
review; (2) An Giang Agriculture Technology
Service Company (‘‘ANTESCO’’); (3) An Giang
Fisheries Import and Export Joint Stock Company
(‘‘Agifish’’); (4) Anhaco; (5) Bamboo Food Co., Ltd.
(‘‘Bamboo Food’’); (6) Binh Dinh Import Export
Company (‘‘Binh Dinh’’); (7) Cataco, which also
requested a review; (8) Can Tho Animal Fishery
Products Processing Export Enterprise (‘‘Cafatex’’);
(9) Da Nang Seaproducts Import-Export Corporation
(‘‘Danang’’); (10) Duyen Hai Foodstuffs Processing
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53387
2005, administrative review request
included Phan Quan, Afiex, Vinh Hoan,
Cataco, QVD and Navico. On September
28, 2005, the Department initiated this
administrative review, covering the
aforementioned twenty–nine
companies. See Initiation of
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Administrative Reviews and Requests
for Revocation in Part (‘‘Initiation
Notice’’), 70 FR 56631 (September 28,
2005).
Quantity and Value (‘‘Q&V’’)
Questionnaires
On September 14, 2005, the
Department issued questionnaires
requesting the total quantity and value
of subject merchandise exported to the
United States during the POR to all 29
companies subject to the administrative
review. On September 28, 2005, a
memorandum to the file was placed on
the record by the Department noting
that Federal Express (‘‘Fed Ex’’) tracking
confirmed that the Q&V questionnaires
were delivered to all 29 companies. See
Memorandum to the File, through Cindy
Robinson, Acting Program Manager,
from Julia Hancock, Case Analyst,
Subject: Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam
(‘‘Vietnam’’): Initial Questionnaires
Timeline, (September 28, 2005).
On September 20, 2005, Vietnam
Fish–One submitted a letter to the
Department stating that it made no
shipments of subject merchandise to the
United States during the POR. On
September 30, 2005, QVD, Vinh Hoan,
Cafatex, and Navico submitted Q&V
responses. On October 1, 2005, Danang,
Mekonimex, Thanh Viet, Phu Thanh,
and Afiex submitted Q&V responses.
Also, on October 3, 2005, Agifish and
Cataco submitted Q&V responses.
On October 5 and 6, 2005, the
Department sent a letter to five
companies (i.e., Danang, Mekonimex,
Thanh Viet, Phu Thanh, and Afiex),
requesting that each company resubmit
their Q&V response because: (1) Danang
failed to answer all questions from the
Factory (‘‘Duyen Hai’’); (11) Gepimex 404 Company
(‘‘Gepimex’’); (12) Hai Vuong Co., Ltd. (‘‘Hai
Vuong’’); (13) Kien Giang Ltd. (‘‘Kien Giang’’); (14)
Mekong Fish Company (‘‘Mekonimex’’); (15)
Navico, which also requested a review; (16) Phan
Quan, which also requested a review; (17) Phu
Thanh Frozen Factory (‘‘Phu Thanh’’); (18) Phuoc
My Seafoods Processing Factory (‘‘Phuoc My’’); (19)
QVD, which also requested a review; (20)
Seaprodex Saigon; (21) Tan Thanh Loi Frozen Food
Co., Ltd. (‘‘Tan Thanh Loi’’); (22) Thangloi Frozen
Food Enterprise (‘‘Thanlgoi Frozen Food’’); (23)
Thanh Viet Co., Ltd. (‘‘Thanh Viet’’); (24) Thuan
Hung Co., Ltd. (‘‘Thuan Hung’’); (25) Tin Thinh Co.,
Ltd. (‘‘Tin Thinh’’); (26) Viet Hai Seafood Company
Limited (‘‘Vietnam Fish-One’’); (27) Vifaco; (28)
Vinh Hoan, which also requested a review; and (29)
Vinh Long Import-Export Company (‘‘Vinh Long’’).
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questionnaire and failed to follow the
Department’s filing procedures pursuant
to its regulations; (2) Mekonimex failed
to submit a public version of its
questionnaire response; (3) Thanh Viet
failed to answer all questions from the
questionnaire and failed to follow the
Department’s filing procedures pursuant
to its regulations; (4) Phu Thanh failed
to answer all questions from the
questionnaire and failed to follow the
Department’s filing procedures pursuant
to its regulations; and (5) Afiex’s Q&V
response was not properly labeled as a
proprietary document and was rejected
for overbracketing of proprietary
information. Also, on October 6, 2005,
the Department issued a letter
requesting the sixteen companies who
had not responded to the Department’s
original Q&V questionnaire to submit
such response.2
On October 19, 2005, Vifaco
submitted a letter to the Department
stating that it made no shipments of
subject merchandise to the United
States during the POR. On October 20,
2005, Phan Quan submitted a Q&V
response to the Department.
On November 2, 2005, the Department
sent a second letter to six companies,
(i.e., Danang, Thanh Viet, Tin Thinh,
Mekonimex, Thuan Hung, and Afiex),
requesting that each company resubmit
their respective Q&V response because:
(1) Danang failed to bracket the
proprietary information in the
appropriate format and provide a public
version of the proprietary questionnaire
response; (2) Thanh Viet failed to
answer all the questions from the
questionnaire and identify whether its
submission was a public or proprietary
document; (3) Tin Thinh failed to
bracket the proprietary information and
provide a public version; (4)
Mekonimex failed to provide a public
summary of the proprietary information;
(5) Thuan Hung failed to answer all of
the questions from the questionnaire
and identify whether its submission was
a public or proprietary document; and
(6) Afiex failed to provide a public
summary of the proprietary information.
Also, on November 2, 2005, the
Department placed on the record
memoranda to the file stating that the
Department had removed Afiex, Thuan
Hung, Mekonimex, and Thanh Viet’s
Q&V responses from the record of this
review and returned the responses to
2 The sixteen companies that did not respond to
the Department’s September 14, 2005, Q&V
questionnaire are: (1) Duyen Hai; (2) Gepimex; (3)
Hai Vuong; (4) Kien Giang; (5) Thangloi Frozen; (6)
Tan Thanh Loi; (7) Thuan Hung; (8) ANTESCO; (9)
Seaprodex Saigon; 10) Anhaco; (11) Vinh Long; (12)
Vifaco; (13) Tin Thinh; (14) Binh Dinh; (15) Bamboo
Food; and (16) Phan Quan.
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the respective company because the
Department was unable to consider each
company’s resubmitted Q&V response
for the above reasons.
On November 3, 2005, the Department
issued a letter to Tin Thinh regarding
the deadline for Tin Thinh’s second
resubmitted Q&V response.
On November 8, 2005, Thuan Huang
resubmitted its Q&V response. On
November 9, 2005, Thanh Viet,
Mekonimex, and Afiex resubmitted
their Q&V responses. On November 9,
2005, the Department issued a letter to
Tin Thinh stating that, because the
Department’s November 3, 2005, letter
to Tin Thinh was returned by Fed Ex,
Tin Thinh’s second resubmitted Q&V
response was due on November 16,
2005.
On November 9, 2005, a
memorandum to the file was placed by
the Department noting that Fed Ex
tracking confirmed that the second Q&V
letter was delivered to the 16
companies3 that did not respond to the
Department’s September 14, 2005, Q&V
questionnaire. Additionally, Fed Ex
tracking confirmed that the
Department’s October 5, 2005, and
October 6, 2005, letters to Afiex,
Danang, Mekonimex, Thanh Viet, and
Phu Thanh were delivered to the
respective companies.
On November 16, 2005, Afiex
submitted a letter clarifying its
November 9, 2005, Q&V response. On
November 17, 2005, a memorandum to
the file was placed on the record by the
Department noting that Fed Ex tracking
confirmed that the Department’s
November 2, 2005, letters to Afiex,
Danang, Mekonimex, Thanh Viet,
Thuan Hung, and Tin Thinh were
delivered to the respective companies.
On November 21, 2005, Petitioners
submitted comments on respondent
selection. On November 21, 2005, the
Department sent a letter to Danang
rejecting Danang’s Q&V response for
filing deficiencies. Also, on November
28, 2005, the Department sent a letter to
Tin Thinh rejecting Tin Thinh’s Q&V
response for filing deficiencies.
On November 29, 2005, Petitioners
resubmitted their November 21, 2005,
comments on respondent selection. On
November 30, 2005, the Department
issued letters to Mekonimex and Cataco
requesting clarification of their reported
Q&V data.
3 The sixteen companies are: (1) Duyen Hai; (2)
Gepimex; (3) Hai Vuong; (4) Kien Giang; (5)
Thangloi Frozen; (6) Tan Thanh Loi; (7) Thuan
Hung; (8) ANTESCO; (9) Seaprodex Saigon; (10)
Anhaco; (11) Vinh Long; (12) Vifaco; (13) Tin
Thinh; (14) Binh Dinh; (15) Bamboo Food; and (16)
Phan Quan.
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On December 7, 2005, Vietnam Fish–
One submitted a response to Petitioners’
respondent selection comments.
On December 19, 2005, Danang
resubmitted a Q&V questionnaire
response, explaining that, as a pro se
company, it attempted to cooperate and
misunderstood the Department’s filing
requirements. In addition, on December
19, 2005, the Department placed a
memorandum to the file on the record
noting that Cataco’s quantity and value
clarification response received via email
communication was placed on the
record.
On December 27, 2005, Cataco
submitted a Q&V clarification response.
On December 29, 2005, Petitioners
submitted comments on Danang’s
December 19, 2005, Q&V response and
on Cataco’s December 27, 2005, Q&V
clarification response.
On January 4, 2006, Danang submitted
rebuttal comments in response to
Petitioners’ December 29, 2005,
submission.
On January 13, 2006, the Department
selected the four largest exporters/
producers of subject merchandise
during the POR as mandatory
respondents: QVD; Cafatex; Mekonimex;
and Cataco. See Memorandum to
Stephen J. Claeys, Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Import Administration,
from James C. Doyle, Office Director,
Office 9, AD/CVD Operations, Import
Administration, Subject: Antidumping
Duty Administrative Review of Certain
Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam: Selection of
Respondents (January 13, 2006)
(‘‘Respondent Selection Memo’’).
Partial Rescission
On November 21, 2005, Petitioners
withdrew their request on the following
fourteen exporters that did not
individually request a review: Bamboo
Food; Caseafex; Gepimex; Hai Vuong;
Kien Giang; Phu Thanh; Phuoc My;
Seaprodex Saigon; Tan Thanh Loi;
Thangloi Frozen Food; Thanh Viet;
Thuan Hung; Tin Thinh; and Vifaco.
Additionally, Petitioners withdrew their
request on the following three
companies who had individually
requested a review: Afiex; Phan Quan;
and Vinh Hoan.
On December 23, 2005, Vinh Hoan
withdrew its request for an
administrative review. Additionally, on
December 23, 2005, H&N Foods
International (‘‘H&N’’), a U.S. importer
of the subject merchandise, requested
that the Department extend the deadline
for withdrawing requests review in this
proceeding by thirty days. On December
27, 2005, Vinh Hoan submitted a letter
to the Department requesting that its
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withdrawal letter dated December 23,
2005, be disregarded. Additionally, on
December 27, 2005, the Department
extended the deadline for withdrawing
requests for review in this proceeding
by ten days from December 27, 2005, to
January 6, 2006.
On January 5, 2006, H&N requested
that the Department extend the
deadline, which was January 6, 2006,
for withdrawing requests in this
administrative review until two days
after the Department’s issuance of its
decision regarding respondent selection
in this administrative review. On
January 9, 2006, Vinh Hoan again
withdrew its request for a review in this
administrative review. Additionally, on
January 11, 2006, Petitioners withdrew
their request of two additional
companies, Danang and Agifish, both of
which did not individually request a
review. Moreover, Petitioners also did
not object to Vinh Hoan’s January 9,
2006, request to withdraw its request for
a review.
Subsequently, on February 7, 2006,
due to the withdrawal of Petitioners’
and Vinh Hoan’s review requests, the
Department rescinded the review with
respect to Agifish; Bamboo Food;
Coseafex; Danang; Gepimex; Hai Vuong;
Kien Giang; Phu Thanh; Phuoc My;
Seaprodex Saigon; Tan Thanh Loi;
Thangloi Frozen Food; Thanh Viet;
Thuan Hung; Tin Thinh; Vifaco; and
Vinh Hoan. Additionally, the
Department rescinded the review with
respect to Vietnam Fish–One, which
reported that it made no shipments of
subject merchandise during the POR.
See Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam:
Rescission, in Part, and Extension of
Preliminary Results of the Second
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review, 71 FR 6266 (February 7, 2006)
(‘‘Partial Rescission and Extension of
Preliminary Results’’). On February 7,
2006, the Department extended the
deadline for the preliminary results of
this review by 120 days, to August 31,
2006. Id.
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Mandatory Respondents
On January 17, 2006, the Department
sent the non–market economy (‘‘NME’’)
questionnaire to QVD, Cafatex,
Mekonimex and Cataco.
Cataco
On February 3, 2006, the Department
placed a memorandum to the file on the
record noting that on February 2, 2006,
Cataco emailed the Department
requesting an extension of time to
March 10, 2006, to respond to the
Department’s NME questionnaire. On
February 3, 2006, the Department
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granted Cataco a one-week extension to
respond to the Department’s
questionnaire.
On February 13, 2006, Cataco
submitted its section A response. On
February 27, 2006, Cataco submitted a
letter requesting a one-week extension
to submit its sections C and D
questionnaire response. On February 27,
2006, the Department granted Cataco a
one-week extension to submit its
sections C and D questionnaire response
from March 2, 2006, to March 9, 2006.
On March 2, 2006, the Department
issued a supplemental section A
questionnaire to Cataco. Additionally,
on March 6, 2006, Cataco submitted its
sections C and D questionnaire
response.
On March 14, 2006, the Department
placed a memorandum to the file on the
record regarding an email from Cataco,
which requested a two-week extension
to submit its supplemental section A
questionnaire response. Additionally,
on March 14, 2006, the Department
issued a letter to Cataco granting a oneweek extension to submit its
supplemental section A questionnaire
response from March 20, 2006, to March
27, 2006.
On March 20, 2006, a the Department
placed a memorandum to the file on the
record regarding placing information
with respect to Cataco from the first
administrative review on the record of
this review. Additionally, on March 20,
2006, the Department issued a
supplemental sections C and D
questionnaire to Cataco.
On March 23, 2006, Cataco submitted
its supplemental section A
questionnaire response. On April 4,
2006, Cataco requested a two-week
extension to submit its supplemental
section C questionnaire response. On
April 7, 2006, the Department granted
Cataco a ten-day extension to submit its
supplemental section C questionnaire
response from April 10, 2006, to April
20, 2006. On April 17, 2006, Cataco
submitted its supplemental sections C
and D questionnaire response.
On June 1, 2006, the Department
placed a memorandum to the file on the
record regarding placing Cataco’s entry
packages from CBP on the record of this
review. Additionally, on June 1, 2006,
the Department placed a memorandum
to the file on the record regarding DC
Lawyers’ May 12, 2006, withdrawal as
counsel for Cataco. Additionally, on
June 14, 2006, the Department issued a
second supplemental sections A, C and
D questionnaire to Cataco.
On June 28, 2006, Valley Fresh
Seafood, Inc. (‘‘Valley Fresh’’) submitted
a letter to the Department addressing a
business proprietary section of Cataco’s
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53389
supplemental questionnaire. On July 3,
2006, Cataco submitted a letter to the
Department that it was partially
withdrawing from this administrative
review and was not responding to the
June 14, 2006, supplemental
questionnaire.
On July 7, 2006, the Department
issued a letter to Valley Fresh that it was
rejecting its June 28, 2006, letter,
because it contained new factual
information. The deadline for
submitting factual information was June
1, 2006. Additionally, on July 7, 2006,
the Department placed a memorandum
to the file on the record removing Valley
Fresh’s June 28, 2006, letter from the
record.
On July 17, 2006, Petitioners
submitted a letter requesting that the
Department not accept Cataco’s July 3,
2006, letter of partial withdrawal. On
July 19, 2006, the Department issued a
letter rejecting Cataco’s partial
withdrawal from this review and
requested that Cataco submit a full
response to the June 14, 2006,
supplemental questionnaire.
On July 26, 2006, Valley Fresh
submitted a letter to the Department
with respect to a business proprietary
section of the Department’s June 14,
2006, supplemental questionnaire to
Cataco. On July 26, 2006, Cataco
submitted a letter to the Department
stating that, except for a certain business
proprietary section, it was not
responding to the June 14, 2006,
supplemental questionnaire.
On August 1, 2006, the Department
issued a letter to Valley Fresh rejecting
its July 26, 2006, letter because it
contained new factual information. On
August 1, 2006, the Department also
issued a letter to Cataco rejecting its July
26, 2006 letter and requesting that
Cataco resubmit its letter without the
attached June 28, 2006, letter from
Valley Fresh. Additionally, on August 1,
2006, the Department placed
memoranda to the file on the record
noting that the July 26, 2006,
submissions from Valley Fresh and
Cataco had been removed from the
record.
On August 3, 2006, Cataco submitted
a letter, which contained Valley Fresh’s
June 28, 2006, letter to the Department
requesting that it reconsider its decision
to reject Cataco’s July 26, 2006, letter.
On August 8, 2006, the Department
issued a letter to Cataco rejecting its
August 3, 2006, letter and requesting
that Cataco resubmit the letter without
the attached June 28, 2006, letter from
Valley Fresh. On August 9, 2006, the
Department placed a memorandum to
the file on the record removing Cataco’s
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August 3, 2006, submission from the
record.
The Department did not receive a
response from Cataco on August 14,
2006, which was the deadline to
resubmit. On August 17, 2006, the
Department placed a memorandum to
the file on the record noting, via
telephone communication with Cataco’s
counsel, that Cataco would not be
resubmitting its August 3, 2006, letter.
Cafatex
On January 27, 2006, Cafatex
requested a week extension to submit its
section A response, which was due on
February 7, 2006. On January 31, 2006,
the Department granted Cafatex a oneweek extension to submit its section A
response from February 7, 2006, to
February 14, 2006.
On February 14, 2006, DLA Piper
Rudnick Gray Cary LLP submitted a
letter withdrawing as counsel for
Cafatex. On February 16, 2006, the
Department issued a letter to Cafatex
noting that it had not received Cafatex’s
section A questionnaire response, which
was due on February 14, 2006, and had
not received a request for extension. In
the letter, the Department requested
that, if Cafatex intended to remain in the
review, it should submit its section A
questionnaire response.
On February 27, 2006, the Department
placed a memorandum to the file on the
record noting that in a facsimile dated
February 21, 2006, Cafatex confirmed its
decision not to participate in the instant
administrative review.
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Mekonimex
On February 8, 2006, the Department
issued a letter to Mekonimex noting that
because the Department did not receive
Mekonimex’s section A response, which
was due on February 7, 2006, the
deadline to submit its section A
response was extended to February 13,
2006. On February 15, 2006,
Mekonimex submitted two letters
stating that it would no longer
participate and that it was withdrawing
from this review.
QVD
On January 30, 2006, QVD requested
a two-week extension to submit its
section A response, which was due on
February 7, 2006. On January 31, 2006,
the Department granted QVD a week
extension to submit its section A
response from February 7, 2006, to
February 14, 2006.
On February 13, 2006, QVD requested
a three-week extension to submit its
section C and D response.
On February 14, 2006, QVD submitted
its section A response. Also, on
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February 14, 2006, the Department
granted QVD a week extension to
submit its sections C and D response
from February 22, 2006, to March 1,
2006.
On February 21, 2006, QVD requested
a two-week extension to submit its
sections C and D response. On February
23, 2006, Department granted QVD a
week extension to submit its sections C
and D response from March 1, 2006, to
March 8, 2006.
On March 8, 2006, QVD submitted its
sections C and D questionnaire
response. Additionally, on March 9,
2006, the Department issued a
supplemental section A questionnaire to
QVD.
On March 20, 2006, QVD requested a
two-week extension to submit its
supplemental section A questionnaire
response. On March 20, 2006, the
Department granted QVD a ten-day
extension to submit its supplemental
section A questionnaire response from
March 30, 2006, to April 10, 2006.
On March 21, 2006, the Department
issued a supplemental sections C and D
questionnaire to QVD. Additionally, on
March 30, 2006, a memorandum to the
file was placed by the Department
regarding QVD’s supplemental section C
questionnaire.
On April 4, 2006, QVD requested a
three-week extension to submit its
supplemental section C questionnaire
response. On April 5, 2006, the
Department granted QVD a ten-day
extension to submit its supplemental
section C questionnaire response from
April 10, 2006, to April 20, 2006.
On April 10, 2006, QVD submitted its
supplemental section A questionnaire
response. On April 11, 2006, QVD
requested a three-week extension to
submit its supplemental section D
questionnaire response. On April 12,
2006, the Department granted QVD a
ten-day extension to submit its
supplemental section D questionnaire
response from April 18, 2006, to April
28, 2006.
On April 19, 2006, QVD requested a
one-week extension to submit its
supplemental section C questionnaire
response. Additionally, on April 19,
2006, the Department granted QVD a
one-week extension to submit its
supplemental section C questionnaire
response from April 20, 2006, to April
28, 2006.
On April 24, 2006, QVD requested a
one-week extension to submit its
supplemental section D questionnaire
response. On April 25, 2006, the
Department granted QVD a one-week
extension to submit its supplemental
section D questionnaire response from
April 28, 2006, to May 5, 2006.
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On April 28, 2006, QVD submitted its
supplemental section C questionnaire
response. On May 5, 2006, QVD
submitted its supplemental section D
questionnaire response. Additionally,
on May 31, 2006, the Department issued
a second supplemental section D
questionnaire to QVD.
On June 9, 2006, QVD requested a
three-week extension to submit its
second supplemental section D
questionnaire response. On June 13,
2006, the Department granted QVD a
ten-day extension to submit its second
supplemental section D questionnaire
response from June 14, 2006, to June 26,
2006.
On June 16, 2006, the Department
placed QVD’s entry packages from CBP
on the record of this review. On June 19,
2006, Petitioners submitted deficiency
comments on QVD’s sections A and C
questionnaire responses.
On June 23, 2006, the Department
issued a second supplemental section A
and C questionnaire to QVD. On June
27, 2006, QVD submitted its second
supplemental section D questionnaire
response.
On July 12, 2006, the Department
issued a third supplemental section D
questionnaire to QVD. On July 18, 2006,
QVD requested a ten-day extension to
submit its third supplemental section D
questionnaire response.
On July 19, 2006, the Department
granted QVD a six-day extension to
submit its third supplemental section D
questionnaire response from July 26,
2006, to August 1, 2006.
On July 21, 2006, the Department
issued a fourth supplemental section D
questionnaire to QVD. Additionally, on
July 21, 2006, QVD submitted its second
supplemental sections A and C
questionnaire response.
On July 26, 2006, the Department
issued a third supplemental section A
and C questionnaire to QVD. On August
1, 2006, QVD submitted its third and
fourth supplemental section D
questionnaire responses.
On August 1, 2006, QVD requested a
five-day extension to submit its third
supplemental section A and C
questionnaire response. On August 2,
2006, the Department granted QVD a
four-day extension to submit its section
A and C questionnaire response from
August 4, 2006, to August 8, 2006.
On August 2, 2006, QVD submitted a
letter to the Department with respect to
an attachment that was missing from its
August 1, 2006, third and fourth
supplemental section D questionnaire
responses. On August 2, 2006, the
Department issued a fifth supplemental
section D questionnaire to QVD.
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On August 8, 2006, QVD submitted its
fifth supplemental section D
questionnaire response. On August 9,
2006, QVD submitted its third
supplemental sections A and C
questionnaire responses.
On August 14, 2006, the Department
issued a letter to QVD regarding its
section C database requesting the
downstream sales to Customer A. On
August 21, QVD submitted its section C
database response. Additionally, on
August 22, 2006, QVD submitted
rebuttal pre–preliminary comments.
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Separate Rate Respondents
As noted above, on January 13, 2006,
the Department selected four mandatory
respondents. On January 18, 2006, the
Department sent section A of the
Department’s NME questionnaire to the
three remaining separate rate
respondents: Afiex, Navico and Phan
Quan.
Afiex
On February 3, 2006, Afiex requested
a one-week extension to submit its
section A response, which was due on
February 7, 2006. On February 6, 2006,
the Department granted Afiex a oneweek extension to submit its section A
response from February 7, 2006, to
February 14, 2006.
On February 13, 2006, Afiex
requested a second extension of three
days to submit its section A response.
On February 14, 2006, the Department
granted Afiex a three-day extension to
submit its section A response from
February 14, 2006, to February 17, 2006.
On February 17, 2006, Afiex submitted
a section A response.
On March 2, 2006, the Department
issued a supplemental section A
questionnaire to Afiex. On March 14,
2006, Afiex requested a one-week
extension to submit its supplemental
section A questionnaire response.
Additionally, on March 16, 2006, the
Department granted Afiex a one-week
extension to submit its supplemental
section A questionnaire response from
March 23, 2006, to March 30, 2006.
On March 29, 2006, Afiex requested a
second one-week extension to submit its
supplemental section A questionnaire
response. On March 30, 2006, the
Department granted Afiex a four-day
extension to submit its supplemental
section A questionnaire response from
March 30, 2006, to April 3, 2006.
On April 4, 2006, Afiex submitted its
supplemental section A questionnaire
response. On April 5, 2006, Afiex
requested an extension to submit
documents that were not available when
it submitted the supplemental section A
questionnaire response from April 4,
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2006, to April 10, 2006. On April 6,
2006, the Department issued a letter to
Afiex extending the deadline until April
10, 2006. Additionally, in the letter to
Afiex, the Department issued a second
supplemental section A questionnaire.
On April 10, 2006, Afiex requested an
extension of two days to submit its
second supplemental section A
questionnaire response. On April 11,
2006, the Department granted Afiex a
one-day extension to submit its
supplemental Section A questionnaire
response from April 10, 2006, to April
11, 2006. Additionally, on April 11,
2006, Afiex submitted its second
supplemental section A questionnaire
response.
On July 7, 2006, the Department
issued a third supplemental section A
questionnaire to Afiex. On July 28,
2006, Afiex submitted a letter to the
Department that it was both not
responding to third supplemental
section A questionnaire and
withdrawing from this review.
Navico
On January 27, 2006, Navico
requested a one-week extension to
submit its section A response, which
was due on February 7, 2006. On
January 31, 2006, the Department
granted Navico a one-week extension to
submit its section A response from
February 7, 2006, to February 14, 2006.
On February 16, 2006, the Department
issued a letter to Navico noting that it
had not received Navico’s section A
questionnaire response, which was due
on February 14, 2006, and had not
received a request for extension. In the
letter, the Department requested that, if
Navico intended to remain in the
review, it should submit its section A
questionnaire response.
On February 27, 2006, the Department
issued a second letter to Navico
requesting that, if Navico intended to
remain as a separate rates respondent,
Navico should submit a section A
response by March 3, 2006.
Additionally, in the letter, the
Department requested that if Navico was
not going to submit a response, Navico
should submit a letter confirming its
decision to not participate in this
review.
On March 7, 2006, the Department
place a memorandum to the file on the
record by the Department noting that via
an e–mail received on March 6, 2006,
Navico confirmed its decision not to
participate in this administrative
review.
Phan Quan
On February 3, 2006, Phan Quan
requested a one-week extension to
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53391
submit its section A response. On
February 6, 2006, the Department
granted Phan Quan a one-week
extension to submit its section A
response from February 7, 2006, to
February 14, 2006.
On February 13, 2006, Phan Quan
requested a second extension of three
days to submit its section A response.
On February 14, 2006, the Department
granted Phan Quan a three-day
extension to submit its section A
response from February 14, 2006, to
February 17, 2006.
On February 17, 2006, Phan Quan
submitted its section A response. Also
on February 21, 2006, Phan Quan
submitted a letter that included
attachments supplementing its section
A response.
On March 28, 2006, the Department
issued a supplemental section A
questionnaire to Phan Quan.
On April 19, 2006, the Department
issued a letter to Phan Quan noting that
it had not received a response from
Phan Quan for its supplemental section
A questionnaire response, which was
due on April 18, 2006. In the letter, the
Department granted Phan Quan a
second, final opportunity to submit its
supplemental section A questionnaire
response by April 21, 2006. On April 26,
2006, Phan Quan submitted a letter to
the Department that it was not
responding to the supplemental section
A questionnaire and withdrawing from
this review.
Surrogate Country and Surrogate
Values
On January 18, 2006, the Department
placed a memorandum to the file on the
record extending the deadline for
submission of factual information by 50
days from January 18, 2006, to March 9,
2006. On January 23, 2006, the
Department issued a letter to the
interested parties requesting comments
on surrogate country selection.
On February 27, 2006, Petitioners
requested an extension of time to submit
comments on submission of factual
information, comments on surrogate
country selection, and publicly
available information to value factors of
production. On March 1, 2006, the
Department issued a memorandum to
the file extending these deadlines to
May 1, 2006.
On April 26, 2006, Petitioners and
QVD requested extensions to place
factual information on the record,
comments on surrogate country
selection, and publicly available
information to value factors of
production. On April 27, 2006, the
Department issued a letter extending
these deadlines to June 1, 2006.
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On June 1, 2006, Petitioners and QVD
submitted factual information. On June
1, 2006, Petitioners and QVD also
submitted surrogate value information
for the Department to consider for these
preliminary results. Also, on June 1,
2006, Petitioners submitted comments
on surrogate country selection. No other
party submitted surrogate country
comments.
On June 12, 2006, Petitioners
submitted rebuttal comments on the
surrogate value information submitted
by QVD.
On August 1, 2006, the Department
selected Bangladesh as the surrogate
country. On August 15, 2006,
Petitioners submitted pre–preliminary
comments.
Scope of the Order
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The product covered by this order is
frozen fish fillets, including regular,
shank, and strip fillets and portions
thereof, whether or not breaded or
marinated, of the species Pangasius
Bocourti, Pangasius Hypophthalmus
(also known as Pangasius Pangasius),
and Pangasius Micronemus. Frozen fish
fillets are lengthwise cuts of whole fish.
The fillet products covered by the scope
include boneless fillets with the belly
flap intact (‘‘regular’’ fillets), boneless
fillets with the belly flap removed
(‘‘shank’’ fillets), boneless shank fillets
cut into strips (‘‘fillet strips/finger’’),
which include fillets cut into strips,
chunks, blocks, skewers, or any other
shape. Specifically excluded from the
scope are frozen whole fish (whether or
not dressed), frozen steaks, and frozen
belly–flap nuggets. Frozen whole
dressed fish are deheaded, skinned, and
eviscerated. Steaks are bone–in, crosssection cuts of dressed fish. Nuggets are
the belly–flaps. The subject
merchandise will be hereinafter referred
to as frozen ‘‘basa’’ and ‘‘tra’’ fillets,
which are the Vietnamese common
names for these species of fish. These
products are classifiable under tariff
article code 0304.20.60.33 (Frozen Fish
Fillets of the species Pangasius
including basa and tra) of the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the
United States (‘‘HTSUS’’).4 This order
covers all frozen fish fillets meeting the
above specification, regardless of tariff
classification. Although the HTSUS
subheading is provided for convenience
and customs purposes, our written
4 Until July 1, 2004, these products were
classifiable under tariff article codes 0304.20.60.30
(Frozen Catfish Fillets), 0304.20.60.96 (Frozen Fish
Fillets, NESOI), 0304.20.60.43 (Frozen Freshwater
Fish Fillets) and 0304.20.60.57 (Frozen Sole Fillets)
of the HTSUS.
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18:03 Sep 08, 2006
Jkt 208001
description of the scope of the Order is
dispositive.
Affiliations
Section 771(33) of the Act states that
the Department considers the following
as affiliated: (A) Members of a family,
including brothers and sisters (whether
by the whole or half blood), spouse,
ancestors, and lineal descendants; (B)
any officer or director of an organization
and such organization; (C) partners; (D)
employer and employee; (E) any person
directly or indirectly owning,
controlling, or holding with power to
vote, five percent or more of the
outstanding voting stock or shares of
any organization and such organization;
(F) two or more persons directly or
indirectly controlling, controlled by, or
under common control with, any
person; and (G) any person who controls
any other person and such other person.
For purposes of affiliation, section
771(33) of the ACT states that a person
shall be considered to control another
person if the person is legally or
operationally in a position to exercise
restraint or direction over the other
person.
Based on the evidence on the record
in this administrative review, we
preliminarily find that QVD is affiliated
with Dong Thap Food Co., Ltd. (‘‘Dong
Thap’’) and Company A,5 pursuant to
section 771(33) of the Act. For a detailed
discussion of our analysis, please see
Memorandum to James C. Doyle, Office
Director, Office 9, through Alex
Villanueva, Program Manager, Office 9,
from Julia Hancock, Case Analyst,
Subject: QVD Affiliations
Memorandum: 2nd Administrative
Review of Certain Frozen Fish Fillets,
(August 31, 2006) (‘‘Affiliation and
Collapsing Memo’’). In addition, based
on the evidence presented in QVD’s
questionnaire responses, we
preliminarily find that QVD, Dong
Thap, and Company A should be treated
as a single entity for purposes of this
administrative review. See 19 CFR
351.401(f)(1); see also, Affiliation and
Collapsing Memo for a discussion of the
proprietary aspects of this relationship.
With respect to the criterion of
significant potential for manipulation of
price of production, we note that the
Department normally considers three
factors: (1) The level of common
ownership; (ii) the extent to which
managerial employees or board
members of one firm sit on the board of
directors of an affiliated firm; and (iii)
5 Because Company A’s identity is business
proprietary, it cannot be disclosed in this notice.
See Affiliation and Collapsing Memo for further
information.
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whether operations are intertwined,
such as through the sharing of sales,
information, involvement in production
and pricing decisions, the sharing of
facilities or employees, or significant
transactions between the affiliated
producers. See 19 CFR 351.401(f)(2).
Vietnamese Entities
Based on the information on the
record of this proceeding, we
preliminarily find that QVD, Dong
Thap, and Company A should be
collapsed. Accordingly, the Department
should include the factors of production
for Company A in the Department’s
calculation of QVD’s normal value
(‘‘NV’’). However, the Department does
not currently have this information on
the record of the proceeding. Therefore,
the Department will request this
information from QVD after the issuance
of these preliminary results.
Additionally, we will be issuing an
amended preliminary calculation for
comment after we receive Company A’s
factors of production. Due to the
proprietary nature of the information
with respect to these affiliates, this
information cannot be discussed herein.
See Affiliation and Collapsing Memo for
a further discussion of this issue.
In addition, we preliminary find that
Choi Moi Farming Cooperative (‘‘Choi
Moi’’) is affiliated with QVD pursuant to
section 771(33) of the Act. See
Affiliation and Collapsing Memo for a
further discussion of this issue.
However, we preliminary find that
although Choi Moi is affiliated with
QVD, the collapsing criteria are not
satisfied and therefore, Choi Moi has not
been collapsed with QVD. Id.
We also preliminarily find that
Company B6 and QVD are not affiliated,
pursuant to section 771(33) of the Act.
Id.
United States Entities
We preliminarily find that QVD and
QVD USA LLC (‘‘QVD USA’’) are
affiliated pursuant to section 771(33) of
the Act. Id.
Although the Department received
relevant information from QVD USA
regarding its relationship with Customer
A7 on August 21, 2006, ten days prior
6 Because Company B’s identity is business
proprietary, it cannot be disclosed in this notice.
See Affiliation and Collapsing Memo for further
information.
7 Because Customer A’s identity is business
proprietary, it cannot be disclosed in this notice.
See Memorandum from Julia Hancock, Case
Analyst, to Alex Villanueva, Program Manager,
Import Administration, Subject: 2nd Administrative
Review of Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam: Preliminary Results
Analysis Memo for QVD Food Company, (August
31, 2006) (‘‘QVD Analysis Memo’’) for further
information.
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to the deadline to issue the preliminary
results, the Department was unable to
consider this information for these
preliminary results of review. For the
final results of review, however, the
Department will fully consider the
information submitted by QVD USA on
August 21, 2006, and possibly request
additional information on the
relationship with QVD USA and
Customer A. For these preliminary
results, the Department will include
QVD USA’s sales to Customer A in the
margin calculation for QVD. However,
in the event the Department finds
Customer A and QVD USA affiliated,
the Department intends to request the
relevant sales to the first unaffiliated
U.S. customer after such finding. If
parties fail to provide such data, the
Department may apply facts available,
with an adverse inference, to QVD
USA’s CEP sales to Customer A for the
final results of this review.
On February 14, 2006, QVD stated
that it was affiliated with Beaverstreet
Fisheries Inc. (‘‘BSF’’) and provided a
CEP sales database which contained the
sales from BSF to the first unaffiliated
U.S. customer. For these preliminary
results, the Department is treating QVD
USA and BSF as affiliated entities and
will characterize BSF sales’ as CEP sales
in the margin calculation for QVD for
these preliminary results. However, the
Department notes that there is
insufficient time to evaluate whether the
claim of affiliation properly fulfills the
statutory criteria of section 771(33) of
the Act. Accordingly, the Department
intends to request further information
regarding QVD USA’s affiliation with
BSF, which may affect the use of these
sales and the margin calculation in the
final results of this review. The
Department also intends to request
information on the sales from QVD USA
to BSF.
Separate Rates Determination
In the less–than-fair–value (‘‘LTFV’’)
investigation and the first
administrative review for this Order, the
Department treated Vietnam as a non–
market economy (‘‘NME’’) for
antidumping purposes. It is the
Department’s policy to assign all
exporters of the merchandise subject to
review that are located in NME
countries a single antidumping duty rate
unless an exporter can demonstrate an
absence of governmental control, both
in law (de jure) and in fact (de facto),
with respect to its export activities. To
establish whether an exporter is
sufficiently independent of
governmental control to be entitled to a
separate rate, the Department analyzes
the exporter using the criteria
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Jkt 208001
established in the Final Determination
of Sales at Less Than Fair Value:
Sparklers from the People’s Republic of
China, 56 FR 20588 (May 6, 1991)
(‘‘Sparklers’’), as amplified in the Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value: Silicon Carbide from the
People’s Republic of China, 59 FR 22585
(May 2, 1994) (‘‘Silicon Carbide’’).
Under the separate rates criteria
established in these cases, the
Department assigns separate rates to
NME exporters only if they can
demonstrate the absence of both de jure
and de facto governmental control over
their export activities.
Absence of De Jure Control
Evidence supporting, though not
requiring, a finding of the absence of de
jure governmental control over export
activities includes: (1) An absence of
restrictive stipulations associated with
an individual exporter’s business and
export licenses; (2) any legislative
enactments decentralizing control of
companies; and (3) any other formal
measures by the government
decentralizing control of companies. See
Sparklers, 56 FR at 20589.
In the LTFV investigation for this
case, the Department granted separate
rates to the four mandatory respondents,
Cataco, Cafatex, Mekonimex, and QVD,
and two of the separate rate
respondents, Afiex and Navico. See
Notice of Final Antidumping Duty
Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value and Affirmative Critical
Circumstances: Certain Frozen Fish
Fillets from the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam, 68 FR 37116 (June 23, 2003)
and accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum at Comments 5 and 6
(‘‘LTFV FFF Final Determination’’).
Additionally, in the first administrative
review of this case, the Department did
not grant a separate rate to the other
separate rate respondent, Phan Quan,
because it stopped participating in that
review. See Notice of Preliminary
Results and Partial Rescission of
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review: Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 70 FR
54007 (September 13, 2005) (‘‘1st Review
Prelim’’). However, it is the
Department’s policy to evaluate separate
rates questionnaire responses each time
a respondent makes a separate rates
claim, regardless of whether the
respondent received a separate rate in
the past. See Manganese Metal From the
People’s Republic of China, Final
Results and Partial Rescission of
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review, 63 FR 12441 (March 13, 1998).
In this review only QVD submitted
complete responses to the separate rates
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53393
section of the Department’s NME
questionnaire. The evidence submitted
by QVD includes government laws and
regulations on corporate ownership,
business licenses, and narrative
information regarding its company’s
operations and selection of
management. The evidence provided by
QVD supports a finding of a de jure
absence of governmental control over its
export activities because: (1) There are
no controls on exports of subject
merchandise, such as quotas applied to,
or licenses required for, exports of the
subject merchandise to the United
States; and (2) the subject merchandise
does not appear on any government list
regarding export provisions or export
licensing.
Absence of De Facto Control
The absence of de facto governmental
control over exports is based on whether
the Respondent: (1) Sets its own export
prices independent of the government
and other exporters; (2) retains the
proceeds from its export sales and
makes independent decisions regarding
the disposition of profits or financing of
losses; (3) has the authority to negotiate
and sign contracts and other
agreements; and (4) has autonomy from
the government regarding the selection
of management. See Silicon Carbide, 59
FR at 22587; Sparklers, 56 FR at 20589;
see also Notice of Final Determination
of Sales at Less Than Fair Value:
Furfuryl Alcohol from the People’s
Republic of China, 60 FR 22544, 22545
(May 8, 1995).
In its questionnaire responses, QVD
submitted evidence indicating an
absence of de facto governmental
control over its export activities.
Specifically, this evidence indicates
that: (1) The company sets its own
export prices independent of the
government and without the approval of
a government authority; (2) the
company retains the proceeds from its
sales and makes independent decisions
regarding the disposition of profits or
financing of losses; (3) the company has
a general manager, branch manager or
division manager with the authority to
negotiate and bind the company in an
agreement; (4) the general manager is
selected by the board of directors or
company employees, and the general
manager appoints the deputy managers
and the manager of each department;
and (5) foreign currency does not need
to be sold to the government. Therefore,
the Department has preliminarily found
that QVD has established primae facie
that it qualifies for a separate rate under
the criteria established by Silicon
Carbide and Sparklers.
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As discussed below, the Department
is not granting the other three
mandatory respondents, Cataco, Cafatex,
and Mekonimex, and the three separate
rate respondents, Afiex, Phan Quan, and
Navico, a separate rate because these
respondents withdrew from
participating in this review. As a result,
we cannot verify the separate rate
information that Afiex, Cataco, and
Phan Quan submitted in their respective
questionnaire responses. Moreover,
Afiex, Cataco, and Phan Quan, each
failed to respond to the supplemental
questionnaire issued by the Department
that requested clarification on their
respective submitted separate rate
information. With respect to Cafatex,
Mekonimex, and Navico, we did not
receive separate rate information for
consideration in these preliminary
results.
Adverse Facts Available
Section 776(a)(2) of the Act, provides
that, if an interested party: (A)
withholds information that has been
requested by the Department; (B) fails to
provide such information in a timely
manner or in the form or manner
requested, subject to sections 782(c)(1)
and (e) of the Act; (C) significantly
impedes a proceeding under the
antidumping statute; or (D) provides
such information but the information
cannot be verified, the Department
shall, subject to subsection 782(d) of the
Act, use facts otherwise available in
reaching the applicable determination.
Furthermore, section 776(b) of the Act
states that ‘‘if the administrating
authority finds that an interested party
has failed to cooperate by not acting to
the best of its ability to comply with a
request for information from the
administering authority or the
Commission, the administering
authority or the Commission (as the case
may be), in reaching the applicable
determination under this title, may use
an inference that is adverse to the
interests of that party in selecting from
among the facts otherwise available.’’
See also Statement of Administrative
Action (‘‘SAA’’) accompanying the
Uruguay Round Agreements Act
(‘‘URAA’’), H.R. Rep. No. 103–316 at
870 (1994).
In the instant review, three of the
mandatory respondents, (i.e., Cataco,
Cafatex, and Mekonimex), the three
separate rate respondents, (i.e., Navico,
Afiex and Phan Quan), and four other
companies under review, (i.e., Antesco,
Anhaco, Binh Dinh, and Vinh Long),
significantly impeded our ability to
complete this administrative review
pursuant to section 751 of the Act, and
one mandatory respondent, Cataco,
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18:03 Sep 08, 2006
Jkt 208001
significantly impeded our ability to
impose the correct antidumping duties,
as mandated by section 731 of the Act.
As discussed below, we preliminarily
find that each company’s failure to
cooperate with the Department to the
best of their ability in responding to the
Department’s request for information
warrant the use of adverse facts
available (‘‘AFA’’) in determining
dumping margins for their sales of
merchandise subject to this Order.
Mekonimex and Cafatex
As discussed in the ‘‘Case History’’
above, on January 17, 2006, the
Department issued questionnaires to
Mekonimex and Cafatex. The deadlines
for Mekonimex and Cafatex to file a
response to Section A of the
questionnaire were February 7, 2006,
and February 14, 2006, respectively.
The Department did not receive a
questionnaire response from either
company. Instead, Mekonimex
submitted two letters on February 15,
2006, stating that it was not going to
participate and was withdrawing from
the review. Cafatex faxed a letter, in
response to the Department’s February
16, 2006, letter of Cafatex’s non–
response, on February 21, 2006, stating
that it was not going to participate in the
administrative review. Therefore, we
find that facts available are warranted
for both Mekonimex and Cafatex in
accordance with sections 776(a)(2)(A),
(B) and (C) of the Act.
By each company stating that they
would no longer participate, both
Mekonimex and Cafatex explicitly
impeded this proceeding. Because both
Mekonimex and Cafatex withdrew from
the current administrative review with
critical data potentially relevant to
separate rates still outstanding, the
Department was prevented from
conducting a thorough separate rates
analysis or from verifying either
Mekonimex’s or Cafatex’s information.
Because both Cafatex and Mekonimex
did not respond to the Department’s
NME questionnaire, the Department has
no information on the record with
which to calculate an antidumping
margin or determine if either is eligible
for a separate rate in this proceeding.
Therefore, we find that both Mekonimex
and Cafatex have not demonstrated that
each is entitled to a separate rate and
thus, each is deemed to be included in
the Vietnam–wide entity. By
withdrawing from this administrative
review over a month after the
Department’s established deadline,
which was January 6, 2006, rather than
submitting a response to the
Department’s NME questionnaires, both
Mekonimex and Cafatex have failed to
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cooperate to the best of their ability in
this proceeding. Accordingly, since both
Mekonimex and Cafatex significantly
impeded the proceeding and failed to
cooperate to the best of their ability, the
application of AFA is appropriate,
pursuant to section 776(b) of the Act.
Cataco
During the first administrative review,
the Department found Cataco had
entered into an reimbursement
agreement with Customer B.8 See
Memorandum from Julia Hancock, Case
Analyst, to Alex Villanueva, Program
Manager, Import Administration,
Subject: 2nd Administrative Review of
Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam:
Preliminary Results Analysis Memo for
Can Tho Agricultural and Animal
Products Import Export Company
(‘‘Cataco’’), (August 31, 2006) (‘‘Cataco
Analysis Memo’’); 1st Supplemental
Section C Questionnaire to Cataco,
(March 20, 2006) at Attachment 2
(Memorandum to the File, from Alex
Villanueva, Program Manager, NME
Office 9, RE: Certain Frozen Fish Fillets
from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam:
Verification Report Change, (March 13,
2006)). Specifically, the Department
noted that these reimbursement
‘‘agreements stated that Cataco would
reimburse any antidumping duties {on
basa and tra} exceeding X,’’9 and that
these reimbursement ‘‘agreements did
not specify an expiration date.’’ See 1st
Supplemental Section C Questionnaire
to Cataco, at Attachment 2. A day after
the Department made this discovery,
Cataco withdrew from verification.
Accordingly, Cataco received AFA in
the final results of the first
administrative review because of its
termination of verification and as part of
the adverse inference, the Department
determined that ‘‘the reimbursement
verification findings should be applied
to Cataco for cash deposit and
assessment purposes.’’ See Notice of
Final Results of the First Administrative
Review: Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 71 FR
14170 (March 21, 2006) and
accompanying Issues and Decisions
Memorandum at Comments 1 and 2
(‘‘1st AR FFF Final’’).
In this administrative review, Cataco
admitted from the onset that it sold
subject merchandise under other
commercial names, including ‘‘frozen
grouper’’ and ‘‘frozen seafood.’’ See
Cataco’s Quantity and Value
8 Because this information is business
proprietary, please see Cataco Analysis Memo for
further information on Customer B.
9 Because this information is business
proprietary, please see Cataco Analysis Memo.
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Questionnaire Response, (September 30,
2005) at 1–2; Cataco’s Section A
Questionnaire Response, (February 10,
2006) at Exhibit A–1. However, on June
1, 2006, the Department placed on the
record entry packages from U.S.
Customs Border and Protection (CBP) of
all entries, classified as HTS 304206033,
304206043, 304206057, 304206070,
304206096, that were manufactured by
Cataco and entered into the United
States during the POR. A review of the
entry packages showed a discrepancy
between Cataco’s reported quantity and
value (‘‘Q&V’’) of sales of subject
merchandise under other commercial
names, ‘‘frozen grouper’’ and ‘‘frozen
seafood,’’ and the Q&V of its CBP entries
of ‘‘frozen grouper’’ to Customer B. See
Cataco’s Section A Questionnaire
Response at Exhibit A–1; Cataco’s 2nd
Supplemental Section A and C
Questionnaire, (June 14, 2006) at 12–13
(‘‘Cataco’s 2nd Questionnaire’’).
Moreover, the Department noted that
CBP issued a Notice of Request for
Information and a Notice of Action to
Cataco’s Customer B that certain entries
needed to be reclassified as subject
merchandise. See Cataco’s 2nd
Questionnaire, at 13; Memorandum to
the File, from Julia Hancock, Case
Analyst, Subject: 2nd Administrative
Review of Certain Frozen Fish Fillets
from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam
(‘‘Vietnam’’): Customs Data for Can Tho
Agricultural and Animal Products
Import Export Company, (June 1, 2006).
Based on the apparent discrepancies
with Cataco’s reported Q&V of sales of
subject merchandise under other
commercial names, and other issues,
including Cataco’s affiliate and
reimbursement of antidumping duties,
the Department issued a supplemental
questionnaire to Cataco on June 14,
2006, which was due on July 5, 2006.
On July 3, 2006, Cataco submitted a
letter to the Department that it would
not be submitting a response to Cataco’s
2nd Questionnaire. In the letter, Cataco
also stated that it was ‘‘withdrawing
from the current administrative review
for all issues except that of
reimbursement of antidumping duties.’’
See Cataco’s Letter to the Department,
RE: June 14, 2006, Supplemental
Questionnaire, (July 3, 2006) at 1–2.
However, on July 19, 2006, the
Department issued a letter to Cataco
stating that Cataco could not partially
withdraw from this administrative
review. By granting Cataco’s partial
withdrawal, the Department would have
allowed Cataco to ‘‘control the results of
the administrative review by {only}
granting partial information’’ on
reimbursement. See Krupp Stahl A.G.,
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et. al vs. United States, 822 F. Supp 789,
792 (CIT 1993). Accordingly, the
Department granted Cataco a final
opportunity to submit a full response to
Cataco’s 2nd Questionnaire by July 26,
2006.
On July 26, 2006, Cataco submitted a
letter to the Department stating that it
had never entered into a
‘‘reimbursement agreement’’ with its
U.S. customer, Valley Fresh, and that it
would not be submitting a response to
the entirety of Cataco’s 2nd
Questionnaire. Additionally, Cataco
submitted a June 28, 2006, letter from its
customer, Valley Fresh. However, the
Department rejected Cataco’s July 26,
2006, letter as containing untimely, new
information, pursuant to section
351.301(b)(2) of the Department’s
regulations, because Valley Fresh’s
letter had previously been rejected as
new information. See Letter from the
Department to Matthew McConkey,
(August 1, 2006) at 1–2. Specifically, the
deadline for submitting factual
information was June 1, 2006, and as
such, Valley Fresh’s letter was received
twenty–seven days after the deadline.
Instead of resubmitting its letter
without the letter from Valley Fresh,
Cataco submitted a letter on August 3,
2006, that contained this submission. In
its August 3, 2006, letter, Cataco stated
that it was including the letter from
Valley Fresh because it was ‘‘directly
relevant to the {reimbursement}
questions raised’’ in the Department’s
June 14, 2006, supplemental
questionnaire. See Letter from Alex
Villanueva, Program Manager, Import
Administration, to Matthew McConkey,
(August 8, 2006) at 2. After review of
Cataco’s letter, the Department issued a
letter to Cataco requesting that it
resubmit its August 3, 2006, letter
without the attached submission from
Valley Fresh. Specifically, the
Department noted the reimbursement
questions from Cataco’s 2nd
Questionnaire, requested that Cataco
provide information on its commercial
relationships with specific importers,
not Valley Fresh. Accordingly, the
Department continued to find that the
letter from Valley Fresh was new
information and requested that Cataco
resubmit its August 3, 2006, letter
without the letter from Valley Fresh by
August 11, 2006. The Department did
not receive a response from Cataco on
August 11, 2006.
Based upon Cataco’s refusal to submit
a full response to Cataco’s 2nd
Questionnaire, the Department finds
that Cataco failed to provide the
information in a timely manner and in
the form requested and significantly
impeded this proceeding, pursuant to
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sections 776(a)(2)(B) and 776(a)(2)(C) of
the Act. Specifically, the Department
twice granted Cataco the opportunity to
submit a full response to Cataco’s 2nd
Questionnaire. Cataco decided not to:
(1) submit a response to Cataco’s 2nd
Questionnaire, but rather attempt to
partially withdraw from this review
except with respect to reimbursement;
and (2) respond to the entirety of
Cataco’s 2nd Questionnaire except
regarding those questions on
reimbursement. Additionally, the
Department notes that statements
submitted by Cataco on reimbursement
were incomplete because Cataco did not
submit information requested on the
specific importers, including Cataco’s
Customer B. See Cataco’s 2nd
Questionnaire, at 22–23. Accordingly,
the Department finds that Cataco failed
to provide a full response to Cataco’s
2nd Questionnaire in a timely manner.
Moreover, the Department finds that
Cataco has significantly impeded this
proceeding by picking and choosing the
questions that it would respond to from
Cataco’s 2nd Questionnaire.
Specifically, antidumping law ‘‘does not
permit a party to pick and choose
information it wishes to present’’ to the
Department. See Brother Industries, Ltd.
vs. United States, 771 F. Supp. 374, 383
(CIT 1991). Furthermore, the questions
that Cataco refused to answer,
specifically questions regarding
reimbursement from Customer B and
the discrepancies in Cataco’s reported
sales of ‘‘frozen grouper’’ and ‘‘frozen
seafood,’’ needed to be answered in
order for the Department to calculate a
margin for Cataco for these preliminary
results. Because Cataco refused to
submit a full response to Cataco’s 2nd
Questionnaire, the application of facts
available is warranted, pursuant to
sections 776(a)(2)(B) and 776(a)(2)(C) of
the Act.
Further, section 776(b) of the Act
provides that, if the Department finds
that an interested party ‘‘has failed to
cooperate by not acting to the best of its
ability to comply with a request for
information,’’ the Department may use
information that is adverse to the
interests of that party as facts otherwise
available. Adverse inferences are
appropriate ‘‘to ensure that the party
does not obtain a more favorable result
by failing to cooperate than if it had
cooperated fully.’’ See Statement of
Administrative Action (‘‘SAA’’)
accompanying the URAA, H.R. Doc. No.
316, 103d Cong., 2d Session at 870
(1994). An adverse inference may
include reliance on information derived
from the petition, the final
determination in the investigation, any
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previous review, or any other
information placed on the record. See
section 776(b) of the Act.
For these preliminary results, the
Department finds that Cataco has failed
to cooperate to the best of its ability.
Specifically, the Department finds that
Cataco did not respond to the
Department’s request for clarification on
certain issues, including its reported
sales of ‘‘frozen grouper’’ and ‘‘frozen
seafood’’ and whether it reimbursed
certain importers, as requested in
Cataco’s 2nd Supplemental
Questionnaire. See Nippon Steel Corp.
v. United States, 337 F. 3d 1373, 1377
(Fed. Cir. 2003) (‘‘Nippon Steel’’).
Because Cataco refused to answer the
entirety of Cataco’s 2nd Supplemental
Questionnaire, the Department finds
that Cataco has failed to cooperate to the
best of its ability, pursuant to section
776(b) of the Act.
As an adverse inference, the
Department is assigning to Cataco’s
sales of subject merchandise an
individual rate of 80.88 percent, which
is the highest established rate on the
record of this proceeding, and, we note,
the rate applied to Cataco in the first
administrative review. See 1st AR FFF
Final, 71 FR 14170 at Comments 1 and
2. During the course of this
administrative review, Cataco was
unable to provide information regarding
the reimbursement agreements, found at
the verification of the first
administrative review, which had no
expiration date, and were not still in
effect during this administrative review.
Therefore, inclusive in our adverse
inference is a presumption that Cataco
continued to reimburse antidumping
duties during this POR.
While it would be consistent with the
Department’s normal practice for Cataco
to be subject to the same rate as all other
exporters that are part of the Vietnam–
Wide Entity, because Cataco failed to
cooperate to the best of its ability and
significantly impeded this proceeding,
and because as AFA, the Department
presumes Cataco’s agreement to
reimburse its importer(s) continued
throughout this POR, Cataco is receiving
the individual rate of 80.88 percent. The
Department finds that, for cash deposit
purposes, it must take into account the
reimbursement provision and assign
Cataco an individual rate for future
entries. Reimbursement, however, is
necessarily exporter–importer specific,
and is treated as a unique adjustment.
Moreover, the reimbursement
adjustment is exogenous to the normal
calculation of the dumping margin.
Therefore, in order to properly account
for reimbursement, the Department has
adjusted Cataco’s cash deposit and
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assessment rates, but not applied the
adjustment to the rest of the Vietnam–
Wide Entity. Consequently, the cash
deposit rate assigned to Cataco for these
preliminary results is 80.88 percent. See
Cataco Analysis Memo.
ANTESCO, Anhaco, Binh Dinh, and
Vinh Long
We note, as mentioned in the ‘‘Case
History’’ section above, the Department
initiated this administrative review with
respect to 29 companies, including
ANTESCO, Anhaco, Binh Dinh, and
Vinh Long. On September 14, 2005, we
issued a Q&V questionnaire to all of the
companies identified in the notice of
initiation. See Initiation Notice. On
February 7, 2006, the Department
rescinded, in part, the review on 18 of
the 29 companies, but noted that 11
companies, including ANTESCO,
Anhaco, Binh Dinh, and Vinh Long,
were still subject to review. See Partial
Rescission and Extension of Preliminary
Results. Further, each of these
companies identified in our notice of
rescission did not respond to our
September 14, 2005, Q&V questionnaire
nor did these companies respond to the
Department’s second Q&V questionnaire
issued to these companies on October 6,
2006. The Department placed
information on the record confirming
the delivery of the first and second Q&V
questionnaire to each company. See
Memorandum to the File, through Cindy
Robinson, Acting Program Manager,
from Julia Hancock, Case Analyst,
Subject: Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam
(‘‘Vietnam’’): Initial Questionnaires
Timeline, (September 28, 2005);
Memorandum to the File, through Alex
Villanueva, Program Manager, from
Julia Hancock, Case Analyst, Subject:
Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam
(‘‘Vietnam’’): 2nd Q&V Questionnaire
Timeline, (November 9, 2005).
Because these four companies were
non–responsive to the Department’s two
requests for Q&V information, the
Department finds that they are not
entitled to a separate rate. Additionally,
by neither responding to the
Department’s first nor second Q&V
questionnaire, each company failed to
provide critical information to be used
for the Department’s respondent
selection process. Therefore, pursuant to
sections 776(a)(2)(A)(B) and (C), the
Department finds that facts available is
appropriate. In addition, pursuant to
section 776(b) of the Act, the
Department may apply adverse facts
available if it finds a respondent has
failed to cooperate by not acting to the
best of its ability to comply with a
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request for information from the
Department. By failing to respond to the
Department’s first and second Q&V
questionnaire, ANTESCO, Anhaco, Binh
Dinh, and Vinh Long have failed to act
to the best of their ability in this
segment of the proceeding. Moreover,
because ANTESCO, Anhaco, Binh Dinh,
and Vinh Long did not participate in the
respondent selection exercise, the
Department did not send them a
questionnaire and was unable to
determine whether or not they qualified
for a separate rate. Therefore,
ANTESCO, Anhaco, Binh Dinh, and
Vinh Long are not eligible to receive a
separate rate and will be part of the
Vietnam–wide entity, subject to the
Vietnam–wide rate.
Afiex
Between February and April 2006, the
Department issued two supplemental
questionnaires to Afiex regarding their
response to section A of the
Department’s NME questionnaire. On
July 7, 2006, the Department issued a
third supplemental section A
questionnaire to Afiex. However, on
July 28, 2006, Afiex submitted a letter
stating that it was not submitting a
response and was withdrawing from
this administrative review. Therefore,
pursuant to sections 776(a)(2)(A)(B) and
(C) of the Act, the Department finds that
facts available is appropriate.
Because Afiex failed to submit a
questionnaire response critical data
potentially relevant to separate rates
remain. Therefore, the Department was
prevented from conducting a thorough
separate rates analysis of Afiex’s
information. Therefore, we find that
Afiex has not demonstrated that it is
entitled to a separate rate and is thus
deemed to be included in the Vietnam–
wide entity. Moreover, Afiex has failed
to cooperate to the best of its ability.
Accordingly, since Afiex both
significantly impeded the proceeding
and failed to cooperate to the best of its
ability, the application of AFA is
appropriate, pursuant to sections
776(a)(2)(A) and (b) of the Act.
Navico
As discussed in the ‘‘Case History’’
section above, on January 18, 2006, the
Department sent section A of the
Department’s NME questionnaire to
Navico. The deadline for Navico to file
a response to section A of the NME
questionnaire was February 14, 2006,
but the Department did not receive a
response. Between February 16 and 27,
2006, the Department issued two letters
to Navico that it had not received a
section A response and requested that
Navico either submit a response or a
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letter stating that it was not going to
participate. On March 6, 2006, Navico
notified the Department via email that it
was not going to participate and was
withdrawing from the administrative
review. Therefore, we find that facts
available are warranted for Navico in
accordance with section 776(a)(2)(A)(B)
and (C).
Because Navico failed to submit a
questionnaire response, critical data
relevant to separate rates remain.
Therefore, the Department was
prevented from conducting a thorough
separate rates analysis of Navico’s
information. Accordingly, we find that
Navico has not demonstrated that it is
entitled to a separate rate and thus, is
deemed to be included in the Vietnam–
wide entity. Moreover, Navico has failed
to cooperate to best of its ability by
withdrawing from this administrative
review over two months after the
Department’s established deadline,
which was January 6, 2006. Because
Navico has both significantly impeded
this proceeding and failed to cooperate
to the best of its ability, the Department
finds that the application of AFA is
appropriate, pursuant to sections
776(a)(2)(a) and (b) of the Act.
Phan Quan
Between January and March 2006, the
Department issued two questionnaires
to Phan Quan on Section A of the
Department’s NME questionnaire.
However, on April 26, 2006, Phan Quan
submitted a letter stating that it was not
submitting a response to the
Department’s March 28, 2006,
supplemental questionnaire and was
withdrawing from this administrative
review. Therefore, pursuant to sections
776(a)(2)(A)(B) and (C) of the Act, the
Department finds that facts available is
appropriate.
Because Phan Quan failed to submit
a questionnaire response, critical data
potentially relevant to separate rates
remain. Therefore, the Department was
prevented from conducting a thorough
separate rates analysis of Phan Quan’s
information. Therefore, we find that
Phan Quan has not demonstrated that it
is entitled to a separate rate and is thus
deemed to be included in the Vietnam–
wide entity. Moreover, Phan Quan has
failed to cooperate to the best of its
ability. Accordingly, since Phan Quan
both significantly impeded the
proceeding and failed to cooperate to
the best of its ability, the application of
AFA is appropriate, pursuant to sections
776(a)(2)(A) and (b) of the Act.
Vietnam–wide Entity
Because the Vietnam–wide entity
(including Cafatex, Mekonimex, Navico,
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Phan Quan and Afiex) has failed to
cooperate to the best of its ability in
providing the requested information, we
find it appropriate, in accordance with
sections 776(a)(2)(A) and (B), as well as
section 776(b), of the Act, to assign total
AFA to the Vietnam–wide entity. By
doing so, we ensure that the companies
that are part of the Vietnam–wide entity
will not obtain a more favorable result
by failing to cooperate than had they
cooperated fully in this review.
Section 776(a)(2) of the Act provides
that, if an interested party or any other
person (A) withholds information that
has been requested by the administering
authority, or (B) fails to provide such
information by the deadlines for the
submission of the information or in the
form and manner requested, subject to
subsections (c)(1) and (e) of section 782
of the Act, the Department shall, subject
to section 782(d) of the Act, use the facts
otherwise available in reaching the
applicable determination under this
title. Furthermore, under section 782(c)
of the Act, a Respondent has a
responsibility not only to notify the
Department if it is unable to provide the
requested information but also to
provide a full explanation as to why it
cannot provide the information and
suggest alternative forms in which it is
able to submit the information. Because
these four companies did not establish
their entitlement to a separate rate and
failed to provide requested information,
we find that, in accordance with
sections 776(a)(2)(A) and (B) of the Act,
it is appropriate to base the Vietnam–
wide margin in this review on facts
available. See Final Results of
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review for Two Manufacturers/
Exporters: Certain Preserved
Mushrooms from the People’s Republic
of China, 65 FR 50183, 50184 (August
17, 2000).
Section 776(b) of the Act provides
that, if the Department finds that an
interested party ‘‘has failed to cooperate
by not acting to the best of its ability to
comply with a request for information,’’
the Department may use information
that is adverse to the interests of the
party as the facts otherwise available.
Adverse inferences are appropriate ‘‘to
ensure that the party does not obtain a
more favorable result by failing to
cooperate than if it had cooperated
fully.’’ See SAA accompanying the
URAA, H. Doc. No. 103–316, at 870
(1994). Section 776(b) of the Act
authorizes the Department to use, as
AFA, information derived from the
petition, the final determination in the
LTFV investigation, any previous
administrative review, or any other
information placed on the record.
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Section 776(b)(4) of the Act permits
the Department to use as AFA
information derived in the LTFV
investigation or any prior review. Thus,
in selecting an AFA rate, the
Department’s practice has been to assign
Respondents, who fail to cooperate with
the Department’s requests for
information, the highest margin
determined for any party in the LTFV
investigation or in any administrative
review. See Stainless Steel Plate in Coils
from Taiwan; Preliminary Results and
Rescission in Part of Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review, 67 FR 5789
(February 7, 2002). As AFA, we are
assigning the Vietnam–wide entity
(which includes Cafatex, Mekonimex,
Navico, Phan Quan and Afiex) the 66.34
percent which is the rate calculated in
this review for QVD as this rate now
replaces the Vietnam–wide entity rate as
the highest rate available.
Surrogate Country
When the Department is investigating
imports from an NME country, section
773(c)(1) of the Act directs it to base NV,
in most circumstances, on the NME
producer’s factors of production
(‘‘FOP’’), valued in a surrogate market–
economy country or countries
considered to be appropriate by the
Department. In accordance with section
773(c)(4) of the Act, in valuing the
factors of production, the Department
shall utilize, to the extent possible, the
prices or costs of FOPs in one or more
market–economy countries that are at a
level of economic development
comparable to that of the NME country
and are significant producers of
comparable merchandise. The sources
of the surrogate values we have used in
this investigation are discussed under
the ‘‘Normal Value’’ Section below.
As discussed in the ‘‘Separate Rates’’
section, the Department considers
Vietnam to be an NME country. The
Department has treated Vietnam as an
NME country in all previous
antidumping proceedings. In
accordance with section 771(18)(C)(i) of
the Act, any determination that a foreign
country is an NME country shall remain
in effect until revoked by the
administering authority. None of the
parties to this proceeding has contested
such treatment. Accordingly, we treated
Vietnam as an NME country for
purposes of this review and calculated
NV, pursuant to section 773(c) of the
Act, by valuing the FOPs in a surrogate
country.
The Department determined that
Bangladesh, Pakistan, India, Indonesia,
and Sri Lanka are countries comparable
to Vietnam in terms of economic
development. See Memorandum from
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Ron Lorentzen, Director, Office of
Policy, to Alex Villanueva, Program
Manager, China/NME Group, Office 9:
Antidumping Administrative Review of
Certain Frozen Fish Fillets (‘‘Frozen
Fish’’) from the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam: Request for a List of Surrogate
Countries, (December 16, 2005)
(‘‘Surrogate Country List’’). We select an
appropriate surrogate country based on
the availability and reliability of data
from the countries. See Department
Policy Bulletin No. 04.1: Non–Market
Economy Surrogate Country Selection
Process, (March 1, 2004) (‘‘Policy
Bulletin’’). In this case, we have found
that Bangladesh is a significant
producer of comparable merchandise, is
at a similar level of economic
development pursuant to 773(c)(4) of
the Act, and has publically available
and reliable data. See Memorandum to
the File, through James C. Doyle, Office
Director, Office 9, Import
Administration, and Alex Villanueva,
Program Manager, Office 9, from Julia
Hancock, Case Analyst, Subject: 2nd
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review of Certain Frozen Fish Fillets
from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam:
Selection of a Surrogate Country,
(August 1, 2006) (‘‘Surrogate Country
Memo’’). Thus, we have selected
Bangladesh as the primary surrogate
country for this administrative review.
However, in certain instances where
Bangladeshi data was not available, we
used data from Indian or Indonesian
sources.
Fair Value Comparisons
To determine whether sales of the
subject merchandise by QVD to the
United States were made at prices below
NV, we compared the company’s export
prices (‘‘EP’’) or constructed export
prices (‘‘CEP’’) to NV, as described in
the ‘‘Export Price,’’ ‘‘Constructed Export
Price,’’ and ‘‘Normal Value’’ sections of
this notice, below.
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Export Price
For QVD’s EP sale, we used EP
methodology, pursuant to section 772(a)
of the Act, because the first sale to an
unaffiliated purchaser was made prior
to importation and CEP was not
otherwise warranted by the facts on the
record. We calculated EP based on the
free–on-board (‘‘FOB’’) foreign port
price to the first unaffiliated purchaser
in the United States. For this EP sale, we
also deducted foreign inland freight,
foreign cold storage, and international
ocean freight from the starting price (or
gross unit price), in accordance with
section 772(c) of the Act.
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Jkt 208001
Constructed Export Price
In accordance with section 772(b) of
the Act, we used CEP methodology
when the first sale to an unaffiliated
purchaser occurred after importation of
the merchandise into the United States.
We calculated CEP for certain U.S. sales
made QVD through its U.S. affiliates to
unaffiliated U.S. customers.
For QVD’s CEP sales, we made
adjustments to the gross unit price for
billing adjustments, rebates, foreign
inland freight, international freight,
foreign cold storage, U.S. marine
insurance, U.S. inland freight, U.S.
warehousing, U.S. inland insurance,
other U.S. transportation expenses, and
U.S. customs duties. In accordance with
section 772(d)(1) of the Act, we also
deducted those selling expenses
associated with economic activities
occurring in the United States,
including commissions, credit expenses,
advertising expenses, indirect selling
expenses, inventory carry costs, and
U.S. re–packing costs. We also made an
adjustment for profit in accordance with
section 772(d)(3) of the Act.
Where movement expenses were
provided by NME–service providers or
paid for in NME currency, we valued
these services using either Bangladeshi
or Indian surrogate values. See
Memorandum to the File, through Alex
Villanueva, Program Manager, Office 9,
from Julia Hancock, Case Analyst,
Subject: 2nd Administrative Review of
Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam
(‘‘Vietnam’’): Surrogate Values for the
Preliminary Results, (August 31, 2006)
(‘‘Surrogate Value Memo’’). Where
applicable, we used the actual reported
expense for those movement expenses
provided by market economy (‘‘ME’’)
suppliers and paid for in a ME currency.
Zero–Priced Transactions
During the course of this review, QVD
reported a number of zero–priced
transactions to their U.S. customers. See
QVD’s Supplemental Section C
Response, at 8 and Exhibit S–9. An
analysis of QVD’s section C database
reveals that QVD made a number of
zero–priced transactions with customers
that had purchased the same
merchandise in commercial quantities.
See QVD’s Analysis Memo at
Attachment I. In the 2nd Review of
Tables and Chairs, the Department
included zero–priced transactions in the
margin calculation stating that the
record demonstrated that: (1) The
respondent provided many pieces of the
same product, indicating that these
‘‘samples’’ did not primarily serve for
evaluation or testing of the
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
merchandise; (2) the respondent
provided significant numbers of the
same product to its U.S. customer while
that customer was purchasing that same
product; (3) the respondent provided
‘‘samples’’ to the same customers to
whom it was selling the same products
in commercial quantities; (4) the
respondent acknowledged that it gave
these products at zero price to its U.S.
customers (already purchasing the same
items) to sell to their own customers.
See Notice of Final Results of
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review: Folding Metal Tables and
Chairs from the People’s Republic of
China, 71 FR 2905 (January 18, 2006)
and accompanying Issues and Decisions
Memorandum at Comment 4 (‘‘2nd
Review of Tables and Chairs’’).
The Federal Circuit has not required
the Department to exclude zero–priced
or de minimis priced sales from its
analysis, but rather, has defined a sale
as requiring ‘‘both a transfer of
ownership to an unrelated party and
consideration.’’ See NSK Ltd. v. United
States, 115 F.3d 965, 975 (Fed. Cir.
1997). The CIT in NSK Ltd. v. United
States stated that it saw ‘‘little reason in
supplying and re–supplying and yet re–
supplying the same product to the same
customer in order to solicit sales if the
supplies are made in reasonably short
periods of time,’’ and that ‘‘it would be
even less logical to supply a sample to
a client that has made a recent bulk
purchase of the very item being sampled
by the client.’’ See NSK Ltd v. United
States, 217 F. Supp. 2d 1291, 1311–1312
(CIT 2002). Furthermore, the Courts
have consistently ruled that the burden
rests with a respondent to demonstrate
that it received no consideration in
return for its provision of purported
samples. See Zenith Electronics Corp. v.
United States, 988 F. 2d 1573, 1583
(Fed. Cir. 1993) (explaining that the
burden of evidentiary production
belongs ‘‘to the party in possession of
the necessary information’’). See Tianjin
Machinery Import & Export Corp. v.
United States, 806 F. Supp. 1008, 1015
(CIT 1992) (‘‘The burden of creating an
adequate record lies with respondents
and not with {the Department}.’’)
(citation omitted). Moreover, ‘‘{e}ven
where the Department does not ask a
respondent for specific information that
would enable it to make an exclusion
determination in the respondent’s favor,
the respondent has the burden of proof
to present the information in the first
place with its request for exclusion.’’
See Notice of Final Results of
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Reviews: Ball Bearings and Parts
Thereof from France, Germany, Italy,
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Japan, Singapore, and the United
Kingdom, 70 FR 54711 (September 16,
2005), and accompanying Issues and
Decisions Memorandum at Comment 8
(citing NTN Bearing Corp. of America.
v. United States, 997 F. 2d 1453, 1458
(Fed. Cir. 1993)).
An analysis of QVD’s section C
computer sales listings reveals that QVD
provided zero–priced merchandise to
the same customers to whom it was
selling or had sold the same products in
commercial quantities, with the
exception of a few of QVD’s customers,
who did not make any purchases of
subject merchandise during the POR.
See QVD Preliminary Analysis
Memorandum at Attachment I.
Consequently, based on the facts cited
above, the guidance of past CIT
decisions, and consistent with the
Department’s prior case precedent, for
the preliminary results of this review,
we have not excluded zero–priced
transactions from the margin calculation
of this case for QVD, with the exception
of certain sales that QVD made to new
customers that did not purchase any
subject merchandise during the POR.
Normal Value
Section 773(c)(1) of the Act provides
that, in the case of an NME, the
Department shall determine NV using
an FOP methodology if the merchandise
is exported from an NME and the
information does not permit the
calculation of NV using home–market
prices, third–country prices, or
constructed value under section 773(a)
of the Act. Because information on the
record does not permit the calculation
of NV using home–market prices, third–
country prices, or constructed value and
no party has argued otherwise, we
calculated NV based on FOPs reported
by QVD, pursuant to sections 773(c)(3)
and (4) of the Act and 19 CFR
351.408(c).
As the basis for NV, QVD provided
FOPs used in each of the stages for
processing frozen fish fillets. However,
QVD also reported that it is an
integrated producer, (i.e., it farms and
processes the whole fish input), but that
its affiliated farming facility, Choi Moi,
did not supply the majority of the whole
fish used during the production of the
subject merchandise. See QVD’s Section
D Questionnaire Response, (March 8,
2006) at 3. In response to a
supplemental questionnaire, QVD also
provided factors of production
information used in each of the
production stages, from the fingerling
stage to the frozen fish fillet processing
stage, separately. Although QVD
reported the inputs used to produce the
main input to the processing stage
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18:03 Sep 08, 2006
Jkt 208001
(whole fish), for the purposes of these
preliminary results, we are not valuing
those inputs when calculating NV.
Rather, our NV calculation begins with
a valuation of the fish input (whole fish)
used to produce the merchandise under
investigation.
Our general policy, consistent with
section 773(c)(1)(B) of the Act, is to
value the FOPs that a respondent uses
to produce the subject merchandise. If
the NME respondent is an integrated
producer, we take into account the
factors utilized in each stage of the
production process. For example, in a
previous aquaculture case, Shrimp from
PRC Final, one of the respondents,
Zhanjiang Guolian, was a fully
integrated firm, and the Department
valued both the farming and processing
FOPs because Zhanjiang Guolian bore
all the costs related to growing the
shrimp. See Notice of Final
Determination at Less Than Fair Value:
Certain Frozen and Canned Warmwater
Shrimp from the People’s Republic of
China, 69 FR 70997 (December 8, 2004)
and accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum at Comment 9(e)
(‘‘Shrimp from PRC Final’’).
Unlike Zhanjiang Guolian in Shrimp
from the PRC Final, QVD is not a fully
integrated firm. Although QVD is
affiliated with Choi Moi, QVD
purchased the whole fish input from
Choi Moi. Accordingly, QVD did not
bear all the costs related to growing the
fish input. Therefore, we will apply a
surrogate value to the whole fish input
that QVD purchased from Choi Moi,
rather than valuing the factors of
production incurred by Choi Moi in
calculating QVD’s NV.
To calculate NV, QVD’s reported per–
unit factor quantities were valued using
publicly available Bangladeshi, Indian,
and Indonesian surrogate values. In
selecting surrogate values, we
considered the quality, specificity, and
contemporaneity of the available values.
As appropriate, we adjusted the value of
material inputs to account for delivery
costs. Specifically, we added surrogate
freight costs to surrogate values using
the reported distances from the Vietnam
port to the Vietnam factory, or from the
domestic supplier to the factory, where
appropriate. This adjustment is in
accordance with the decision of the
United States Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit (‘‘CAFC’’) in Sigma
Corp. v. United States, 117 F. 3d 1401,
1407–1408 (Fed. Cir. 1997).
For those values not
contemporaneous with the POR, we
adjusted for inflation using data
published in the International Monetary
Fund (‘‘IMF’’)’s International Financial
Statistics. We excluded from the
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
53399
surrogate country import data used in
our calculations imports from South
Korea, Thailand, Indonesia and India
due to generally available export
subsidies. See China Nat’l Mach. Import
& Export Corp. v. United States, CIT 01–
1114, 293 F. Supp. 2d 1334 (CIT 2003),
aff’d 104 Fed. Appx. 183 (Fed. Cir.
2004) and Certain Cut–to-Length Carbon
Steel Plate from Romania: Notice of
Final Results and Final Partial
Rescission of Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review, 70 FR 12651
(March 15, 2005) and accompanying
Issues and Decision Memorandum at
Comment 4. Additionally, we
disregarded prices from NME countries
and imports that were labeled as
originating from an ‘‘unspecified’’
country were excluded from the average
value. The Department excluded these
imports because it could not ascertain
whether they were not from either an
NME country or a country with general
export subsidies. Finally, we also
disregarded prices from North Korea, as
the Department has in a previous case.
See Notice of Final Results of
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review: Chrome–Plated Lug Nuts from
the People’s Republic of China, 61 FR
58514 (November 15, 1996). We
converted the surrogate values to U.S.
dollars as appropriate, using the official
exchange rate recorded on the dates of
sale of subject merchandise in this case,
obtained from Import Administration’s
website at https://www.ia.ita.doc.gov/
exchange/. For further detail,
see Surrogate Values Memo.
Preliminary Results of the Review
As a result of our review, we
preliminarily find that the following
margins exist for the period August 1,
2004, through July 31, 2005:
Manufacturer/Exporter
Cataco ..........................
QVD ..............................
Vietnam–wide Rate10 ...
Weighted–Average
Margin (Percent)
80.88
66.34
66.34
10 The
Vietnam-wide
rate
includes
Mekonimex, Cafatex, Afiex, Navico, Phan
Quan, ANTESCO, Anhaco, Binh Dinh and
Vinh Long.
Public Comment
The Department will disclose to
parties to this proceeding the
calculations performed in reaching the
preliminary results within ten days of
the date of announcement of the
preliminary results. An interested party
may request a hearing within 30 days of
publication of the preliminary results.
See 19 CFR 351.310(c). Interested
parties may submit written comments
(case briefs) within 20 days of
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publication of the preliminary results
and rebuttal comments (rebuttal briefs),
which must be limited to issues raised
in the case briefs, within five days after
the time limit for filing case briefs. See
19 CFR 351.309(c)(1)(ii) and 19 CFR
351.309(d). Parties who submit
arguments are requested to submit with
the argument: (1) A statement of the
issue; (2) a brief summary of the
argument; and (3) a table of authorities.
Further, the Department requests that
parties submitting written comments
provide the Department with a diskette
containing the public version of those
comments. Unless the deadline is
extended pursuant to section
751(a)(3)(A) of the Act, the Department
will issue the final results of this
administrative review, including the
results of our analysis of the issues
raised by the parties in their comments,
within 120 days of publication of the
preliminary results. The assessment of
antidumping duties on entries of
merchandise covered by this review and
future deposits of estimated duties shall
be based on the final results of this
review.
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Assessment Rates
Upon completion of this
administrative review, pursuant to 19
CFR 351.212(b), the Department will
calculate an assessment rate on all
appropriate entries. For QVD, the only
respondent receiving a calculated rate in
this review, we will calculate importer–
specific duty assessment rates on the
basis of the ratio of the total amount of
antidumping duties calculated for the
examined sales to the total volume of
the examined sales for that importer.
For Cataco, to ensure proper assessment,
the Department has adjusted the total
volume of the examined sales for Cataco
as outlined in the Cataco Analysis
Memo. Where the assessment rate is de
minimis, we will instruct CBP to assess
duties on all entries of subject
merchandise by that importer.
Cash–Deposit Requirements
The following cash deposit
requirements will be effective upon
publication of the final results of this
administrative review for all shipments
of the subject merchandise entered, or
withdrawn from warehouse, for
consumption on or after the publication
date, as provided for by section
751(a)(2)(C) of the Act: (1) for the
exporters listed above, the cash deposit
rate will be that established in the final
results of this review (except, if the rate
is zero or de minimis, no cash deposit
will be required); (2) for previously
investigated or reviewed Vietnam and
non–Vietnam exporters not listed above
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18:03 Sep 08, 2006
Jkt 208001
that have separate rates, the cash
deposit rate will continue to be the
exporter–specific rate published for the
most recent period; (3) for all Vietnam
exporters of subject merchandise which
have not been found to be entitled to a
separate rate, the cash deposit rate will
be the Vietnam–wide rate of 66.34
percent, which was calculated in this
review for QVD; and (4) for all non–
Vietnam exporters of subject
merchandise which have not received
their own rate, the cash deposit rate will
be the rate applicable to the Vietnam
exporters that supplied that non–
Vietnam exporter. These deposit
requirements, when imposed, shall
remain in effect until publication of the
final results of the next administrative
review.
Notification to Interested Parties
This notice serves as a preliminary
reminder to importers of their
responsibility under 19 CFR
351.402(f)(2) to file a certificate
regarding the reimbursement of
antidumping duties prior to liquidation
of the relevant entries during this POR.
Failure to comply with this requirement
could result in the Secretary’s
presumption that reimbursement of
antidumping duties occurred and the
subsequent assessment of double
antidumping duties.
We are issuing and publishing this
determination in accordance with
sections 751(a)(1) and 777(i)(1) of the
Act.
Dated: August 31, 2006.
David M. Spooner,
Assistant Secretaryfor Import Administration.
[FR Doc. E6–15003 Filed 9–8–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
(A–475–703)
Notice of Preliminary Results of
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review: Granular
Polytetrafluoroethylene Resin From
Italy
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
EFFECTIVE DATE: September 11, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Salim Bhabhrawala or Saliha Loucif, at
(202) 482–1784 or (202) 482–1779,
respectively; AD/CVD Operations,
Office 1, Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th
AGENCY:
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Street & Constitution Avenue, NW,
Washington, DC 20230.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce
(the Department) is conducting an
administrative review of the
antidumping duty order on granular
polytetrafluoroethylene resin (PTFE)
from Italy, covering the period August 1,
2004, through July 31, 2005. We
preliminarily determine that sales of
subject merchandise by Solvay Solexis,
Inc. and Solvay Solexis S.p.A
(collectively, Solvay) have been made
below normal value (NV). If these
preliminary results are adopted in our
final results, we will instruct U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to
assess antidumping duties on
appropriate entries based on the
difference between the export price (EP)
and the NV. Interested parties are
invited to comment on these
preliminary results.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On August 30, 1988, the Department
published in the Federal Register the
antidumping duty order on granular
PTFE resin from Italy. See Antidumping
Duty Order; Granular
Polytetrafluoroethylene Resin from Italy,
53 FR 33163 (August 30, 1988). On
August 1, 2005, the Department issued
a notice of opportunity to request an
administrative review of this order. See
Antidumping or Countervailing Duty
Order, Finding, or Suspended
Investigation; Opportunity To Request
Administrative Review, 70 FR 44085
(August 1, 2005). In accordance with 19
CFR 351.213(b), Solvay requested an
administrative review. On September
28, 2005, the Department published the
notice of initiation of this antidumping
duty administrative review, covering the
period August 1, 2004, through July 31,
2005 (the period of review, or POR). See
Initiation of Antidumping and
Countervailing Duty Administrative
Reviews and Request for Revocation in
Part, 70 FR 56631 (September 28, 2005).
On October 11, 2005, the Department
issued its antidumping questionnaire to
Solvay, specifying that the responses to
Section A and Sections B–E would be
due on November 1, 2005, and,
November 15, 2005, respectively.1 The
1 Section A of the questionnaire requests general
information concerning a company’s corporate
structure and business practices, the merchandise
under review that it sells, and the manner in which
it sells that merchandise in all of its markets.
Section B requests a complete listing of all home
market sales, or, if the home market is not viable,
of sales in the most appropriate third-country
market (this Section is not applicable to
respondents in non-market economy cases). Section
C requests a complete listing of U.S. sales. Section
D requests information on the cost of production of
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[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 175 (Monday, September 11, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 53387-53400]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-15003]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
A-552-801
Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam: Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review
AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce (the ``Department'') is conducting
an administrative review of the antidumping duty order on certain
frozen fish fillets from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam
(``Vietnam''). See Notice of Antidumping Duty Order: Certain Frozen
Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 68 FR 47909
(August 12, 2003) (``Order''). We preliminarily find that QVD Food
Company Ltd. (``QVD'') sold subject merchandise at less than normal
value (``NV'') during the period of review (``POR''), August 1, 2004,
through July 31, 2005. If these preliminary results are adopted in our
final results of review, we will instruct U.S. Customs and Border
Protection (``CBP'') to assess antidumping duties on all appropriate
entries.
EFFECTIVE DATE: September 11, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Julia Hancock, AD/CVD Operations,
Office 9, Import Administration, International Trade Administration,
U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue, NW,
Washington, DC 20230; telephone: (202) 482-1394.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Case History
General
On August 1, 2005, the Department published a notice of opportunity
to request an administrative review on the antidumping duty order on
certain frozen fish fillets from Vietnam. See Antidumping or
Countervailing Duty Order, Finding, or Suspended Investigation;
Opportunity To Request Administrative Review, 70 FR 44085 (August 1,
2005). On August 26, 2005, we received a request for review from Phan
Quan Trading Co., Ltd. (``Phan Quan''). On August 31, 2005, we received
requests for review from An Giang Agriculture and Foods Import-Export
Company (``Afiex''); Vinh Hoan Company, Ltd. (``Vinh Hoan''); Can Tho
Agricultural and Animal Products Import Export Company (``Cataco'');
QVD; and Nam Viet Company, Ltd. (``Navico''). Also on August 31, 2005,
we received a request from Catfish Farmers of America and individual
U.S. catfish processors (``Petitioners'') to conduct an administrative
review of twenty-nine Vietnamese exporters and/or producers.\1\
Petitioners' August 31, 2005, administrative review request included
Phan Quan, Afiex, Vinh Hoan, Cataco, QVD and Navico. On September 28,
2005, the Department initiated this administrative review, covering the
aforementioned twenty-nine companies. See Initiation of Antidumping and
Countervailing Duty Administrative Reviews and Requests for Revocation
in Part (``Initiation Notice''), 70 FR 56631 (September 28, 2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Petitioners requested a review on the following companies:
(1) Afiex, which also requested a review; (2) An Giang Agriculture
Technology Service Company (``ANTESCO''); (3) An Giang Fisheries
Import and Export Joint Stock Company (``Agifish''); (4) Anhaco; (5)
Bamboo Food Co., Ltd. (``Bamboo Food''); (6) Binh Dinh Import Export
Company (``Binh Dinh''); (7) Cataco, which also requested a review;
(8) Can Tho Animal Fishery Products Processing Export Enterprise
(``Cafatex''); (9) Da Nang Seaproducts Import-Export Corporation
(``Danang''); (10) Duyen Hai Foodstuffs Processing Factory (``Duyen
Hai''); (11) Gepimex 404 Company (``Gepimex''); (12) Hai Vuong Co.,
Ltd. (``Hai Vuong''); (13) Kien Giang Ltd. (``Kien Giang''); (14)
Mekong Fish Company (``Mekonimex''); (15) Navico, which also
requested a review; (16) Phan Quan, which also requested a review;
(17) Phu Thanh Frozen Factory (``Phu Thanh''); (18) Phuoc My
Seafoods Processing Factory (``Phuoc My''); (19) QVD, which also
requested a review; (20) Seaprodex Saigon; (21) Tan Thanh Loi Frozen
Food Co., Ltd. (``Tan Thanh Loi''); (22) Thangloi Frozen Food
Enterprise (``Thanlgoi Frozen Food''); (23) Thanh Viet Co., Ltd.
(``Thanh Viet''); (24) Thuan Hung Co., Ltd. (``Thuan Hung''); (25)
Tin Thinh Co., Ltd. (``Tin Thinh''); (26) Viet Hai Seafood Company
Limited (``Vietnam Fish-One''); (27) Vifaco; (28) Vinh Hoan, which
also requested a review; and (29) Vinh Long Import-Export Company
(``Vinh Long'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Quantity and Value (``Q&V'') Questionnaires
On September 14, 2005, the Department issued questionnaires
requesting the total quantity and value of subject merchandise exported
to the United States during the POR to all 29 companies subject to the
administrative review. On September 28, 2005, a memorandum to the file
was placed on the record by the Department noting that Federal Express
(``Fed Ex'') tracking confirmed that the Q&V questionnaires were
delivered to all 29 companies. See Memorandum to the File, through
Cindy Robinson, Acting Program Manager, from Julia Hancock, Case
Analyst, Subject: Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam (``Vietnam''): Initial Questionnaires Timeline,
(September 28, 2005).
On September 20, 2005, Vietnam Fish-One submitted a letter to the
Department stating that it made no shipments of subject merchandise to
the United States during the POR. On September 30, 2005, QVD, Vinh
Hoan, Cafatex, and Navico submitted Q&V responses. On October 1, 2005,
Danang, Mekonimex, Thanh Viet, Phu Thanh, and Afiex submitted Q&V
responses. Also, on October 3, 2005, Agifish and Cataco submitted Q&V
responses.
On October 5 and 6, 2005, the Department sent a letter to five
companies (i.e., Danang, Mekonimex, Thanh Viet, Phu Thanh, and Afiex),
requesting that each company resubmit their Q&V response because: (1)
Danang failed to answer all questions from the
[[Page 53388]]
questionnaire and failed to follow the Department's filing procedures
pursuant to its regulations; (2) Mekonimex failed to submit a public
version of its questionnaire response; (3) Thanh Viet failed to answer
all questions from the questionnaire and failed to follow the
Department's filing procedures pursuant to its regulations; (4) Phu
Thanh failed to answer all questions from the questionnaire and failed
to follow the Department's filing procedures pursuant to its
regulations; and (5) Afiex's Q&V response was not properly labeled as a
proprietary document and was rejected for overbracketing of proprietary
information. Also, on October 6, 2005, the Department issued a letter
requesting the sixteen companies who had not responded to the
Department's original Q&V questionnaire to submit such response.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The sixteen companies that did not respond to the
Department's September 14, 2005, Q&V questionnaire are: (1) Duyen
Hai; (2) Gepimex; (3) Hai Vuong; (4) Kien Giang; (5) Thangloi
Frozen; (6) Tan Thanh Loi; (7) Thuan Hung; (8) ANTESCO; (9)
Seaprodex Saigon; 10) Anhaco; (11) Vinh Long; (12) Vifaco; (13) Tin
Thinh; (14) Binh Dinh; (15) Bamboo Food; and (16) Phan Quan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On October 19, 2005, Vifaco submitted a letter to the Department
stating that it made no shipments of subject merchandise to the United
States during the POR. On October 20, 2005, Phan Quan submitted a Q&V
response to the Department.
On November 2, 2005, the Department sent a second letter to six
companies, (i.e., Danang, Thanh Viet, Tin Thinh, Mekonimex, Thuan Hung,
and Afiex), requesting that each company resubmit their respective Q&V
response because: (1) Danang failed to bracket the proprietary
information in the appropriate format and provide a public version of
the proprietary questionnaire response; (2) Thanh Viet failed to answer
all the questions from the questionnaire and identify whether its
submission was a public or proprietary document; (3) Tin Thinh failed
to bracket the proprietary information and provide a public version;
(4) Mekonimex failed to provide a public summary of the proprietary
information; (5) Thuan Hung failed to answer all of the questions from
the questionnaire and identify whether its submission was a public or
proprietary document; and (6) Afiex failed to provide a public summary
of the proprietary information. Also, on November 2, 2005, the
Department placed on the record memoranda to the file stating that the
Department had removed Afiex, Thuan Hung, Mekonimex, and Thanh Viet's
Q&V responses from the record of this review and returned the responses
to the respective company because the Department was unable to consider
each company's resubmitted Q&V response for the above reasons.
On November 3, 2005, the Department issued a letter to Tin Thinh
regarding the deadline for Tin Thinh's second resubmitted Q&V response.
On November 8, 2005, Thuan Huang resubmitted its Q&V response. On
November 9, 2005, Thanh Viet, Mekonimex, and Afiex resubmitted their
Q&V responses. On November 9, 2005, the Department issued a letter to
Tin Thinh stating that, because the Department's November 3, 2005,
letter to Tin Thinh was returned by Fed Ex, Tin Thinh's second
resubmitted Q&V response was due on November 16, 2005.
On November 9, 2005, a memorandum to the file was placed by the
Department noting that Fed Ex tracking confirmed that the second Q&V
letter was delivered to the 16 companies\3\ that did not respond to the
Department's September 14, 2005, Q&V questionnaire. Additionally, Fed
Ex tracking confirmed that the Department's October 5, 2005, and
October 6, 2005, letters to Afiex, Danang, Mekonimex, Thanh Viet, and
Phu Thanh were delivered to the respective companies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The sixteen companies are: (1) Duyen Hai; (2) Gepimex; (3)
Hai Vuong; (4) Kien Giang; (5) Thangloi Frozen; (6) Tan Thanh Loi;
(7) Thuan Hung; (8) ANTESCO; (9) Seaprodex Saigon; (10) Anhaco; (11)
Vinh Long; (12) Vifaco; (13) Tin Thinh; (14) Binh Dinh; (15) Bamboo
Food; and (16) Phan Quan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On November 16, 2005, Afiex submitted a letter clarifying its
November 9, 2005, Q&V response. On November 17, 2005, a memorandum to
the file was placed on the record by the Department noting that Fed Ex
tracking confirmed that the Department's November 2, 2005, letters to
Afiex, Danang, Mekonimex, Thanh Viet, Thuan Hung, and Tin Thinh were
delivered to the respective companies.
On November 21, 2005, Petitioners submitted comments on respondent
selection. On November 21, 2005, the Department sent a letter to Danang
rejecting Danang's Q&V response for filing deficiencies. Also, on
November 28, 2005, the Department sent a letter to Tin Thinh rejecting
Tin Thinh's Q&V response for filing deficiencies.
On November 29, 2005, Petitioners resubmitted their November 21,
2005, comments on respondent selection. On November 30, 2005, the
Department issued letters to Mekonimex and Cataco requesting
clarification of their reported Q&V data.
On December 7, 2005, Vietnam Fish-One submitted a response to
Petitioners' respondent selection comments.
On December 19, 2005, Danang resubmitted a Q&V questionnaire
response, explaining that, as a pro se company, it attempted to
cooperate and misunderstood the Department's filing requirements. In
addition, on December 19, 2005, the Department placed a memorandum to
the file on the record noting that Cataco's quantity and value
clarification response received via email communication was placed on
the record.
On December 27, 2005, Cataco submitted a Q&V clarification
response.
On December 29, 2005, Petitioners submitted comments on Danang's
December 19, 2005, Q&V response and on Cataco's December 27, 2005, Q&V
clarification response.
On January 4, 2006, Danang submitted rebuttal comments in response
to Petitioners' December 29, 2005, submission.
On January 13, 2006, the Department selected the four largest
exporters/producers of subject merchandise during the POR as mandatory
respondents: QVD; Cafatex; Mekonimex; and Cataco. See Memorandum to
Stephen J. Claeys, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration, from James C. Doyle, Office Director, Office 9, AD/CVD
Operations, Import Administration, Subject: Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review of Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam: Selection of Respondents (January 13, 2006)
(``Respondent Selection Memo'').
Partial Rescission
On November 21, 2005, Petitioners withdrew their request on the
following fourteen exporters that did not individually request a
review: Bamboo Food; Caseafex; Gepimex; Hai Vuong; Kien Giang; Phu
Thanh; Phuoc My; Seaprodex Saigon; Tan Thanh Loi; Thangloi Frozen Food;
Thanh Viet; Thuan Hung; Tin Thinh; and Vifaco. Additionally,
Petitioners withdrew their request on the following three companies who
had individually requested a review: Afiex; Phan Quan; and Vinh Hoan.
On December 23, 2005, Vinh Hoan withdrew its request for an
administrative review. Additionally, on December 23, 2005, H&N Foods
International (``H&N''), a U.S. importer of the subject merchandise,
requested that the Department extend the deadline for withdrawing
requests review in this proceeding by thirty days. On December 27,
2005, Vinh Hoan submitted a letter to the Department requesting that
its
[[Page 53389]]
withdrawal letter dated December 23, 2005, be disregarded.
Additionally, on December 27, 2005, the Department extended the
deadline for withdrawing requests for review in this proceeding by ten
days from December 27, 2005, to January 6, 2006.
On January 5, 2006, H&N requested that the Department extend the
deadline, which was January 6, 2006, for withdrawing requests in this
administrative review until two days after the Department's issuance of
its decision regarding respondent selection in this administrative
review. On January 9, 2006, Vinh Hoan again withdrew its request for a
review in this administrative review. Additionally, on January 11,
2006, Petitioners withdrew their request of two additional companies,
Danang and Agifish, both of which did not individually request a
review. Moreover, Petitioners also did not object to Vinh Hoan's
January 9, 2006, request to withdraw its request for a review.
Subsequently, on February 7, 2006, due to the withdrawal of
Petitioners' and Vinh Hoan's review requests, the Department rescinded
the review with respect to Agifish; Bamboo Food; Coseafex; Danang;
Gepimex; Hai Vuong; Kien Giang; Phu Thanh; Phuoc My; Seaprodex Saigon;
Tan Thanh Loi; Thangloi Frozen Food; Thanh Viet; Thuan Hung; Tin Thinh;
Vifaco; and Vinh Hoan. Additionally, the Department rescinded the
review with respect to Vietnam Fish-One, which reported that it made no
shipments of subject merchandise during the POR. See Certain Frozen
Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam: Rescission, in
Part, and Extension of Preliminary Results of the Second Antidumping
Duty Administrative Review, 71 FR 6266 (February 7, 2006) (``Partial
Rescission and Extension of Preliminary Results''). On February 7,
2006, the Department extended the deadline for the preliminary results
of this review by 120 days, to August 31, 2006. Id.
Mandatory Respondents
On January 17, 2006, the Department sent the non-market economy
(``NME'') questionnaire to QVD, Cafatex, Mekonimex and Cataco.
Cataco
On February 3, 2006, the Department placed a memorandum to the file
on the record noting that on February 2, 2006, Cataco emailed the
Department requesting an extension of time to March 10, 2006, to
respond to the Department's NME questionnaire. On February 3, 2006, the
Department granted Cataco a one-week extension to respond to the
Department's questionnaire.
On February 13, 2006, Cataco submitted its section A response. On
February 27, 2006, Cataco submitted a letter requesting a one-week
extension to submit its sections C and D questionnaire response. On
February 27, 2006, the Department granted Cataco a one-week extension
to submit its sections C and D questionnaire response from March 2,
2006, to March 9, 2006.
On March 2, 2006, the Department issued a supplemental section A
questionnaire to Cataco. Additionally, on March 6, 2006, Cataco
submitted its sections C and D questionnaire response.
On March 14, 2006, the Department placed a memorandum to the file
on the record regarding an email from Cataco, which requested a two-
week extension to submit its supplemental section A questionnaire
response. Additionally, on March 14, 2006, the Department issued a
letter to Cataco granting a one-week extension to submit its
supplemental section A questionnaire response from March 20, 2006, to
March 27, 2006.
On March 20, 2006, a the Department placed a memorandum to the file
on the record regarding placing information with respect to Cataco from
the first administrative review on the record of this review.
Additionally, on March 20, 2006, the Department issued a supplemental
sections C and D questionnaire to Cataco.
On March 23, 2006, Cataco submitted its supplemental section A
questionnaire response. On April 4, 2006, Cataco requested a two-week
extension to submit its supplemental section C questionnaire response.
On April 7, 2006, the Department granted Cataco a ten-day extension to
submit its supplemental section C questionnaire response from April 10,
2006, to April 20, 2006. On April 17, 2006, Cataco submitted its
supplemental sections C and D questionnaire response.
On June 1, 2006, the Department placed a memorandum to the file on
the record regarding placing Cataco's entry packages from CBP on the
record of this review. Additionally, on June 1, 2006, the Department
placed a memorandum to the file on the record regarding DC Lawyers' May
12, 2006, withdrawal as counsel for Cataco. Additionally, on June 14,
2006, the Department issued a second supplemental sections A, C and D
questionnaire to Cataco.
On June 28, 2006, Valley Fresh Seafood, Inc. (``Valley Fresh'')
submitted a letter to the Department addressing a business proprietary
section of Cataco's supplemental questionnaire. On July 3, 2006, Cataco
submitted a letter to the Department that it was partially withdrawing
from this administrative review and was not responding to the June 14,
2006, supplemental questionnaire.
On July 7, 2006, the Department issued a letter to Valley Fresh
that it was rejecting its June 28, 2006, letter, because it contained
new factual information. The deadline for submitting factual
information was June 1, 2006. Additionally, on July 7, 2006, the
Department placed a memorandum to the file on the record removing
Valley Fresh's June 28, 2006, letter from the record.
On July 17, 2006, Petitioners submitted a letter requesting that
the Department not accept Cataco's July 3, 2006, letter of partial
withdrawal. On July 19, 2006, the Department issued a letter rejecting
Cataco's partial withdrawal from this review and requested that Cataco
submit a full response to the June 14, 2006, supplemental
questionnaire.
On July 26, 2006, Valley Fresh submitted a letter to the Department
with respect to a business proprietary section of the Department's June
14, 2006, supplemental questionnaire to Cataco. On July 26, 2006,
Cataco submitted a letter to the Department stating that, except for a
certain business proprietary section, it was not responding to the June
14, 2006, supplemental questionnaire.
On August 1, 2006, the Department issued a letter to Valley Fresh
rejecting its July 26, 2006, letter because it contained new factual
information. On August 1, 2006, the Department also issued a letter to
Cataco rejecting its July 26, 2006 letter and requesting that Cataco
resubmit its letter without the attached June 28, 2006, letter from
Valley Fresh. Additionally, on August 1, 2006, the Department placed
memoranda to the file on the record noting that the July 26, 2006,
submissions from Valley Fresh and Cataco had been removed from the
record.
On August 3, 2006, Cataco submitted a letter, which contained
Valley Fresh's June 28, 2006, letter to the Department requesting that
it reconsider its decision to reject Cataco's July 26, 2006, letter. On
August 8, 2006, the Department issued a letter to Cataco rejecting its
August 3, 2006, letter and requesting that Cataco resubmit the letter
without the attached June 28, 2006, letter from Valley Fresh. On August
9, 2006, the Department placed a memorandum to the file on the record
removing Cataco's
[[Page 53390]]
August 3, 2006, submission from the record.
The Department did not receive a response from Cataco on August 14,
2006, which was the deadline to resubmit. On August 17, 2006, the
Department placed a memorandum to the file on the record noting, via
telephone communication with Cataco's counsel, that Cataco would not be
resubmitting its August 3, 2006, letter.
Cafatex
On January 27, 2006, Cafatex requested a week extension to submit
its section A response, which was due on February 7, 2006. On January
31, 2006, the Department granted Cafatex a one-week extension to submit
its section A response from February 7, 2006, to February 14, 2006.
On February 14, 2006, DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary LLP submitted a
letter withdrawing as counsel for Cafatex. On February 16, 2006, the
Department issued a letter to Cafatex noting that it had not received
Cafatex's section A questionnaire response, which was due on February
14, 2006, and had not received a request for extension. In the letter,
the Department requested that, if Cafatex intended to remain in the
review, it should submit its section A questionnaire response.
On February 27, 2006, the Department placed a memorandum to the
file on the record noting that in a facsimile dated February 21, 2006,
Cafatex confirmed its decision not to participate in the instant
administrative review.
Mekonimex
On February 8, 2006, the Department issued a letter to Mekonimex
noting that because the Department did not receive Mekonimex's section
A response, which was due on February 7, 2006, the deadline to submit
its section A response was extended to February 13, 2006. On February
15, 2006, Mekonimex submitted two letters stating that it would no
longer participate and that it was withdrawing from this review.
QVD
On January 30, 2006, QVD requested a two-week extension to submit
its section A response, which was due on February 7, 2006. On January
31, 2006, the Department granted QVD a week extension to submit its
section A response from February 7, 2006, to February 14, 2006.
On February 13, 2006, QVD requested a three-week extension to
submit its section C and D response.
On February 14, 2006, QVD submitted its section A response. Also,
on February 14, 2006, the Department granted QVD a week extension to
submit its sections C and D response from February 22, 2006, to March
1, 2006.
On February 21, 2006, QVD requested a two-week extension to submit
its sections C and D response. On February 23, 2006, Department granted
QVD a week extension to submit its sections C and D response from March
1, 2006, to March 8, 2006.
On March 8, 2006, QVD submitted its sections C and D questionnaire
response. Additionally, on March 9, 2006, the Department issued a
supplemental section A questionnaire to QVD.
On March 20, 2006, QVD requested a two-week extension to submit its
supplemental section A questionnaire response. On March 20, 2006, the
Department granted QVD a ten-day extension to submit its supplemental
section A questionnaire response from March 30, 2006, to April 10,
2006.
On March 21, 2006, the Department issued a supplemental sections C
and D questionnaire to QVD. Additionally, on March 30, 2006, a
memorandum to the file was placed by the Department regarding QVD's
supplemental section C questionnaire.
On April 4, 2006, QVD requested a three-week extension to submit
its supplemental section C questionnaire response. On April 5, 2006,
the Department granted QVD a ten-day extension to submit its
supplemental section C questionnaire response from April 10, 2006, to
April 20, 2006.
On April 10, 2006, QVD submitted its supplemental section A
questionnaire response. On April 11, 2006, QVD requested a three-week
extension to submit its supplemental section D questionnaire response.
On April 12, 2006, the Department granted QVD a ten-day extension to
submit its supplemental section D questionnaire response from April 18,
2006, to April 28, 2006.
On April 19, 2006, QVD requested a one-week extension to submit its
supplemental section C questionnaire response. Additionally, on April
19, 2006, the Department granted QVD a one-week extension to submit its
supplemental section C questionnaire response from April 20, 2006, to
April 28, 2006.
On April 24, 2006, QVD requested a one-week extension to submit its
supplemental section D questionnaire response. On April 25, 2006, the
Department granted QVD a one-week extension to submit its supplemental
section D questionnaire response from April 28, 2006, to May 5, 2006.
On April 28, 2006, QVD submitted its supplemental section C
questionnaire response. On May 5, 2006, QVD submitted its supplemental
section D questionnaire response. Additionally, on May 31, 2006, the
Department issued a second supplemental section D questionnaire to QVD.
On June 9, 2006, QVD requested a three-week extension to submit its
second supplemental section D questionnaire response. On June 13, 2006,
the Department granted QVD a ten-day extension to submit its second
supplemental section D questionnaire response from June 14, 2006, to
June 26, 2006.
On June 16, 2006, the Department placed QVD's entry packages from
CBP on the record of this review. On June 19, 2006, Petitioners
submitted deficiency comments on QVD's sections A and C questionnaire
responses.
On June 23, 2006, the Department issued a second supplemental
section A and C questionnaire to QVD. On June 27, 2006, QVD submitted
its second supplemental section D questionnaire response.
On July 12, 2006, the Department issued a third supplemental
section D questionnaire to QVD. On July 18, 2006, QVD requested a ten-
day extension to submit its third supplemental section D questionnaire
response.
On July 19, 2006, the Department granted QVD a six-day extension to
submit its third supplemental section D questionnaire response from
July 26, 2006, to August 1, 2006.
On July 21, 2006, the Department issued a fourth supplemental
section D questionnaire to QVD. Additionally, on July 21, 2006, QVD
submitted its second supplemental sections A and C questionnaire
response.
On July 26, 2006, the Department issued a third supplemental
section A and C questionnaire to QVD. On August 1, 2006, QVD submitted
its third and fourth supplemental section D questionnaire responses.
On August 1, 2006, QVD requested a five-day extension to submit its
third supplemental section A and C questionnaire response. On August 2,
2006, the Department granted QVD a four-day extension to submit its
section A and C questionnaire response from August 4, 2006, to August
8, 2006.
On August 2, 2006, QVD submitted a letter to the Department with
respect to an attachment that was missing from its August 1, 2006,
third and fourth supplemental section D questionnaire responses. On
August 2, 2006, the Department issued a fifth supplemental section D
questionnaire to QVD.
[[Page 53391]]
On August 8, 2006, QVD submitted its fifth supplemental section D
questionnaire response. On August 9, 2006, QVD submitted its third
supplemental sections A and C questionnaire responses.
On August 14, 2006, the Department issued a letter to QVD regarding
its section C database requesting the downstream sales to Customer A.
On August 21, QVD submitted its section C database response.
Additionally, on August 22, 2006, QVD submitted rebuttal pre-
preliminary comments.
Separate Rate Respondents
As noted above, on January 13, 2006, the Department selected four
mandatory respondents. On January 18, 2006, the Department sent section
A of the Department's NME questionnaire to the three remaining separate
rate respondents: Afiex, Navico and Phan Quan.
Afiex
On February 3, 2006, Afiex requested a one-week extension to submit
its section A response, which was due on February 7, 2006. On February
6, 2006, the Department granted Afiex a one-week extension to submit
its section A response from February 7, 2006, to February 14, 2006.
On February 13, 2006, Afiex requested a second extension of three
days to submit its section A response. On February 14, 2006, the
Department granted Afiex a three-day extension to submit its section A
response from February 14, 2006, to February 17, 2006. On February 17,
2006, Afiex submitted a section A response.
On March 2, 2006, the Department issued a supplemental section A
questionnaire to Afiex. On March 14, 2006, Afiex requested a one-week
extension to submit its supplemental section A questionnaire response.
Additionally, on March 16, 2006, the Department granted Afiex a one-
week extension to submit its supplemental section A questionnaire
response from March 23, 2006, to March 30, 2006.
On March 29, 2006, Afiex requested a second one-week extension to
submit its supplemental section A questionnaire response. On March 30,
2006, the Department granted Afiex a four-day extension to submit its
supplemental section A questionnaire response from March 30, 2006, to
April 3, 2006.
On April 4, 2006, Afiex submitted its supplemental section A
questionnaire response. On April 5, 2006, Afiex requested an extension
to submit documents that were not available when it submitted the
supplemental section A questionnaire response from April 4, 2006, to
April 10, 2006. On April 6, 2006, the Department issued a letter to
Afiex extending the deadline until April 10, 2006. Additionally, in the
letter to Afiex, the Department issued a second supplemental section A
questionnaire.
On April 10, 2006, Afiex requested an extension of two days to
submit its second supplemental section A questionnaire response. On
April 11, 2006, the Department granted Afiex a one-day extension to
submit its supplemental Section A questionnaire response from April 10,
2006, to April 11, 2006. Additionally, on April 11, 2006, Afiex
submitted its second supplemental section A questionnaire response.
On July 7, 2006, the Department issued a third supplemental section
A questionnaire to Afiex. On July 28, 2006, Afiex submitted a letter to
the Department that it was both not responding to third supplemental
section A questionnaire and withdrawing from this review.
Navico
On January 27, 2006, Navico requested a one-week extension to
submit its section A response, which was due on February 7, 2006. On
January 31, 2006, the Department granted Navico a one-week extension to
submit its section A response from February 7, 2006, to February 14,
2006.
On February 16, 2006, the Department issued a letter to Navico
noting that it had not received Navico's section A questionnaire
response, which was due on February 14, 2006, and had not received a
request for extension. In the letter, the Department requested that, if
Navico intended to remain in the review, it should submit its section A
questionnaire response.
On February 27, 2006, the Department issued a second letter to
Navico requesting that, if Navico intended to remain as a separate
rates respondent, Navico should submit a section A response by March 3,
2006. Additionally, in the letter, the Department requested that if
Navico was not going to submit a response, Navico should submit a
letter confirming its decision to not participate in this review.
On March 7, 2006, the Department place a memorandum to the file on
the record by the Department noting that via an e-mail received on
March 6, 2006, Navico confirmed its decision not to participate in this
administrative review.
Phan Quan
On February 3, 2006, Phan Quan requested a one-week extension to
submit its section A response. On February 6, 2006, the Department
granted Phan Quan a one-week extension to submit its section A response
from February 7, 2006, to February 14, 2006.
On February 13, 2006, Phan Quan requested a second extension of
three days to submit its section A response. On February 14, 2006, the
Department granted Phan Quan a three-day extension to submit its
section A response from February 14, 2006, to February 17, 2006.
On February 17, 2006, Phan Quan submitted its section A response.
Also on February 21, 2006, Phan Quan submitted a letter that included
attachments supplementing its section A response.
On March 28, 2006, the Department issued a supplemental section A
questionnaire to Phan Quan.
On April 19, 2006, the Department issued a letter to Phan Quan
noting that it had not received a response from Phan Quan for its
supplemental section A questionnaire response, which was due on April
18, 2006. In the letter, the Department granted Phan Quan a second,
final opportunity to submit its supplemental section A questionnaire
response by April 21, 2006. On April 26, 2006, Phan Quan submitted a
letter to the Department that it was not responding to the supplemental
section A questionnaire and withdrawing from this review.
Surrogate Country and Surrogate Values
On January 18, 2006, the Department placed a memorandum to the file
on the record extending the deadline for submission of factual
information by 50 days from January 18, 2006, to March 9, 2006. On
January 23, 2006, the Department issued a letter to the interested
parties requesting comments on surrogate country selection.
On February 27, 2006, Petitioners requested an extension of time to
submit comments on submission of factual information, comments on
surrogate country selection, and publicly available information to
value factors of production. On March 1, 2006, the Department issued a
memorandum to the file extending these deadlines to May 1, 2006.
On April 26, 2006, Petitioners and QVD requested extensions to
place factual information on the record, comments on surrogate country
selection, and publicly available information to value factors of
production. On April 27, 2006, the Department issued a letter extending
these deadlines to June 1, 2006.
[[Page 53392]]
On June 1, 2006, Petitioners and QVD submitted factual information.
On June 1, 2006, Petitioners and QVD also submitted surrogate value
information for the Department to consider for these preliminary
results. Also, on June 1, 2006, Petitioners submitted comments on
surrogate country selection. No other party submitted surrogate country
comments.
On June 12, 2006, Petitioners submitted rebuttal comments on the
surrogate value information submitted by QVD.
On August 1, 2006, the Department selected Bangladesh as the
surrogate country. On August 15, 2006, Petitioners submitted pre-
preliminary comments.
Scope of the Order
The product covered by this order is frozen fish fillets, including
regular, shank, and strip fillets and portions thereof, whether or not
breaded or marinated, of the species Pangasius Bocourti, Pangasius
Hypophthalmus (also known as Pangasius Pangasius), and Pangasius
Micronemus. Frozen fish fillets are lengthwise cuts of whole fish. The
fillet products covered by the scope include boneless fillets with the
belly flap intact (``regular'' fillets), boneless fillets with the
belly flap removed (``shank'' fillets), boneless shank fillets cut into
strips (``fillet strips/finger''), which include fillets cut into
strips, chunks, blocks, skewers, or any other shape. Specifically
excluded from the scope are frozen whole fish (whether or not dressed),
frozen steaks, and frozen belly-flap nuggets. Frozen whole dressed fish
are deheaded, skinned, and eviscerated. Steaks are bone-in, cross-
section cuts of dressed fish. Nuggets are the belly-flaps. The subject
merchandise will be hereinafter referred to as frozen ``basa'' and
``tra'' fillets, which are the Vietnamese common names for these
species of fish. These products are classifiable under tariff article
code 0304.20.60.33 (Frozen Fish Fillets of the species Pangasius
including basa and tra) of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United
States (``HTSUS'').\4\ This order covers all frozen fish fillets
meeting the above specification, regardless of tariff classification.
Although the HTSUS subheading is provided for convenience and customs
purposes, our written description of the scope of the Order is
dispositive.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Until July 1, 2004, these products were classifiable under
tariff article codes 0304.20.60.30 (Frozen Catfish Fillets),
0304.20.60.96 (Frozen Fish Fillets, NESOI), 0304.20.60.43 (Frozen
Freshwater Fish Fillets) and 0304.20.60.57 (Frozen Sole Fillets) of
the HTSUS.
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Affiliations
Section 771(33) of the Act states that the Department considers the
following as affiliated: (A) Members of a family, including brothers
and sisters (whether by the whole or half blood), spouse, ancestors,
and lineal descendants; (B) any officer or director of an organization
and such organization; (C) partners; (D) employer and employee; (E) any
person directly or indirectly owning, controlling, or holding with
power to vote, five percent or more of the outstanding voting stock or
shares of any organization and such organization; (F) two or more
persons directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by, or under
common control with, any person; and (G) any person who controls any
other person and such other person. For purposes of affiliation,
section 771(33) of the ACT states that a person shall be considered to
control another person if the person is legally or operationally in a
position to exercise restraint or direction over the other person.
Based on the evidence on the record in this administrative review,
we preliminarily find that QVD is affiliated with Dong Thap Food Co.,
Ltd. (``Dong Thap'') and Company A,\5\ pursuant to section 771(33) of
the Act. For a detailed discussion of our analysis, please see
Memorandum to James C. Doyle, Office Director, Office 9, through Alex
Villanueva, Program Manager, Office 9, from Julia Hancock, Case
Analyst, Subject: QVD Affiliations Memorandum: 2\nd\ Administrative
Review of Certain Frozen Fish Fillets, (August 31, 2006) (``Affiliation
and Collapsing Memo''). In addition, based on the evidence presented in
QVD's questionnaire responses, we preliminarily find that QVD, Dong
Thap, and Company A should be treated as a single entity for purposes
of this administrative review. See 19 CFR 351.401(f)(1); see also,
Affiliation and Collapsing Memo for a discussion of the proprietary
aspects of this relationship. With respect to the criterion of
significant potential for manipulation of price of production, we note
that the Department normally considers three factors: (1) The level of
common ownership; (ii) the extent to which managerial employees or
board members of one firm sit on the board of directors of an
affiliated firm; and (iii) whether operations are intertwined, such as
through the sharing of sales, information, involvement in production
and pricing decisions, the sharing of facilities or employees, or
significant transactions between the affiliated producers. See 19 CFR
351.401(f)(2).
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\5\ Because Company A's identity is business proprietary, it
cannot be disclosed in this notice. See Affiliation and Collapsing
Memo for further information.
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Vietnamese Entities
Based on the information on the record of this proceeding, we
preliminarily find that QVD, Dong Thap, and Company A should be
collapsed. Accordingly, the Department should include the factors of
production for Company A in the Department's calculation of QVD's
normal value (``NV''). However, the Department does not currently have
this information on the record of the proceeding. Therefore, the
Department will request this information from QVD after the issuance of
these preliminary results. Additionally, we will be issuing an amended
preliminary calculation for comment after we receive Company A's
factors of production. Due to the proprietary nature of the information
with respect to these affiliates, this information cannot be discussed
herein. See Affiliation and Collapsing Memo for a further discussion of
this issue.
In addition, we preliminary find that Choi Moi Farming Cooperative
(``Choi Moi'') is affiliated with QVD pursuant to section 771(33) of
the Act. See Affiliation and Collapsing Memo for a further discussion
of this issue. However, we preliminary find that although Choi Moi is
affiliated with QVD, the collapsing criteria are not satisfied and
therefore, Choi Moi has not been collapsed with QVD. Id.
We also preliminarily find that Company B\6\ and QVD are not
affiliated, pursuant to section 771(33) of the Act. Id.
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\6\ Because Company B's identity is business proprietary, it
cannot be disclosed in this notice. See Affiliation and Collapsing
Memo for further information.
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United States Entities
We preliminarily find that QVD and QVD USA LLC (``QVD USA'') are
affiliated pursuant to section 771(33) of the Act. Id.
Although the Department received relevant information from QVD USA
regarding its relationship with Customer A\7\ on August 21, 2006, ten
days prior
[[Page 53393]]
to the deadline to issue the preliminary results, the Department was
unable to consider this information for these preliminary results of
review. For the final results of review, however, the Department will
fully consider the information submitted by QVD USA on August 21, 2006,
and possibly request additional information on the relationship with
QVD USA and Customer A. For these preliminary results, the Department
will include QVD USA's sales to Customer A in the margin calculation
for QVD. However, in the event the Department finds Customer A and QVD
USA affiliated, the Department intends to request the relevant sales to
the first unaffiliated U.S. customer after such finding. If parties
fail to provide such data, the Department may apply facts available,
with an adverse inference, to QVD USA's CEP sales to Customer A for the
final results of this review.
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\7\ Because Customer A's identity is business proprietary, it
cannot be disclosed in this notice. See Memorandum from Julia
Hancock, Case Analyst, to Alex Villanueva, Program Manager, Import
Administration, Subject: 2nd Administrative Review of Certain Frozen
Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam: Preliminary
Results Analysis Memo for QVD Food Company, (August 31, 2006) (``QVD
Analysis Memo'') for further information.
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On February 14, 2006, QVD stated that it was affiliated with
Beaverstreet Fisheries Inc. (``BSF'') and provided a CEP sales database
which contained the sales from BSF to the first unaffiliated U.S.
customer. For these preliminary results, the Department is treating QVD
USA and BSF as affiliated entities and will characterize BSF sales' as
CEP sales in the margin calculation for QVD for these preliminary
results. However, the Department notes that there is insufficient time
to evaluate whether the claim of affiliation properly fulfills the
statutory criteria of section 771(33) of the Act. Accordingly, the
Department intends to request further information regarding QVD USA's
affiliation with BSF, which may affect the use of these sales and the
margin calculation in the final results of this review. The Department
also intends to request information on the sales from QVD USA to BSF.
Separate Rates Determination
In the less-than-fair-value (``LTFV'') investigation and the first
administrative review for this Order, the Department treated Vietnam as
a non-market economy (``NME'') for antidumping purposes. It is the
Department's policy to assign all exporters of the merchandise subject
to review that are located in NME countries a single antidumping duty
rate unless an exporter can demonstrate an absence of governmental
control, both in law (de jure) and in fact (de facto), with respect to
its export activities. To establish whether an exporter is sufficiently
independent of governmental control to be entitled to a separate rate,
the Department analyzes the exporter using the criteria established in
the Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Sparklers
from the People's Republic of China, 56 FR 20588 (May 6, 1991)
(``Sparklers''), as amplified in the Final Determination of Sales at
Less Than Fair Value: Silicon Carbide from the People's Republic of
China, 59 FR 22585 (May 2, 1994) (``Silicon Carbide''). Under the
separate rates criteria established in these cases, the Department
assigns separate rates to NME exporters only if they can demonstrate
the absence of both de jure and de facto governmental control over
their export activities.
Absence of De Jure Control
Evidence supporting, though not requiring, a finding of the absence
of de jure governmental control over export activities includes: (1) An
absence of restrictive stipulations associated with an individual
exporter's business and export licenses; (2) any legislative enactments
decentralizing control of companies; and (3) any other formal measures
by the government decentralizing control of companies. See Sparklers,
56 FR at 20589.
In the LTFV investigation for this case, the Department granted
separate rates to the four mandatory respondents, Cataco, Cafatex,
Mekonimex, and QVD, and two of the separate rate respondents, Afiex and
Navico. See Notice of Final Antidumping Duty Determination of Sales at
Less Than Fair Value and Affirmative Critical Circumstances: Certain
Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 68 FR 37116
(June 23, 2003) and accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum at
Comments 5 and 6 (``LTFV FFF Final Determination''). Additionally, in
the first administrative review of this case, the Department did not
grant a separate rate to the other separate rate respondent, Phan Quan,
because it stopped participating in that review. See Notice of
Preliminary Results and Partial Rescission of Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review: Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam, 70 FR 54007 (September 13, 2005) (``1\st\ Review
Prelim''). However, it is the Department's policy to evaluate separate
rates questionnaire responses each time a respondent makes a separate
rates claim, regardless of whether the respondent received a separate
rate in the past. See Manganese Metal From the People's Republic of
China, Final Results and Partial Rescission of Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review, 63 FR 12441 (March 13, 1998).
In this review only QVD submitted complete responses to the
separate rates section of the Department's NME questionnaire. The
evidence submitted by QVD includes government laws and regulations on
corporate ownership, business licenses, and narrative information
regarding its company's operations and selection of management. The
evidence provided by QVD supports a finding of a de jure absence of
governmental control over its export activities because: (1) There are
no controls on exports of subject merchandise, such as quotas applied
to, or licenses required for, exports of the subject merchandise to the
United States; and (2) the subject merchandise does not appear on any
government list regarding export provisions or export licensing.
Absence of De Facto Control
The absence of de facto governmental control over exports is based
on whether the Respondent: (1) Sets its own export prices independent
of the government and other exporters; (2) retains the proceeds from
its export sales and makes independent decisions regarding the
disposition of profits or financing of losses; (3) has the authority to
negotiate and sign contracts and other agreements; and (4) has autonomy
from the government regarding the selection of management. See Silicon
Carbide, 59 FR at 22587; Sparklers, 56 FR at 20589; see also Notice of
Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Furfuryl Alcohol
from the People's Republic of China, 60 FR 22544, 22545 (May 8, 1995).
In its questionnaire responses, QVD submitted evidence indicating
an absence of de facto governmental control over its export activities.
Specifically, this evidence indicates that: (1) The company sets its
own export prices independent of the government and without the
approval of a government authority; (2) the company retains the
proceeds from its sales and makes independent decisions regarding the
disposition of profits or financing of losses; (3) the company has a
general manager, branch manager or division manager with the authority
to negotiate and bind the company in an agreement; (4) the general
manager is selected by the board of directors or company employees, and
the general manager appoints the deputy managers and the manager of
each department; and (5) foreign currency does not need to be sold to
the government. Therefore, the Department has preliminarily found that
QVD has established primae facie that it qualifies for a separate rate
under the criteria established by Silicon Carbide and Sparklers.
[[Page 53394]]
As discussed below, the Department is not granting the other three
mandatory respondents, Cataco, Cafatex, and Mekonimex, and the three
separate rate respondents, Afiex, Phan Quan, and Navico, a separate
rate because these respondents withdrew from participating in this
review. As a result, we cannot verify the separate rate information
that Afiex, Cataco, and Phan Quan submitted in their respective
questionnaire responses. Moreover, Afiex, Cataco, and Phan Quan, each
failed to respond to the supplemental questionnaire issued by the
Department that requested clarification on their respective submitted
separate rate information. With respect to Cafatex, Mekonimex, and
Navico, we did not receive separate rate information for consideration
in these preliminary results.
Adverse Facts Available
Section 776(a)(2) of the Act, provides that, if an interested
party: (A) withholds information that has been requested by the
Department; (B) fails to provide such information in a timely manner or
in the form or manner requested, subject to sections 782(c)(1) and (e)
of the Act; (C) significantly impedes a proceeding under the
antidumping statute; or (D) provides such information but the
information cannot be verified, the Department shall, subject to
subsection 782(d) of the Act, use facts otherwise available in reaching
the applicable determination.
Furthermore, section 776(b) of the Act states that ``if the
administrating authority finds that an interested party has failed to
cooperate by not acting to the best of its ability to comply with a
request for information from the administering authority or the
Commission, the administering authority or the Commission (as the case
may be), in reaching the applicable determination under this title, may
use an inference that is adverse to the interests of that party in
selecting from among the facts otherwise available.'' See also
Statement of Administrative Action (``SAA'') accompanying the Uruguay
Round Agreements Act (``URAA''), H.R. Rep. No. 103-316 at 870 (1994).
In the instant review, three of the mandatory respondents, (i.e.,
Cataco, Cafatex, and Mekonimex), the three separate rate respondents,
(i.e., Navico, Afiex and Phan Quan), and four other companies under
review, (i.e., Antesco, Anhaco, Binh Dinh, and Vinh Long),
significantly impeded our ability to complete this administrative
review pursuant to section 751 of the Act, and one mandatory
respondent, Cataco, significantly impeded our ability to impose the
correct antidumping duties, as mandated by section 731 of the Act. As
discussed below, we preliminarily find that each company's failure to
cooperate with the Department to the best of their ability in
responding to the Department's request for information warrant the use
of adverse facts available (``AFA'') in determining dumping margins for
their sales of merchandise subject to this Order.
Mekonimex and Cafatex
As discussed in the ``Case History'' above, on January 17, 2006,
the Department issued questionnaires to Mekonimex and Cafatex. The
deadlines for Mekonimex and Cafatex to file a response to Section A of
the questionnaire were February 7, 2006, and February 14, 2006,
respectively. The Department did not receive a questionnaire response
from either company. Instead, Mekonimex submitted two letters on
February 15, 2006, stating that it was not going to participate and was
withdrawing from the review. Cafatex faxed a letter, in response to the
Department's February 16, 2006, letter of Cafatex's non-response, on
February 21, 2006, stating that it was not going to participate in the
administrative review. Therefore, we find that facts available are
warranted for both Mekonimex and Cafatex in accordance with sections
776(a)(2)(A), (B) and (C) of the Act.
By each company stating that they would no longer participate, both
Mekonimex and Cafatex explicitly impeded this proceeding. Because both
Mekonimex and Cafatex withdrew from the current administrative review
with critical data potentially relevant to separate rates still
outstanding, the Department was prevented from conducting a thorough
separate rates analysis or from verifying either Mekonimex's or
Cafatex's information. Because both Cafatex and Mekonimex did not
respond to the Department's NME questionnaire, the Department has no
information on the record with which to calculate an antidumping margin
or determine if either is eligible for a separate rate in this
proceeding. Therefore, we find that both Mekonimex and Cafatex have not
demonstrated that each is entitled to a separate rate and thus, each is
deemed to be included in the Vietnam-wide entity. By withdrawing from
this administrative review over a month after the Department's
established deadline, which was January 6, 2006, rather than submitting
a response to the Department's NME questionnaires, both Mekonimex and
Cafatex have failed to cooperate to the best of their ability in this
proceeding. Accordingly, since both Mekonimex and Cafatex significantly
impeded the proceeding and failed to cooperate to the best of their
ability, the application of AFA is appropriate, pursuant to section
776(b) of the Act.
Cataco
During the first administrative review, the Department found Cataco
had entered into an reimbursement agreement with Customer B.\8\ See
Memorandum from Julia Hancock, Case Analyst, to Alex Villanueva,
Program Manager, Import Administration, Subject: 2\nd\ Administrative
Review of Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam: Preliminary Results Analysis Memo for Can Tho Agricultural and
Animal Products Import Export Company (``Cataco''), (August 31, 2006)
(``Cataco Analysis Memo''); 1\st\ Supplemental Section C Questionnaire
to Cataco, (March 20, 2006) at Attachment 2 (Memorandum to the File,
from Alex Villanueva, Program Manager, NME Office 9, RE: Certain Frozen
Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam: Verification
Report Change, (March 13, 2006)). Specifically, the Department noted
that these reimbursement ``agreements stated that Cataco would
reimburse any antidumping duties {on basa and tra{time} exceeding
X,''\9\ and that these reimbursement ``agreements did not specify an
expiration date.'' See 1\st\ Supplemental Section C Questionnaire to
Cataco, at Attachment 2. A day after the Department made this
discovery, Cataco withdrew from verification. Accordingly, Cataco
received AFA in the final results of the first administrative review
because of its termination of verification and as part of the adverse
inference, the Department determined that ``the reimbursement
verification findings should be applied to Cataco for cash deposit and
assessment purposes.'' See Notice of Final Results of the First
Administrative Review: Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam, 71 FR 14170 (March 21, 2006) and accompanying
Issues and Decisions Memorandum at Comments 1 and 2 (``1\st\ AR FFF
Final'').
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\8\ Because this information is business proprietary, please see
Cataco Analysis Memo for further information on Customer B.
\9\ Because this information is business proprietary, please see
Cataco Analysis Memo.
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In this administrative review, Cataco admitted from the onset that
it sold subject merchandise under other commercial names, including
``frozen grouper'' and ``frozen seafood.'' See Cataco's Quantity and
Value
[[Page 53395]]
Questionnaire Response, (September 30, 2005) at 1-2; Cataco's Section A
Questionnaire Response, (February 10, 2006) at Exhibit A-1. However, on
June 1, 2006, the Department placed on the record entry packages from
U.S. Customs Border and Protection (CBP) of all entries, classified as
HTS 304206033, 304206043, 304206057, 304206070, 304206096, that were
manufactured by Cataco and entered into the United States during the
POR. A review of the entry packages showed a discrepancy between
Cataco's reported quantity and value (``Q&V'') of sales of subject
merchandise under other commercial names, ``frozen grouper'' and
``frozen seafood,'' and the Q&V of its CBP entries of ``frozen
grouper'' to Customer B. See Cataco's Section A Questionnaire Response
at Exhibit A-1; Cataco's 2\nd\ Supplemental Section A and C
Questionnaire, (June 14, 2006) at 12-13 (``Cataco's 2\nd\
Questionnaire''). Moreover, the Department noted that CBP issued a
Notice of Request for Information and a Notice of Action to Cataco's
Customer B that certain entries needed to be reclassified as subject
merchandise. See Cataco's 2\nd\ Questionnaire, at 13; Memorandum to the
File, from Julia Hancock, Case Analyst, Subject: 2\nd\ Administrative
Review of Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam (``Vietnam''): Customs Data for Can Tho Agricultural and Animal
Products Import Export Company, (June 1, 2006). Based on the apparent
discrepancies with Cataco's reported Q&V of sales of subject
merchandise under other commercial names, and other issues, including
Cataco's affiliate and reimbursement of antidumping duties, the
Department issued a supplemental questionnaire to Cataco on June 14,
2006, which was due on July 5, 2006.
On July 3, 2006, Cataco submitted a letter to the Department that
it would not be submitting a response to Cataco's 2\nd\ Questionnaire.
In the letter, Cataco also stated that it was ``withdrawing from the
current administrative review for all issues except that of
reimbursement of antidumping duties.'' See Cataco's Letter to the
Department, RE: June 14, 2006, Supplemental Questionnaire, (July 3,
2006) at 1-2. However, on July 19, 2006, the Department issued a letter
to Cataco stating that Cataco could not partially withdraw from this
administrative review. By granting Cataco's partial withdrawal, the
Department would have allowed Cataco to ``control the results of the
administrative review by {only{time} granting partial information'' on
reimbursement. See Krupp Stahl A.G., et. al vs. United States, 822 F.
Supp 789, 792 (CIT 1993). Accordingly, the Department granted Cataco a
final opportunity to submit a full response to Cataco's 2\nd\
Questionnaire by July 26, 2006.
On July 26, 2006, Cataco submitted a letter to the Department
stating that it had never entered into a ``reimbursement agreement''
with its U.S. customer, Valley Fresh, and that it would not be
submitting a response to the entirety of Cataco's 2\nd\ Questionnaire.
Additionally, Cataco submitted a June 28, 2006, letter from its
customer, Valley Fresh. However, the Department rejected Cataco's July
26, 2006, letter as containing untimely, new information, pursuant to
section 351.301(b)(2) of the Department's regulations, because Valley
Fresh's letter had previously been rejected as new information. See
Letter from the Department to Matthew McConkey, (August 1, 2006) at 1-
2. Specifically, the deadline for submitting factual information was
June 1, 2006, and as such, Valley Fresh's letter was received twenty-
seven days after the deadline.
Instead of resubmitting its letter without the letter from Valley
Fresh, Cataco submitted a letter on August 3, 2006, that contained this
submission. In its August 3, 2006, letter, Cataco stated that it was
including the letter from Valley Fresh because it was ``directly
relevant to the {reimbursement{time} questions raised'' in the
Department's June 14, 2006, supplemental questionnaire. See Letter from
Alex Villanueva, Program Manager, Import Administration, to Matthew
McConkey, (August 8, 2006) at 2. After review of Cataco's letter, the
Department issued a letter to Cataco requesting that it resubmit its
August 3, 2006, letter without the attached submission from Valley
Fresh. Specifically, the Department noted the reimbursement questions
from Cataco's 2\nd\ Questionnaire, requested that Cataco provide
information on its commercial relationships with specific importers,
not Valley Fresh. Accordingly, the Department continued to find that
the letter from Valley Fresh was new information and requested that
Cataco resubmit its August 3, 2006, letter without the letter from
Valley Fresh by August 11, 2006. The Department did not receive a
response from Cataco on August 11, 2006.
Based upon Cataco's refusal to submit a full response to Cataco's
2\nd\ Questionnaire, the Department finds that Cataco failed to provide
the information in a timely manner and in the form requested and
significantly impeded this proceeding, pursuant to sections
776(a)(2)(B) and 776(a)(2)(C) of the Act. Specifically, the Department
twice granted Cataco the opportunity to submit a full response to
Cataco's 2nd Questionnaire. Cataco decided not to: (1) submit a
response to Cataco's 2\nd\ Questionnaire, but rather attempt to
partially withdraw from this review except with respect to
reimbursement; and (2) respond to the entirety of Cataco's 2\nd\
Questionnaire except regarding those questions on reimbursement.
Additionally, the Department notes that statements submitted by Cataco
on reimbursement were incomplete because Cataco did not submit
information requested on the specific importers, including Cataco's
Customer B. See Cataco's 2\nd\ Questionnaire, at 22-23. Accordingly,
the Department finds that Cataco failed to provide a full response to
Cataco's 2\nd\ Questionnaire in a timely manner. Moreover, the
Department finds that Cataco has significantly impeded this proceeding
by picking and choosing the questions that it would respond to from
Cataco's 2\nd\ Questionnaire. Specifically, antidumping law ``does not
permit a party to pick and choose information it wishes to present'' to
the Department. See Brother Industries, Ltd. vs. United States, 771 F.
Supp. 374, 383 (CIT 1991). Furthermore, the questions that Cataco
refused to answer, specifically questions regarding reimbursement from
Customer B and the discrepancies in Cataco's reported sales of ``frozen
grouper'' and ``frozen seafood,'' needed to be answered in order for
the Department to calculate a margin for Cataco