Certain Preserved Mushrooms From the People's Republic of China; Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 64930-64938 [E6-18662]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 214 / Monday, November 6, 2006 / Notices
Any interested party may request a
hearing within 30 days of publication of
this notice in accordance with 19 CFR
351.310(c). Interested parties may
submit case briefs no later than 30 days
after the date of publication of this
notice, in accordance with 19 CFR
351.309(c)(1)(i). Rebuttal briefs, which
must be limited to issues raised in the
case briefs, may be filed no later than 5
days after the case briefs, in accordance
with 19 CFR 351.309(d)(1). Any hearing,
if requested, will be held two days after
rebuttal briefs are due, in accordance
with 19 CFR 351.310(d)(1). The
Department will issue a notice of final
results of this reconsideration of the
sunset review, which will include the
results of its analysis of issues raised in
any such briefs, no later than March 9,
2007.
This reconsideration of sunset review
and notice are in accordance with
sections 751(c), 752, and 777(i)(1) of the
Act.
Dated: October 30, 2006.
David M. Spooner,
Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration.
[FR Doc. E6–18670 Filed 11–3–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[A–570–851]
Certain Preserved Mushrooms From
the People’s Republic of China;
Preliminary Results of Antidumping
Duty Administrative Review
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce
(‘‘the Department’’) has preliminarily
determined that sales by the
respondents in this review, covering the
period February 1, 2005, through
January 31, 2006, have been made at
prices less than normal value (‘‘NV’’). If
these preliminary results are adopted in
the final results of this review, we will
instruct U.S. Customs and Border
Protection (‘‘CBP’’) to assess
antidumping duties on all appropriate
entries. The Department invites
interested parties to comment on these
preliminary results.
DATES: Effective Date: September 12,
2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brian Smith or Terre Keaton, AD/CVD
Operations, Office 2, Import
Administration, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of
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AGENCY:
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Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20230;
telephone (202) 482–1766 and (202)
482–1280, respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On February 19, 1999, the Department
published in the Federal Register an
amended final determination and
antidumping duty order on certain
preserved mushrooms from the PRC (64
FR 8308).
On February 1, 2006, the Department
published in the Federal Register a
notice of ‘‘Opportunity to Request
Administrative Review’’ of the
antidumping duty order on certain
preserved mushrooms from the People’s
Republic of China (‘‘PRC’’) covering the
period February 1, 2005, through
January 31, 2006. See Antidumping or
Countervailing Duty Order, Finding, or
Suspended Investigation; Opportunity
to Request Administrative Review, 71
FR 5239 (February 1, 2006).
On February 28, 2006, in accordance
with 19 CFR 351.213(b), the petitioner 1
requested a review of 13 companies
(including Guangxi Eastwing and
Primera Harvest which submitted their
own requests for review).2 In addition,
Raoping CXF Foods (‘‘Raoping CXF’’)
(i.e., Guangxi Eastwing’s supplier)
requested its own review.
On April 5, 2006, the Department
published in the Federal Register a
notice of initiation of this administrative
review covering the companies listed in
the requests received from the interested
parties. See Notice of Initiation of
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Administrative Reviews and Deferral of
Administrative Reviews, 71 FR 17077
(April 5, 2006) (‘‘Initiation Notice’’).
Prior to the notice of initiation, the
Department issued quantity and value
(‘‘Q&V’’) questionnaires to the firms for
1 The petitioner is the Coalition for Fair Preserved
Mushroom Trade which includes the following
domestic companies: L.K. Bowman, Inc., Monterey
Mushrooms, Inc., Mushroom Canning Company,
and Sunny Dell Foods, Inc.
2 These companies are: (1) Blue Field (Sichuan)
Food Industrial Co., Ltd. (‘‘Blue Field’’);
(2) China National Cereals, Oils & Foodstuffs
Import & Export Corporation (‘‘China National’’); (3)
China Processed Food Import & Export Company
(‘‘COFCO’’); (4) COFCO (Zhangzhou) Food
Industrial Co., Ltd. (‘‘COFCO Zhangzhou’’); (5)
Gerber Food (Yunnan) Co., Ltd. (‘‘Gerber’’); (6)
Green Fresh Foods (Zhangzhou) Co., Ltd. (‘‘Green
Fresh’’); (7) Guangxi Hengxian Pro-Light Foods, Inc.
(‘‘Guangxi Hengxian’’); (8) Guangxi Eastwing
Trading Co., Ltd. (‘‘Guangxi Eastwing’’); (9) Guangxi
Yulin Oriental Food Co., Ltd. (‘‘Guangxi Yulin’’);
(10) Primera Harvest (Xiangfan) Co., Ltd. (‘‘Primera
Harvest’’); (11) Raoping Yucun Canned Foods
Factory (‘‘Raoping Yucun’’); (12) Shandong Jiufa
Edible Fungus Co., Ltd. (‘‘Jiufa’’); and (13) Xiamen
Jiahua Import & Export Trading Co., Ltd. (‘‘Xiamen
Jiahua’’).
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which a review had been requested.3
This questionnaire requested the
quantity and value for the identified
companies that produced and/or
exported certain preserved mushrooms
from the PRC.4
After the notice of initiation, the
Department again requested Q&V
information and provided additional
opportunity for all companies covered
by the review to respond to this request.
In response, four companies responded
that they exported subject merchandise
to the United States during the POR: (1)
COFCO; (2) Guangxi Hengxian; (3)
Primera Harvest; and (4) Guangxi
Eastwing. The following five companies
filed no-shipment claims: (1) Blue Field;
(2) Gerber; (3) Jiufa; (4) Raoping CXF; 5
and (5) Raoping Yucun. The two
remaining companies, Green Fresh and
Guangxi Yulin, either did not submit a
properly filed Q&V response or did not
respond.6
Because it was not practicable for the
Department to individually examine all
of the companies covered by the review,
the Department limited its examination
for these preliminary results to the
largest producers/exporters that could
reasonably be examined, accounting for
the greatest possible export volume,
3 In two prior administrative reviews of this
antidumping duty order, the Department collapsed
COFCO with COFCO Zhangzhou, Xiamen Jiahua,
Fujian Zishan Group, Co., Ltd. (‘‘Fujian Zishan’’),
and Fujian Yu Xing Fruits & Vegetable Foodstuff
Co., Ltd. (‘‘Yu Xing’’). See Certain Preserved
Mushrooms from the People’s Republic of China:
Final Results of Sixth Antidumping Duty New
Shipper Review and Final Results and Partial
Rescission of the Fourth Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review, 69 FR 54635, 54637
(September 9, 2004) and accompanying Issues and
Decision Memorandum at Comment 1 (‘‘PRC
Mushrooms 4th AR’’); and Certain Preserved
Mushrooms from the People’s Republic of China:
Preliminary Results and Partial Rescission of Fifth
Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 70 FR
10965, 10971 (March 7, 2005) as affirmed in Certain
Preserved Mushrooms from the People’s Republic of
China: Final Results and Final Rescission, in Part,
of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 70 FR
54361 (September 14, 2005) (‘‘PRC Mushrooms 5th
AR’’). During the POR, COFCO was the only one of
the COFCO affiliated companies to export subject
merchandise to the United States.
4 The Department inadvertently did not issue a
Q&V questionnaire to Raoping CXF prior to
initiating this review.
5 Raoping CXF subsequently withdrew its review
request on April 26, 2006.
6 With respect to Green Fresh, we issued the
initial Q&V questionnaire on March 9, 2006, and
follow-up letters on April 20 and 25, and May 4,
2006, to this company informing it that its Q&V
response was not properly filed in accordance with
the Department’s regulations, but Green Fresh failed
to correct its filing deficiencies (see Memorandum
to the File dated May 23, 2006, for further
discussion on this matter). With respect to Guangxi
Yulin, we issued the initial Q&V questionnaire on
March 9, 2006, and re-issued the Q&V questionnaire
to it on April 6, and May 5, 2006, but received no
response (see Memorandum to the File dated May
23, 2006, for further discussion on this matter).
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pursuant to section 777A(c)(2)(B) of the
Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (‘‘the
Act’’). Therefore, the Department
selected COFCO and Guangxi Hengxian
as the mandatory respondents in this
review and designated Guangxi
Eastwing and Primera Harvest as
Section A Respondents. See
Memorandum From Irene Darzenta
Tzafolias, Acting Office Director, to
Stephen Claeys, Deputy Assistant
Secretary, entitled 2005–2006
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review of Certain Preserved Mushrooms
from the People’s Republic of China:
Selection of Respondents, dated June 8,
2006. Accordingly, on June 9, 2006, we
issued the full antidumping duty
questionnaire to COFCO and Guangxi
Hengxian and only the section A
questionnaire to Guangxi Eastwing and
Primera Harvest.
On May 10, 2006, the Department
requested documentation from CBP for
specific entries of subject merchandise
from the PRC into the United States
during the POR in order to examine
Gerber’s no-shipment claim. On June 16,
2006, the Department received the
requested entry documentation from
CBP. As a result of reviewing the CBP
entry documentation, the Department
issued Gerber a letter on June 21, 2006,
asking questions regarding its claim that
it made no shipments of subject
merchandise to the United States during
the POR. Specifically, the Department
asked Gerber if it had any affiliates in
Hong Kong through which it shipped
subject merchandise to the United
States during the POR. In response to
the Department’s June 21, 2006, letter,
Gerber stated in its July 11, 2006,
submission that it had no affiliates in
Hong Kong through which subject
merchandise was exported to or
imported into the United States during
the POR. As a result of conducting
further independent research on this
matter, the Department issued Gerber a
second letter on July 31, 2006, which
contained documentation indicating
that Gerber indeed had an undisclosed
affiliate registered in Hong Kong during
the POR. Combined with the fact that
this same Hong Kong affiliate also made
shipments of subject merchandise to the
United States during the POR, the
Department’s July 31, 2006, letter asked
Gerber to explain why it did not
mention this Hong Kong affiliate and
why it did not disclose that its affiliate
was involved in sales of subject
merchandise to the United States during
the POR. Gerber did not submit a
response to the Department’s July 31,
2006, letter by the specified deadline
(i.e., August 14, 2006). Therefore, the
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Department issued Gerber another letter
on August 15, 2006, which stated that
the Department intended to resort to
adverse facts available as a result of
Gerber’s failure to respond to the
Department’s letter of July 31, 2006.
Gerber did not respond to the
Department’s August 15 letter (see
September 6, 2006, Memorandum to the
File, entitled Efforts to Provide Gerber
Food (Yunnan) Co., Ltd. With the
Department’s July 31, 2006,
Supplemental Questionnaire).
On August 17, 2006, in accordance
with section 751(a)(3)(A) of the Act, the
Department rescinded this review with
respect to Blue Field, Raoping CXF,
Raoping Yucun, and Shandong Jiufa
because these companies did not have
shipments of subject merchandise to the
United States during the POR, or
withdrew their request for a review in
a timely manner. See Certain Preserved
Mushrooms from the People’s Republic
of China: Notice of Partial Rescission of
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review, 71 FR 48911 (August 22, 2006).
The Department is conducting this
administrative review in accordance
with section 751 of the Act.
(‘‘supplemental section A response’’).
On August 10, 2006, the Department
issued COFCO a sections C and D
supplemental questionnaire and it
submitted its response on September 7,
2006. On September 14, 2006, the
Department issued COFCO another
sections C and D supplemental
questionnaire and COFCO submitted its
response on September 25, 2006.
Mandatory Respondents
On June 9, 2006, the Department
issued the full antidumping duty
questionnaire to COFCO and Guangxi
Hengxian. On July 21, 2006, COFCO
submitted its section A questionnaire
response (‘‘section A response’’). On
August 2, 2006, COFCO submitted its
sections C and D questionnaire response
(‘‘sections C and D response’’). Guangxi
Hengxian did not submit a
questionnaire response.7 The
Department issued Guangxi Hengxian a
letter on August 7, 2006, which stated
that the Department intends to resort to
adverse facts available as a result of
Guangxi Hengxian’s failure to respond
to the Department’s June 8, 2006,
antidumping duty questionnaire.
Guangxi Hengxian did not respond to
the Department’s August 7 letter. See
September 6, 2006, Memorandum to the
File, entitled Efforts to Provide Guangxi
Hengxian Pro-Light Foods, Inc. With the
Department’s June 9, 2006,
Antidumping Duty Questionnaire.
On August 2, 2006, the Department
issued COFCO a section A supplemental
questionnaire and it submitted its
response on August 30, 2006
Surrogate Country and Factors
On May 4, 2006, the Department
identified five countries, including
India, that are comparable to the PRC in
terms of overall economic development
to use in this review. On July 13, 2006,
the Department solicited comments on
surrogate country selection from
interested parties. The Department
received no comments from the
interested parties. See the ‘‘Normal
Value’’ section below for further detail.
On September 15, 2006,8 the
Department received surrogate-value
information from COFCO. For a detailed
discussion of the Department’s selection
of surrogate values and financial ratios,
see ‘‘Factor Valuation’’ section below.
See also Memorandum from the Team
to the File, Re: 2005–2006 Antidumping
Duty Administrative Review of Certain
Preserved Mushrooms from the People’s
Republic of China—Factors Valuation
For the Preliminary Results (‘‘Factor
Valuation Memo’’), dated October 31,
2006, which is on file in CRU.
7 The original deadline for the mandatory
respondents to submit their response to all sections
of the Department’s June 8, 2006, antidumping duty
questionnaire was July 17, 2006. However, the
Department subsequently extended the section A
response deadline until July 21, 2006, and the
sections C and D response deadline until August 2,
2006.
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Section A Respondents
On June 8, 2006, the Department
issued the section A questionnaire to
Guangxi Eastwing and Primera Harvest.
Guangxi Eastwing and Primera Harvest
submitted their section A questionnaire
responses on June 13, and July 7, 2006,
respectively.
On July 20 and 24, 2006, the
Department issued Primera Harvest and
Guangxi Eastwing a section A
supplemental questionnaire,
respectively. Both companies submitted
their supplemental responses on August
3, 2006. On August 23, 2006, the
Department issued Primera Harvest a
second section A supplemental
questionnaire, to which it responded on
September 7, 2006.
Scope of the Order
The products covered by this order
are certain preserved mushrooms,
whether imported whole, sliced, diced,
or as stems and pieces. The certain
preserved mushrooms covered under
this order are the species Agaricus
8 September 5, 2006, was the deadline for
submitting surrogate value information for
consideration in the preliminary results as specified
in the Department’s July 13, 2006, letter.
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bisporus and Agaricus bitorquis.
‘‘Certain Preserved Mushrooms’’ refer to
mushrooms that have been prepared or
preserved by cleaning, blanching, and
sometimes slicing or cutting. These
mushrooms are then packed and heated
in containers including, but not limited
to, cans or glass jars in a suitable liquid
medium, including, but not limited to,
water, brine, butter or butter sauce.
Certain preserved mushrooms may be
imported whole, sliced, diced, or as
stems and pieces. Included within the
scope of this order are ‘‘brined’’
mushrooms, which are presalted and
packed in a heavy salt solution to
provisionally preserve them for further
processing.
Excluded from the scope of this order
are the following: (1) All other species
of mushroom, including straw
mushrooms; (2) all fresh and chilled
mushrooms, including ‘‘refrigerated’’ or
‘‘quick blanched mushrooms’’; (3) dried
mushrooms; (4) frozen mushrooms; and
(5) ‘‘marinated,’’ ‘‘acidified,’’ or
‘‘pickled’’ mushrooms, which are
prepared or preserved by means of
vinegar or acetic acid, but may contain
oil or other additives.9
The merchandise subject to this order
is classifiable under subheadings:
2003.10.0127, 2003.10.0131,
2003.10.0137, 2003.10.0143,
2003.10.0147, 2003.10.0153 and
0711.51.0000 of the Harmonized Tariff
Schedule of the United States
(‘‘HTSUS’’). Although the HTSUS
subheadings are provided for
convenience and customs purposes, the
written description of the scope of this
order is dispositive.
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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
9 On June 19, 2000, the Department affirmed that
‘‘marinated,’’ ‘‘acidified,’’ or ‘‘pickled’’ mushrooms
containing less than 0.5 percent acetic acid are
within the scope of the antidumping duty order.
See ‘‘Recommendation Memorandum-Final Ruling
of Request by Tak Fat, et al. for Exclusion of Certain
Marinated, Acidified Mushrooms from the Scope of
the Antidumping Duty Order on Certain Preserved
Mushrooms from the People’s Republic of China,’’
dated June 19, 2000. On February 9, 2005, this
decision was upheld by the United States Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit. See Tak Fat v.
United States, 39C F.3d 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
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Act, use facts otherwise available in
reaching the applicable determination.
Furthermore, section 776(b) of the Act
states 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, ‘‘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).
Green Fresh, Guangxi Hengxian,
Guangxi Yulin, and Gerber
(A) Facts Available
As stated above, Green Fresh, Guangxi
Hengxian, Guangxi Yulin, and Gerber
each withheld information requested by
the Department by not submitting a
response to the Department’s
questionnaires.
Green Fresh and Guangxi Yulin failed
to properly respond to the Department’s
requests for Q&V information. The
information requested in the
Department’s Q&V questionnaire was
critical and necessary for selecting
mandatory respondents in the review.
Specifically, Green Fresh failed to
submit a properly filed Q&V response
despite being provided numerous
opportunities to do so. Guangxi Yulin
did not attempt to file a Q&V response
at all.
Guangxi Hengxian did not submit a
response to the Department’s
antidumping duty questionnaire.
Because Guangxi Hengxian was selected
as a mandatory respondent for this
review, the information requested in the
Department’s antidumping duty
questionnaire is critical and necessary
to calculate Guangxi Hengxian’s margin.
As stated above in the ‘‘Background’’
section, Gerber did not respond to the
Department’s supplemental
questionnaire which further attempted
to examine Gerber’s claim that it made
no shipments of subject merchandise to
the United States during the POR.
Specifically, based on documentation
obtained from CBP, the Department had
reason to believe that Gerber exported
subject merchandise to the United
States through one of its affiliates
located in Hong Kong. As a result of this
discovery, the Department provided
Gerber with an opportunity to explain
whether Gerber used its previously
undisclosed Hong Kong-based affiliate
to make sales of subject merchandise to
the U.S. market during the POR. Gerber
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failed to respond to the Department’s
second request for information. Gerber
withheld requested information from
the Department and impeded this
proceeding because of its failure to
participate in the instant review.
Therefore, the Department has no
choice but to rely on the facts otherwise
available in order to determine a margin
for Green Fresh, Guangxi Hengxian,
Guangxi Yulin, and Gerber pursuant to
section 776(a)(2) of the Act because they
failed to provide information requested
by the Department. See Stainless Steel
Sheet and Strip in Coils From Japan:
Preliminary Results of Antidumping
Duty Administrative Review, 70 FR
18369 (April 11, 2005), (‘‘because this
company refused to participate in this
administrative review, we find that,
* * * the use of total facts available is
appropriate’’); see Notice of Preliminary
Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value and Affirmative Preliminary
Determination of Critical
Circumstances: Wax and Wax/Resin
Thermal Transfer Ribbons From Japan,
68 FR 71072 (December 22, 2003),
(‘‘Since UC and DNP withheld
information requested by the
Department, the Department has no
choice but to rely on the facts otherwise
available in order to determine a margin
for these parties’’). Because each of the
above-mentioned respondents failed to
respond to the Department’s
questionnaires, the Department could
not determine whether Gerber, Green
Fresh, Guangxi Hengxian, or Guangxi
Yulin is eligible for a separate rate.
Accordingly, we are not granting these
companies a separate rate and are
applying the PRC-wide rate to all four
companies.
(B) Adverse Inference
In applying facts otherwise available,
section 776(b) of the Act states that if 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 Department, the Department,
in reaching the applicable
determination under section 776(b) of
the Act, may use an inference that is
adverse to the interests of that party in
selecting from among the facts
otherwise available. In the instant
proceeding, we find it appropriate to
apply an adverse inference in selecting
from among the facts otherwise
available for Gerber, Green Fresh,
Guangxi Hengxian, and Guangxi Yulin,
which are part of the PRC-wide entity.
By failing to submit a response to the
Department’s questionnaires, all four
above-mentioned companies have failed
to cooperate to the best of their ability
in this proceeding. Accordingly, we find
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that an adverse inference is warranted.
By applying AFA, we ensure that the
companies that fail to cooperate will not
obtain a more favorable result than
those companies that complied fully
with the Department’s requests in this
review.
The PRC Entity
As mentioned, four exporters named
in the notice of initiation did not
respond to the Department’s request for
information. The PRC-wide rate applies
to all entries of subject merchandise
except for entries from PRC exporters
that have their own calculated rate.
Companies that have not demonstrated
their entitlement to a separate rate are
appropriately considered to be part of
the PRC-wide entity. Therefore, we
determine it is necessary to review the
PRC-wide entity because these four PRC
exporters are subject to the instant
proceeding. Pursuant to section
776(a)(1) of the Act, the Department
determines that it must use facts
otherwise available for the PRC-wide
entity because necessary information is
not available on the record of this
proceeding due to the failure of the
PRC-wide entity, including the four PRC
exporters mentioned, to provide
responses to the Department’s requests
for information in this proceeding.
Because the PRC-wide entity did not
respond to requests for information in
the form or manner requested, we find
it necessary, under section 776(a)(2) of
the Act, to use facts otherwise available
as the basis for the preliminary results
of review for the PRC-wide entity. In
addition, pursuant to section 776(b) of
the Act, we find that the PRC-wide
entity failed to cooperate by not acting
to the best of its ability to comply with
a request for information. As noted
above, the PRC-wide entity failed to
respond to the Department’s requests for
information, despite repeated requests
that it do so. Thus, because the PRCwide entity refused to participate fully
in this proceeding, we find it
appropriate to use an inference that is
adverse to the interests of the PRC-wide
entity in selecting from among the facts
otherwise available. By doing so, we
ensure that the companies that are part
of the PRC-wide entity will not obtain
a more favorable result by failing to
cooperate than had they cooperated
fully in this review. An adverse
inference may include reliance on
information derived from the petition,
the final determination in the
investigation, any previous review, or
any other information placed on the
record. See section 776(b) of the Act. It
is the Department’s practice to assign
the highest rate from any segment of the
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proceeding as total AFA when a
respondent fails to cooperate to the best
of its ability. See Honey from the
People’s Republic of China; Final
Results and Final Rescission In Part of
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review, 70 FR 38873 (July 6, 2005).
Specifically, as AFA, we have assigned
to the PRC-entity 198.63 percent, which
is the current PRC-wide rate. See the
‘‘Corroboration’’ section below for a
discussion of the probative value of the
PRC-wide 198.63 percent rate.
Corroboration of AFA Rate for PRCWide Entity, Including Gerber, Green
Fresh, Guangxi Hengxian and Guangxi
Yulin
Section 776(c) of the Act requires that
the Department corroborate, to the
extent practicable, the information it
applies as facts available. To be
considered corroborated, information
must be found to be both reliable and
relevant. We are applying as AFA the
PRC-wide rate, which is the highest rate
from any segment of this administrative
proceeding, and is the highest rate from
the petition in the less-than-fair-value
(‘‘LTFV’’) investigation. See Notice of
Amendment of Final Determination of
Sales at Less Than Fair Value and
Antidumping Duty Order: Certain
Preserved Mushrooms from the People’s
Republic of China, 64 FR 8308, 8310
(February 19, 1999). This AFA rate has
not changed since the original LTFV
determination.
For purposes of corroboration, the
Department will consider whether the
AFA rate is both reliable and relevant.
The AFA rate we are applying for the
current review was found to be reliable
in reviews subsequent to the LTFV
investigation, including the two most
recently completed reviews. See Certain
Preserved Mushrooms from the People’s
Republic of China: Partial Rescission
and Preliminary Results of Sixth
Administrative Review, 71 FR 11183,
11186 (March 6, 2006) and affirmed in
Certain Preserved Mushrooms From the
People’s Republic of China: Final
Results and Final Partial Rescission of
Sixth Administrative Review, 71 FR
40477, 40478 (July 17, 2006) (‘‘PRC
Mushrooms 6th AR’’); and PRC
Mushrooms 5th AR, 70 FR at 10969 (to
corroborate the AFA margin of 198.63
percent, in the 5th review the
Department compared the AFA margin
to calculated margins for certain
respondents and found that 198.63
percent was within the range of margins
for individual sales of identical and/or
similar products). Furthermore, no
information has been presented in the
current review that calls into question
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the reliability of the currently-applied
PRC-wide rate.
With respect to the relevance aspect
of corroboration, the Department will
consider information reasonably at its
disposal to determine whether a margin
continues to have relevance. Where
circumstances indicate that the selected
margin is not appropriate as AFA, the
Department will disregard the margin
and determine an appropriate margin.
For example, in Fresh Cut Flowers from
Mexico: Final Results of Antidumping
Administrative Review, 61 FR 6812
(February 22, 1996), the Department
disregarded the highest margin in that
case as adverse best information
available (the predecessor to ‘‘facts
available’’) because the margin was
based on another company’s
uncharacteristic business expense
resulting in an unusually high margin.
Similarly, the Department does not
apply a margin that has been
discredited. See D&L Supply Co. v.
United States, 113 F.3d 1220, 1221 (Fed.
Cir. 1997) (the Department will not use
a margin that has been judicially
invalidated). The information used in
calculating this margin was based on
sales and production data submitted by
the respondents in the LTFV
investigation, together with the most
appropriate surrogate value information
available to the Department chosen from
submissions by the parties in the LTFV
investigation, as well as gathered by the
Department itself. Furthermore, the
calculation of this margin was subject to
comment from interested parties in the
proceeding. Moreover, as there is no
information on the record of this review
that demonstrates that this rate is not
appropriately used as AFA, we
determine that this rate has relevance.
Based on our analysis as described
above, we find that the margin of 198.63
percent is reliable and has relevance. As
the rate is both reliable and relevant, we
determine that it has probative value.
Accordingly, we determine that the
calculated rate of 198.63 percent, which
is the current PRC-wide rate, is in
accordance with the requirement of
section 776(c) of the Act that secondary
information be corroborated (that it have
probative value). Consequently, we have
assigned this AFA rate to exports of the
subject merchandise from all companies
subject to the PRC-wide rate, including
Gerber, Green Fresh, Guangxi Hengxian,
and Guangxi Yulin.
Affiliation—COFCO
To the extent that section 771(33) of
the Act does not conflict with the
Department’s application of separate
rates and enforcement of the non-market
economy (‘‘NME’’) provision, section
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773(c) of the Act, the Department will
determine that exporters and/or
producers are affiliated if the facts of the
case support such a finding.10 For the
reasons discussed below, we find that
this condition has not prevented us
from examining whether certain
exporters and/or producers are affiliated
with COFCO in this administrative
review.
In prior administrative reviews
involving COFCO, the Department has
found COFCO to be affiliated with Yu
Xing as a result of its direct ownership
and control in Yu Xing and affiliated
with Fujian Zishan through its parent
company, China National, and Xiamen
Jiahua. Moreover, the Department has
also found in prior reviews that COFCO
is affiliated with another preserved
mushroom producer, COFCO
Zhangzhou. See PRC Mushrooms 5th
AR, 70 FR at 10969.
COFCO claims that it is no longer
affiliated with Fujian Zishan because
Xiamen Jiahua sold all of its ownership
shares in Fujian Zishan at the beginning
of this POR (see page A–5 of COFCO’s
section A response). The Department
has examined whether COFCO and the
entities noted above are still affiliated
for purposes of determining whether
they should be collapsed in this review.
For further discussion on this matter,
see Memorandum From James P.
Maeder, Jr., Office Director, to Stephen
Claeys, Deputy Assistant Secretary,
entitled Certain Preserved Mushrooms
from the People’s Republic of China:
Whether To Continue To Collapse
COFCO with Some or All of its Affiliated
Companies, dated October 31, 2006
(‘‘Affiliation/Collapsing Memo’’).
Based on our analysis, we
preliminarily find that during this POR,
COFCO, China National, COFCO
Zhangzhou, Xiamen Jiahua, and Yu
Xing were affiliated through the
common control of COFCO’s parent
company, pursuant to sections
771(33)(F) and (G) of the Act. However,
with respect to Fujian Zishan, we find
that during the POR, Fujian Zishan was
no longer affiliated with the abovementioned companies based on the facts
discussed above. See Affiliation/
Collapsing Memo for further discussion.
Collapsing—COFCO
Pursuant to 19 CFR 351.401(f), the
Department will collapse producers and
treat them as a single entity where (1)
those producers are affiliated, (2) the
producers have production facilities for
producing similar or identical products
that would not require substantial
retooling of either facility in order to
10 See
PRC Mushrooms 5th AR, 70 FR at 10969.
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restructure manufacturing priorities,
and (3) there is a significant potential
for manipulation of price or production.
We also note that the rationale for
collapsing, to prevent manipulation of
price and/or production (see 19 CFR
351.401(f)), applies to both producers
and exporters, if the facts indicate that
they are able to manipulate price or
production as a result of control over
the production and sales activities of
affiliates whose operations are
intertwined.
To the extent that this provision does
not conflict with the Department’s
application of separate rates and
enforcement of the NME provision,
section 773(c) of the Act, the
Department will collapse two or more
affiliated entities in a case involving a
NME country if the facts of the case
warrant such treatment. Furthermore,
we note that the factors listed in 19 CFR
351.401(f)(2) are not exhaustive, and in
the context of a NME investigation or
administrative review, other factors
unique to the relationship of business
entities within the NME may lead the
Department to determine that collapsing
is either warranted or unwarranted,
depending on the facts of the case. See
Hontex Enterprises, Inc. v. United
States, 248 F. Supp. 2d 1323, 1342 (CIT
2003) (noting that the application of
collapsing in the NME context may
differ from the standard factors listed in
the regulation).
In summary, if there is evidence of
significant potential for manipulation
between or among affiliates which
produce and/or export similar or
identical merchandise, whether or not
all such merchandise is exported to the
United States, the Department may find
such evidence sufficient to apply the
collapsing criteria in a NME context in
order to determine whether all or some
of those affiliates should be treated as
one entity (see Certain Hot-Rolled
Carbon Steel Flat Products from the
People’s Republic of China, Preliminary
Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value, 66 FR 22183 (May 3, 2001);
Notice of Final Determination of Sales
at Less Than Fair Value: Certain HotRolled Carbon Steel Flat Products from
the People’s Republic of China, 66 FR
49632 (September 28, 2001) (‘‘Certain
Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products’’);
and Anshan Iron & Steel Co. v. United
States, Slip. Op. 03–83 at 32–33 (CIT
2003) (‘‘Anshan’’)).
We find that the first and second
collapsing criteria are met with respect
to COFCO’s affiliated producers COFCO
Zhangzhou and Yu Xing because these
producers have production facilities for
producing similar or identical products,
such that no retooling at any of the three
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facilities is required in order to
restructure manufacturing priorities. See
factors of production data submitted by
each company in COFCO’s section D
response. We find that the third
collapsing criterion is also met with
respect to COFCO Zhangzhou and Yu
Xing because COFCO and China
National, which wholly owns COFCO,
have significant ownership in and
control over the operations of COFCO
Zhangzhou and Yu Xing. They also have
shared management and intertwined
operations. Therefore, we find that there
is a significant potential for
manipulation of price or production
between these two affiliated producers
of the subject merchandise. We also
note that during the POR COFCO and
Zhangzhou and Yu Xing were legally
merged into a single company. See
Affiliation/Collapsing Memo for further
discussion.
In addition, based on the reasons
mentioned in the Affiliation/Collapsing
Memo and the guidance of 19 CFR
351.401(f), we have preliminarily
collapsed COFCO, China National,
Xiamen Jiahua and COFCO Zhangzhou/
YuXing because there is a significant
potential for manipulation of sales
decisions between these parties that are
exporters of the subject merchandise or
have the ability to export. Xiamen
Jiahua, a preserved mushroom exporter,
is also owned, in part, by China
National which wholly owns COFCO.
Yu Xing, which is treated as a single
entity with the producer COFCO
Zhangzhou, also has export rights and
has directly exported since obtaining
those export rights. Consequently, we
have considered COFCO and the four
affiliates mentioned above as a single
entity for purposes of determining
whether or not the collapsed entity as a
whole is entitled to a separate rate. With
respect to Fujian Zishan, as mentioned
we find this company to be no longer
affiliated with COFCO and it is,
therefore, not part of the collapsed
entity.11 This decision is specific to the
facts presented in this review and is
based on several considerations,
including the structure of the collapsed
entity, the level of control between and
among affiliates, and the level of
participation by each affiliate in the
proceeding. Given the unique
relationships which arise in NMEs
between individual companies and the
government, a separate rate will be
granted to the collapsed entity only if
11 Accordingly, Fujian Zishan is not subject to
this review and the Department has not conducted
a separate rates analysis on this company. Fujian
Zishan, therefore, is not entitled to a separate rate
in this review.
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the facts, taken as a whole, support such
a finding (see ‘‘Separate Rates’’ section
below for further discussion).
Separate-Rates Determination
In proceedings involving NME
countries, the Department begins with a
rebuttable presumption that all
companies within the country are
subject to governmental control and,
thus, should be assessed a single
antidumping duty deposit rate (i.e., a
PRC-wide rate). One respondent in this
review, Primera Harvest, is wholly
owned by a company located outside
the PRC. Therefore, an additional
separate-rates analysis is not necessary
to determine whether Primera Harvest’s
export activities are independent from
government control. (See e.g.,
Polyethylene Retail Carrier Bags from
the People’s Republic of China:
Preliminary Results of Antidumping
Duty Administrative Review, 71 FR
54021 (September 13, 2006), which cites
to Notice of Final Determination of
Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Creatine
Monohydrate from the People’s
Republic of China, 64 FR 71104, 71105
(December 20, 1999) (where the
respondent was wholly owned by
persons located in Hong Kong)).
The other Section A respondent,
Guangxi Eastwing is a limited liability
company, whereas the mandatory
respondent, COFCO, is owned by its
affiliate China National, which is owned
by ‘‘all of the people.’’ COFCO also
owns, in part, two preserved mushroom
producers, COFCO Zhangzhou and Yu
Xing. As discussed above in the
‘‘Collapsing’’ section of this notice, we
have preliminarily considered COFCO,
China National, Yu Xing, COFCO
Zhangzhou, and Xiamen Jiahua a
collapsed entity.
Thus, a separate-rates analysis is
necessary to determine whether the
export activities of Guangxi Eastwing
and COFCO’s collapsed entity are
independent from government control.
To establish whether a respondent is
sufficiently independent from
governmental control of its export
activities so as to be entitled to a
separate rate, the Department analyzes
each entity exporting the subject
merchandise under a test arising from
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) at Comment 1,
and amplified in the Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value: Silicon Carbide from the
People’s Republic of China, 59 FR
22585, 22587 (May 2, 1994) (Silicon
Carbide). In accordance with the
separate-rates criteria, the Department
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assigns separate rates in NME cases only
if the respondent can demonstrate the
absence of both de jure and de facto
governmental control over export
activities.
1. Absence of De Jure Control
Evidence supporting, though not
requiring, a finding of de jure absence
of government control over exporter
activities includes: (1) An absence of
restrictive stipulations associated with
the 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.
The COFCO collapsed entity and
Guangxi Eastwing have placed on the
administrative record the following
documents to demonstrate absence of de
jure control: The 1994 ‘‘Foreign Trade
Law of the People’s Republic of China;’’
the ‘‘Company Law of the PRC,’’
effective as of July 1, 1994; and ‘‘The
Enterprise Legal Person Registration
Administrative Regulations,’’
promulgated on June 13, 1988. In other
cases involving products from the PRC,
respondents have submitted the
following additional documents to
demonstrate absence of de jure control,
and the Department has placed these
additional documents on the record as
well: The ‘‘Law of the People’s Republic
of China on Industrial Enterprises
Owned by the Whole People,’’ adopted
on April 13, 1988 (‘‘the Industrial
Enterprises Law’’); and the 1992
‘‘Regulations for Transformation of
Operational Mechanisms of StateOwned Industrial Enterprises’’
(‘‘Business Operation Provisions’’). (See
October 31, 2006, memorandum to the
file which places the above-referenced
laws on the record of this proceeding
segment.)
As in prior cases, we have analyzed
these laws and have found them to
establish sufficiently an absence of de
jure control of joint ventures and
companies owned by ‘‘all of the people’’
absent proof on the record to the
contrary. See, e.g., Final Determination
of Sales at Less than Fair Value:
Furfuryl Alcohol from the People’s
Republic of China, 60 FR 22544 (May 8,
1995) (‘‘Furfuryl Alcohol’’), and
Preliminary Determination of Sales at
Less Than Fair Value: Certain PartialExtension Steel Drawer Slides with
Rollers from the People’s Republic of
China, 60 FR 29571 (June 5, 1995).
2. Absence of De Facto Control
As stated in previous cases, there is
some evidence that certain enactments
of the PRC central government have not
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64935
been implemented uniformly among
different sectors and/or jurisdictions in
the PRC. See Silicon Carbide, 56 FR at
22587 (May 2, 1994). Therefore, the
Department has determined that an
analysis of de facto control is critical in
determining whether respondents are,
in fact, subject to a degree of
governmental control which would
preclude the Department from assigning
separate rates.
The Department typically considers
the following four factors in evaluating
whether a respondent is subject to de
facto governmental control of its export
functions: (1) Whether the export prices
are set by, or subject to the approval of,
a governmental agency; (2) whether the
respondent has the authority to
negotiate and sign contracts and other
agreements; (3) whether the respondent
has autonomy from the government in
making decisions regarding the
selection of management; and (4)
whether the respondent retains the
proceeds of its export sales and makes
independent decisions regarding the
disposition of profits or financing of
losses. See Silicon Carbide, 59 FR at
22586–87 and Furfuryl Alcohol, 60 FR
22545.
The affiliates in COFCO’s collapsed
entity (where applicable) and Guangxi
Eastwing have asserted the following:
(1) Each establishes its own export
prices; (2) each negotiates contracts
without guidance from any
governmental entities or organizations;
(3) each makes its own personnel
decisions; and (4) each retains the
proceeds of its export sales, uses profits
according to its business needs, and has
the authority to sell its assets and to
obtain loans. Additionally, each
respondent’s questionnaire responses
indicate that each respondent’s pricing
practices during the POR does not
suggest coordination among exporters.
As a result, there is a sufficient basis to
preliminarily determine that each
respondent listed above (including the
COFCO collapsed entity as a whole) has
demonstrated a de facto absence of
government control of its export
functions and is entitled to a separate
rate. Moreover, with respect to the
affiliates included in the COFCO
collapsed entity, we have assigned to all
of them the same antidumping rate in
these preliminary results for the abovementioned reasons.
Fair-Value Comparisons
To determine whether the
respondents’ sales of subject
merchandise were made at less than NV,
we compared the export price (EP) to
NV, as described in the ‘‘Export Price’’
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and ‘‘Normal Value’’ sections of this
notice, below.
Export Price
In accordance with section 772(a) of
the Act, the Department calculated EPs
for sales by COFCO to the United States
because the subject merchandise was
sold directly to unaffiliated customers
in the United States (or to unaffiliated
resellers outside the United States with
knowledge that the merchandise was
destined for the United States) prior to
importation, and constructed exportprice methodology was not otherwise
indicated. In accordance with 19 CFR
351.401(c), we made deductions from
the net sales price for foreign inland
freight and foreign brokerage and
handling. Each of these services was
provided by a NME vendor and, thus, as
explained in the ‘‘Normal Value’’
section below, we based the deductions
for these movement charges on values
from a surrogate country.
For the reasons stated in the ‘‘Normal
Value’’ section below, we selected India
as the primary surrogate country. To
value brokerage and handling, the
Department used an average of the
publicly summarized data from the
following two sources which we have
placed on the record of this review: (1)
Data reported in the U.S. sales listing in
the February 28, 2005, submission from
Essar Steel Ltd. (‘‘Essar Steel’’) in the
antidumping duty administrative review
of Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat
Products from India, A–533–820
(covering December 2003–November
2004), and (2) data reported in Pidilite
Industries’ March 9, 2004, public
version response submitted in the
antidumping duty investigation of
Carbazole Violet Pigment 23 from India,
A–533–838 (covering the period
November 2002–September 2003). We
identify the source used to value foreign
inland freight in the ‘‘Normal Value’’
section of this notice, below. We
adjusted these values, as appropriate, to
account for inflation or deflation
between the effective period and the
POR. We calculated the inflation or
deflation adjustments for these values
using the wholesale price indices
(‘‘WPI’’) for India as published in the
International Financial Statistics Online
Service maintained by the Statistics
Department of the International
Monetary Fund at the Web site https://
www.imfstatistics.org (‘‘IFS’’).
COFCO claims that its affiliated
producer, Yu Xing, did not incur an
expense for the glass jars and caps used
to export subject merchandise to the
United States during the POR because
its U.S. customers provided these items
to Yu Xing free-of-charge. In response to
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the Department’s supplemental
questionnaire, COFCO provided
documentation which sufficiently
supported its claim that (1) its U.S.
customers contracted with PRC glass jar
and cap producers and that these
producers had indeed delivered these
items to Yu Xing in a certain quantity
on a certain date, free-of-charge; and (2)
that these free-of-charge glass jars and
caps were used in the required
quantities for certain subject
merchandise sold to its applicable U.S.
customers during the POR.
Therefore, for the reasons mentioned
above, the Department has adjusted the
U.S. price of certain preserved
mushroom transactions reported by
COFCO by assigning Indian surrogate
values to the glass jar and caps used in
those preserved mushroom transactions
to reflect its U.S. customers’
expenditures for these items. This
preliminary decision on this matter is
consistent with the Department’s
decision in PRC Mushrooms 5th AR, 70
FR at 10973.
Normal Value
For exports from NME countries,
section 773(c)(1) of the Act provides
that the Department shall determine NV
using a factors-of-production (‘‘FOP’’)
methodology if the subject merchandise
is exported from an NME country and
available information does not permit
the calculation of NV using homemarket prices, third-country prices, or
constructed value under section 773(a)
of the Act. Section 351.408 of the
Department’s regulations sets forth the
methodology the Department uses to
calculate the NV of merchandise
exported from NME countries. The
Department has treated the PRC as a
NME country in every proceeding
involving the PRC. Because none of the
parties to this proceeding contested
such treatment, we calculated NV in
accordance with sections 773(c)(3) and
(4) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.408(c).
In accordance with section 773(c)(3)
of the Act, the FOPs which COFCO’s
suppliers used in producing certain
preserved mushrooms include, but are
not limited to, the following inputs: (1)
Hours of labor required, (2) quantities of
raw materials employed, (3) amounts of
energy and other utilities consumed,
and (4) representative capital costs,
including depreciation. In accordance
with section 773(c)(4) of the Act, the
Department valued the FOPs, to the
extent possible, using the costs of the
FOP in one or more market-economy
countries that are at a level of economic
development comparable to that of the
PRC and are significant producers of
comparable merchandise. We
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determined that India is comparable to
the PRC in terms of per capita gross
national product and the national
distribution of labor. Furthermore, India
is a significant producer of comparable
merchandise. See Memorandum from
Ron Lorentzen, Director, Office of
Policy, to Irene Darzenta Tzafolias,
Acting Office Director, Office 2, dated
May 4, 2006, regarding potential
surrogate countries, which is available
in the CRU—Public File.
Section 773(c)(3) of the Act states that
‘‘the factors of production utilized in
producing merchandise include, but are
not limited to, the quantities of raw
materials employed.’’ Therefore, the
Department is required under the Act to
value all inputs (including inputs which
the respondent claims were provided to
it purportedly free of charge). As
explained in the ‘‘Export Price’’ section
above, COFCO sufficiently supported its
claim that each of its applicable U.S.
customers provided its affiliated
supplier, Yu Xing, the glass jars and
caps, which were used for the preserved
mushrooms sold to those same U.S.
customers free-of-charge. For this
reason, we have adjusted, where
applicable, COFCO’s reported U.S.
prices to include the value of glass jars
and caps for certain sales of preserved
mushrooms in these preliminary results.
In addition to making the abovereferenced adjustment to COFCO’s U.S.
prices reported for sales of the subject
merchandise which contained glass jars
and caps, section 773(c)(3) of the Act
requires the Department to value each
factor of production used to produce the
subject merchandise. Accordingly, for
these preliminary results, the
Department has valued the glass jars
and caps usage amounts reported by
COFCO for specific preserved
mushrooms by using an Indian
surrogate value for each input (see
Factor Valuation Memo).
In accordance with section 773(c)(1)
of the Act, for purposes of calculating
NV, we attempted to value the FOPs
using surrogate values that were in
effect during the POR. If we were unable
to obtain surrogate values that were in
effect during the POR, we adjusted the
values, as appropriate, to account for
inflation or deflation between the
effective period and the POR. We
calculated the inflation or deflation
adjustments for all factor values, as
applicable, except labor, using the WPI
for the appropriate surrogate country as
published in the IFS. We valued the
FOPs as follows:
(1) Except for rice straw, cow manure,
and steam coal, we valued all reported
material inputs using Indian import data
from the World Trade Atlas (‘‘WTA’’)
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for February 2005 through January 2006,
in accordance with the Department’s
established practice in this case (see
e.g., PRC Mushrooms 6th AR, 71 FR at
40477, and accompanying Issues and
Decision Memorandum at Comments 1
through 6).
(2) We valued rice straw using data
from the 2005–2006 financial statement
of Flex Foods Limited (‘‘Flex Foods’’),
an Indian producer of the subject
merchandise.
(3) We valued cow manure using data
from the 2004–2005 financial statement
of Agro Dutch Industries Limited (‘‘Agro
Dutch’’), an Indian producer of the
subject merchandise.
(4) We valued electricity using rates
from Energy Prices and Taxes: Second
Quarter 2003 (Energy Prices), published
by the International Energy Agency. We
valued water using data from the
Maharashtra Industrial Development
Corporation. We valued steam coal
using the Teri Energy Data Directory &
Yearbook (2004).
(5) We valued labor, consistent with
19 CFR 351.408(c)(3), using the PRC
regression-based wage rate as reported
on Import Administration’s home page,
Import Library, Expected Wages of
Selected NME Countries, revised in
November 2005, and posted to Import
Administration’s Web site at https://
ia.ita.doc.gov/wages. The source of this
wage rate data is the Yearbook of Labour
Statistics 2003, International Labour
Office, (Geneva: 2003), Chapter 5B:
Wages in Manufacturing (https://
laborsta.ilo.org). The years of the
reported wage rates range from 1998 to
2003. Because this regression-based
wage rate does not separate the labor
rates into different skill levels or types
of labor, we have applied the same wage
rate to all skill levels and types of labor
reported by the respondent.
(6) We derived ratios for factory
overhead, selling, general and
administrative (‘‘SG&A’’) expenses, and
profit using the 2004–2005 and 2005–
2006 financial statements of Agro Dutch
and Flex Foods. From this information,
we were able to calculate factory
overhead as a percentage of direct
materials, labor, and energy expenses,
SG&A expenses as a percentage of the
total cost of manufacturing, and profit as
a percentage of the sum of the total cost
of manufacturing and SG&A expenses.
(7) We used truck rates published at
https://www.infreight.com to value
freight services provided to transport (a)
the finished product to the port; and (b)
direct materials, packing materials, and
coal from the suppliers of the inputs to
the producers.
For further discussion of the surrogate
values we used for these preliminary
results of review, see Memorandum
From Terre Keaton Regarding Factorsof-Production Valuation for Preliminary
Results (October 31, 2006), which is on
file in the CRU—Public File.
Preliminary Results of Review
As a result of our review, we
preliminarily determine that the
following margins exist for the period
February 1, 2005, through January 31,
2006:
Margin
(percent)
Manufacturer/exporter
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China Processed Food Import & Export Company (which includes its affiliates China National Cereals, Oils & Foodstuffs Import
& Export Corporation, COFCO (Zhangzhou) Food Industrial Co., Ltd., Xiamen Jiahua Import & Export Trading Co., Ltd., and
Fujian Yu Xing Fruit & Vegetable Foodstuff Development Co.)12 ..................................................................................................
Primera Harvest Co., Ltd .....................................................................................................................................................................
Guangxi Eastwing Co., Ltd ..................................................................................................................................................................
PRC-Wide Rate (which applies to the following companies that failed to qualify for a separate rate in this review: Gerber, Green
Fresh, Guangxi Hengxian and Guangxi Yulin) ................................................................................................................................
As stated above in the ‘‘Separate-Rates
Determination’’ section of this notice,
Guangxi Eastwing and Primera Harvest
both qualify for a separate rate in this
review. Moreover, as stated above in the
‘‘Background’’ section of this notice, we
limited this review by selecting the
largest exporters. As section A
respondents, Guangxi Eastwing and
Primera Harvest will be assigned the
weighted-average dumping margin
based on the calculated margins of
mandatory respondents which are not
de minimis or based on AFA, in
accordance with Department practice.
See e.g., Notice of Final Determinations
of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Brake
Drums and Brake Rotors from the
People’s Republic of China, 62 FR 9160,
9174 (February 28, 1997). Accordingly,
we have assigned these two respondents
the dumping margin assigned to the
COFCO collapsed entity.
In accordance with 19 CFR
351.224(b), the Department will disclose
12 For this review, we consider COFCO, COFCO
Zhangzhou, Xiamen, Jiahua, and Yu Xing to
constitute a single entity.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:31 Nov 03, 2006
Jkt 211001
to interested parties within five days of
the date of publication of this notice the
calculations it performed for 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 30 days of
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. We will issue a
memorandum identifying the date of a
hearing, if one is requested. Unless the
deadline is extended pursuant to section
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
195.85
195.85
195.85
198.63
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.
Assessment Rates
Upon completion of this
administrative review, the Department
will determine, and CBP shall assess,
antidumping duties on all appropriate
entries. For the COFCO collapsed entity,
we have calculated customer-specific
antidumping duty assessment amounts
for subject merchandise based on the
ratio of the total amount of antidumping
duties calculated for the examined sales
to the total quantity of sales examined.
We calculated these assessment
amounts because there is no information
on the record which identifies entered
values or the importers of record for the
COFCO collapsed entity’s reported U.S.
sales transactions. For Guangxi
Eastwing and Primera Harvest (i.e.,
respondents which are being assigned
the margin calculated for the COFCO
E:\FR\FM\06NON1.SGM
06NON1
64938
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 214 / Monday, November 6, 2006 / Notices
collapsed entity), we will instruct CBP
to assess antidumping duties on these
company’s entries equal to the margin
these companies receive in the final
results, regardless of the importer or
customer.
The Department intends to issue
assessment instructions to CBP 15 days
after the date of publication of the final
results of review. If these preliminary
results are adopted in the final results
of review, we will direct CBP to assess
the resulting assessment amounts,
calculated as described above, on each
of the applicable entries during the
review period.
Cash Deposit Requirements
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
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
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.
We are issuing and publishing the
preliminary results determination in
accordance with sections 751(a)(1) and
777(i)(1) of the Act.
17:31 Nov 03, 2006
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[A–533–813]
Certain Preserved Mushrooms From
India: Preliminary Results of
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: In response to timely requests
by Agro Dutch Industries, Ltd. (Agro
Dutch) and the petitioner,1 the
Department of Commerce (the
Department) is conducting an
administrative review of the
antidumping duty order on certain
preserved mushrooms from India with
respect to Agro Dutch. The period of
review (POR) is February 1, 2005,
through January 31, 2006.
We preliminarily determine that sales
have been made below normal value
(NV). Interested parties are invited to
comment on these preliminary results. If
these preliminary results are adopted in
our final results of administrative
review, we will instruct U.S. Customs
and Border Protection (CBP) to assess
antidumping duties on all appropriate
entries.
DATES: Effective Date: November 6,
2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Terre Keaton Stefanova or David J.
Goldberger AD/CVD Operations, Office
2, Import Administration, International
Trade Administration, U.S. Department
of Commerce, 14th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20230; telephone: (202) 482–1280 or
(202) 482–4136, respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
AGENCY:
The following deposit requirements
will apply to all shipments of certain
preserved mushrooms from the PRC
entered, or withdrawn from warehouse,
for consumption on or after the
publication date of the final results of
this administrative review, as provided
by section 751(a)(1) of the Act: (1) The
cash deposit rates for the reviewed
companies named above will be the
rates for those firms established in the
final results of this administrative
review; (2) for any previously reviewed
or investigated PRC or non-PRC
exporter, not covered in this review,
with a separate rate, the cash deposit
rate will be the company-specific rate
established in the most recent segment
of this proceeding; (3) for all other PRC
exporters, the cash deposit rate will be
the PRC-wide rate established in the
final results of this review; and (4) the
cash deposit rate for any non-PRC
exporter of subject merchandise from
the PRC will be the rate applicable to
the PRC exporter that supplied that
exporter. These deposit requirements,
when imposed, shall remain in effect
until publication of the final results of
the next administrative review.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Dated: October 31, 2006.
David M. Spooner,
Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration.
[FR Doc. E6–18662 Filed 11–3–06; 8:45 am]
Jkt 211001
Background
On February 19, 1999, the Department
published in the Federal Register an
amended final determination and
antidumping duty order on certain
preserved mushrooms from India. See
Notice of Amendment of Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than
1 The petitioner is the Coalition for Fair Preserved
Mushroom Trade which includes the following
domestic companies: L.K. Bowman, Inc., Monterey
Mushrooms, Inc., Mushroom Canning Company,
and Sunny Dell Foods, Inc.
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Fair Value and Antidumping Duty
Administrative Order: Certain Preserved
Mushrooms from India, 64 FR 8311
(February 19, 1999).
In response to timely requests by a
manufacturer/exporter, Agro Dutch, and
the petitioner, the Department
published a notice of initiation of an
administrative review with respect to
the following companies: Agro Dutch
and Himalya International, Ltd.
(Himalya), 71 FR 17077 (April 5, 2006).
The POR is February 1, 2005, through
January 31, 2006.
On April 5, 2006, the Department
issued antidumping duty questionnaires
to the above-mentioned companies. We
received responses to these
questionnaires in May 2006.
On July 10, 2006, the petitioner
withdrew its request for review with
respect to Himalya. Accordingly, we
published a Notice of Partial Rescission
of Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review, 71 FR 42801 (July 28, 2006),
with respect to this company.
We issued supplemental
questionnaires to Agro Dutch in July
and September 2006, and received
responses in July, August and October
2006.
Scope of the Order
The products covered by this order
are certain preserved mushrooms,
whether imported whole, sliced, diced,
or as stems and pieces. The preserved
mushrooms covered under this order are
the species Agaricus bisporus and
Agaricus bitorquis. ‘‘Preserved
mushrooms’’ refer to mushrooms that
have been prepared or preserved by
cleaning, blanching, and sometimes
slicing or cutting. These mushrooms are
then packed and heated in containers
including but not limited to cans or
glass jars in a suitable liquid medium,
including but not limited to water,
brine, butter or butter sauce. Preserved
mushrooms may be imported whole,
sliced, diced, or as stems and pieces.
Included within the scope of this order
are ‘‘brined’’ mushrooms, which are
presalted and packed in a heavy salt
solution to provisionally preserve them
for further processing.
Excluded from the scope of this order
are the following: (1) All other species
of mushroom, including straw
mushrooms; (2) all fresh and chilled
mushrooms, including ‘‘refrigerated’’ or
‘‘quick blanched mushrooms’’; (3) dried
mushrooms; (4) frozen mushrooms; and
(5) ‘‘marinated,’’ ‘‘acidified’’ or
‘‘pickled’’ mushrooms, which are
prepared or preserved by means of
vinegar or acetic acid, but may contain
oil or other additives.
E:\FR\FM\06NON1.SGM
06NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 214 (Monday, November 6, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 64930-64938]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-18662]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[A-570-851]
Certain Preserved Mushrooms From the People's Republic of China;
Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review
AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce (``the Department'') has
preliminarily determined that sales by the respondents in this review,
covering the period February 1, 2005, through January 31, 2006, have
been made at prices less than normal value (``NV''). If these
preliminary results are adopted in the final results of this review, we
will instruct U.S. Customs and Border Protection (``CBP'') to assess
antidumping duties on all appropriate entries. The Department invites
interested parties to comment on these preliminary results.
DATES: Effective Date: September 12, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brian Smith or Terre Keaton, AD/CVD
Operations, Office 2, Import Administration, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20230; telephone (202) 482-
1766 and (202) 482-1280, respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On February 19, 1999, the Department published in the Federal
Register an amended final determination and antidumping duty order on
certain preserved mushrooms from the PRC (64 FR 8308).
On February 1, 2006, the Department published in the Federal
Register a notice of ``Opportunity to Request Administrative Review''
of the antidumping duty order on certain preserved mushrooms from the
People's Republic of China (``PRC'') covering the period February 1,
2005, through January 31, 2006. See Antidumping or Countervailing Duty
Order, Finding, or Suspended Investigation; Opportunity to Request
Administrative Review, 71 FR 5239 (February 1, 2006).
On February 28, 2006, in accordance with 19 CFR 351.213(b), the
petitioner \1\ requested a review of 13 companies (including Guangxi
Eastwing and Primera Harvest which submitted their own requests for
review).\2\ In addition, Raoping CXF Foods (``Raoping CXF'') (i.e.,
Guangxi Eastwing's supplier) requested its own review.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The petitioner is the Coalition for Fair Preserved Mushroom
Trade which includes the following domestic companies: L.K. Bowman,
Inc., Monterey Mushrooms, Inc., Mushroom Canning Company, and Sunny
Dell Foods, Inc.
\2\ These companies are: (1) Blue Field (Sichuan) Food
Industrial Co., Ltd. (``Blue Field'');
(2) China National Cereals, Oils & Foodstuffs Import & Export
Corporation (``China National''); (3) China Processed Food Import &
Export Company (``COFCO''); (4) COFCO (Zhangzhou) Food Industrial
Co., Ltd. (``COFCO Zhangzhou''); (5) Gerber Food (Yunnan) Co., Ltd.
(``Gerber''); (6) Green Fresh Foods (Zhangzhou) Co., Ltd. (``Green
Fresh''); (7) Guangxi Hengxian Pro-Light Foods, Inc. (``Guangxi
Hengxian''); (8) Guangxi Eastwing Trading Co., Ltd. (``Guangxi
Eastwing''); (9) Guangxi Yulin Oriental Food Co., Ltd. (``Guangxi
Yulin''); (10) Primera Harvest (Xiangfan) Co., Ltd. (``Primera
Harvest''); (11) Raoping Yucun Canned Foods Factory (``Raoping
Yucun''); (12) Shandong Jiufa Edible Fungus Co., Ltd. (``Jiufa'');
and (13) Xiamen Jiahua Import & Export Trading Co., Ltd. (``Xiamen
Jiahua'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On April 5, 2006, the Department published in the Federal Register
a notice of initiation of this administrative review covering the
companies listed in the requests received from the interested parties.
See Notice of Initiation of Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Administrative Reviews and Deferral of Administrative Reviews, 71 FR
17077 (April 5, 2006) (``Initiation Notice'').
Prior to the notice of initiation, the Department issued quantity
and value (``Q&V'') questionnaires to the firms for which a review had
been requested.\3\ This questionnaire requested the quantity and value
for the identified companies that produced and/or exported certain
preserved mushrooms from the PRC.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ In two prior administrative reviews of this antidumping duty
order, the Department collapsed COFCO with COFCO Zhangzhou, Xiamen
Jiahua, Fujian Zishan Group, Co., Ltd. (``Fujian Zishan''), and
Fujian Yu Xing Fruits & Vegetable Foodstuff Co., Ltd. (``Yu Xing'').
See Certain Preserved Mushrooms from the People's Republic of China:
Final Results of Sixth Antidumping Duty New Shipper Review and Final
Results and Partial Rescission of the Fourth Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review, 69 FR 54635, 54637 (September 9, 2004) and
accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum at Comment 1 (``PRC
Mushrooms 4th AR''); and Certain Preserved Mushrooms from the
People's Republic of China: Preliminary Results and Partial
Rescission of Fifth Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 70 FR
10965, 10971 (March 7, 2005) as affirmed in Certain Preserved
Mushrooms from the People's Republic of China: Final Results and
Final Rescission, in Part, of Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review, 70 FR 54361 (September 14, 2005) (``PRC Mushrooms 5th AR'').
During the POR, COFCO was the only one of the COFCO affiliated
companies to export subject merchandise to the United States.
\4\ The Department inadvertently did not issue a Q&V
questionnaire to Raoping CXF prior to initiating this review.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After the notice of initiation, the Department again requested Q&V
information and provided additional opportunity for all companies
covered by the review to respond to this request. In response, four
companies responded that they exported subject merchandise to the
United States during the POR: (1) COFCO; (2) Guangxi Hengxian; (3)
Primera Harvest; and (4) Guangxi Eastwing. The following five companies
filed no-shipment claims: (1) Blue Field; (2) Gerber; (3) Jiufa; (4)
Raoping CXF; \5\ and (5) Raoping Yucun. The two remaining companies,
Green Fresh and Guangxi Yulin, either did not submit a properly filed
Q&V response or did not respond.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Raoping CXF subsequently withdrew its review request on
April 26, 2006.
\6\ With respect to Green Fresh, we issued the initial Q&V
questionnaire on March 9, 2006, and follow-up letters on April 20
and 25, and May 4, 2006, to this company informing it that its Q&V
response was not properly filed in accordance with the Department's
regulations, but Green Fresh failed to correct its filing
deficiencies (see Memorandum to the File dated May 23, 2006, for
further discussion on this matter). With respect to Guangxi Yulin,
we issued the initial Q&V questionnaire on March 9, 2006, and re-
issued the Q&V questionnaire to it on April 6, and May 5, 2006, but
received no response (see Memorandum to the File dated May 23, 2006,
for further discussion on this matter).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because it was not practicable for the Department to individually
examine all of the companies covered by the review, the Department
limited its examination for these preliminary results to the largest
producers/exporters that could reasonably be examined, accounting for
the greatest possible export volume,
[[Page 64931]]
pursuant to section 777A(c)(2)(B) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended
(``the Act''). Therefore, the Department selected COFCO and Guangxi
Hengxian as the mandatory respondents in this review and designated
Guangxi Eastwing and Primera Harvest as Section A Respondents. See
Memorandum From Irene Darzenta Tzafolias, Acting Office Director, to
Stephen Claeys, Deputy Assistant Secretary, entitled 2005-2006
Antidumping Duty Administrative Review of Certain Preserved Mushrooms
from the People's Republic of China: Selection of Respondents, dated
June 8, 2006. Accordingly, on June 9, 2006, we issued the full
antidumping duty questionnaire to COFCO and Guangxi Hengxian and only
the section A questionnaire to Guangxi Eastwing and Primera Harvest.
On May 10, 2006, the Department requested documentation from CBP
for specific entries of subject merchandise from the PRC into the
United States during the POR in order to examine Gerber's no-shipment
claim. On June 16, 2006, the Department received the requested entry
documentation from CBP. As a result of reviewing the CBP entry
documentation, the Department issued Gerber a letter on June 21, 2006,
asking questions regarding its claim that it made no shipments of
subject merchandise to the United States during the POR. Specifically,
the Department asked Gerber if it had any affiliates in Hong Kong
through which it shipped subject merchandise to the United States
during the POR. In response to the Department's June 21, 2006, letter,
Gerber stated in its July 11, 2006, submission that it had no
affiliates in Hong Kong through which subject merchandise was exported
to or imported into the United States during the POR. As a result of
conducting further independent research on this matter, the Department
issued Gerber a second letter on July 31, 2006, which contained
documentation indicating that Gerber indeed had an undisclosed
affiliate registered in Hong Kong during the POR. Combined with the
fact that this same Hong Kong affiliate also made shipments of subject
merchandise to the United States during the POR, the Department's July
31, 2006, letter asked Gerber to explain why it did not mention this
Hong Kong affiliate and why it did not disclose that its affiliate was
involved in sales of subject merchandise to the United States during
the POR. Gerber did not submit a response to the Department's July 31,
2006, letter by the specified deadline (i.e., August 14, 2006).
Therefore, the Department issued Gerber another letter on August 15,
2006, which stated that the Department intended to resort to adverse
facts available as a result of Gerber's failure to respond to the
Department's letter of July 31, 2006. Gerber did not respond to the
Department's August 15 letter (see September 6, 2006, Memorandum to the
File, entitled Efforts to Provide Gerber Food (Yunnan) Co., Ltd. With
the Department's July 31, 2006, Supplemental Questionnaire).
On August 17, 2006, in accordance with section 751(a)(3)(A) of the
Act, the Department rescinded this review with respect to Blue Field,
Raoping CXF, Raoping Yucun, and Shandong Jiufa because these companies
did not have shipments of subject merchandise to the United States
during the POR, or withdrew their request for a review in a timely
manner. See Certain Preserved Mushrooms from the People's Republic of
China: Notice of Partial Rescission of Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review, 71 FR 48911 (August 22, 2006).
The Department is conducting this administrative review in
accordance with section 751 of the Act.
Mandatory Respondents
On June 9, 2006, the Department issued the full antidumping duty
questionnaire to COFCO and Guangxi Hengxian. On July 21, 2006, COFCO
submitted its section A questionnaire response (``section A
response''). On August 2, 2006, COFCO submitted its sections C and D
questionnaire response (``sections C and D response''). Guangxi
Hengxian did not submit a questionnaire response.\7\ The Department
issued Guangxi Hengxian a letter on August 7, 2006, which stated that
the Department intends to resort to adverse facts available as a result
of Guangxi Hengxian's failure to respond to the Department's June 8,
2006, antidumping duty questionnaire. Guangxi Hengxian did not respond
to the Department's August 7 letter. See September 6, 2006, Memorandum
to the File, entitled Efforts to Provide Guangxi Hengxian Pro-Light
Foods, Inc. With the Department's June 9, 2006, Antidumping Duty
Questionnaire.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The original deadline for the mandatory respondents to
submit their response to all sections of the Department's June 8,
2006, antidumping duty questionnaire was July 17, 2006. However, the
Department subsequently extended the section A response deadline
until July 21, 2006, and the sections C and D response deadline
until August 2, 2006.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On August 2, 2006, the Department issued COFCO a section A
supplemental questionnaire and it submitted its response on August 30,
2006 (``supplemental section A response''). On August 10, 2006, the
Department issued COFCO a sections C and D supplemental questionnaire
and it submitted its response on September 7, 2006. On September 14,
2006, the Department issued COFCO another sections C and D supplemental
questionnaire and COFCO submitted its response on September 25, 2006.
Section A Respondents
On June 8, 2006, the Department issued the section A questionnaire
to Guangxi Eastwing and Primera Harvest. Guangxi Eastwing and Primera
Harvest submitted their section A questionnaire responses on June 13,
and July 7, 2006, respectively.
On July 20 and 24, 2006, the Department issued Primera Harvest and
Guangxi Eastwing a section A supplemental questionnaire, respectively.
Both companies submitted their supplemental responses on August 3,
2006. On August 23, 2006, the Department issued Primera Harvest a
second section A supplemental questionnaire, to which it responded on
September 7, 2006.
Surrogate Country and Factors
On May 4, 2006, the Department identified five countries, including
India, that are comparable to the PRC in terms of overall economic
development to use in this review. On July 13, 2006, the Department
solicited comments on surrogate country selection from interested
parties. The Department received no comments from the interested
parties. See the ``Normal Value'' section below for further detail.
On September 15, 2006,\8\ the Department received surrogate-value
information from COFCO. For a detailed discussion of the Department's
selection of surrogate values and financial ratios, see ``Factor
Valuation'' section below. See also Memorandum from the Team to the
File, Re: 2005-2006 Antidumping Duty Administrative Review of Certain
Preserved Mushrooms from the People's Republic of China--Factors
Valuation For the Preliminary Results (``Factor Valuation Memo''),
dated October 31, 2006, which is on file in CRU.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ September 5, 2006, was the deadline for submitting surrogate
value information for consideration in the preliminary results as
specified in the Department's July 13, 2006, letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Scope of the Order
The products covered by this order are certain preserved mushrooms,
whether imported whole, sliced, diced, or as stems and pieces. The
certain preserved mushrooms covered under this order are the species
Agaricus
[[Page 64932]]
bisporus and Agaricus bitorquis. ``Certain Preserved Mushrooms'' refer
to mushrooms that have been prepared or preserved by cleaning,
blanching, and sometimes slicing or cutting. These mushrooms are then
packed and heated in containers including, but not limited to, cans or
glass jars in a suitable liquid medium, including, but not limited to,
water, brine, butter or butter sauce. Certain preserved mushrooms may
be imported whole, sliced, diced, or as stems and pieces. Included
within the scope of this order are ``brined'' mushrooms, which are
presalted and packed in a heavy salt solution to provisionally preserve
them for further processing.
Excluded from the scope of this order are the following: (1) All
other species of mushroom, including straw mushrooms; (2) all fresh and
chilled mushrooms, including ``refrigerated'' or ``quick blanched
mushrooms''; (3) dried mushrooms; (4) frozen mushrooms; and (5)
``marinated,'' ``acidified,'' or ``pickled'' mushrooms, which are
prepared or preserved by means of vinegar or acetic acid, but may
contain oil or other additives.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ On June 19, 2000, the Department affirmed that
``marinated,'' ``acidified,'' or ``pickled'' mushrooms containing
less than 0.5 percent acetic acid are within the scope of the
antidumping duty order. See ``Recommendation Memorandum-Final Ruling
of Request by Tak Fat, et al. for Exclusion of Certain Marinated,
Acidified Mushrooms from the Scope of the Antidumping Duty Order on
Certain Preserved Mushrooms from the People's Republic of China,''
dated June 19, 2000. On February 9, 2005, this decision was upheld
by the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. See
Tak Fat v. United States, 39C F.3d 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The merchandise subject to this order is classifiable under
subheadings: 2003.10.0127, 2003.10.0131, 2003.10.0137, 2003.10.0143,
2003.10.0147, 2003.10.0153 and 0711.51.0000 of the Harmonized Tariff
Schedule of the United States (``HTSUS''). Although the HTSUS
subheadings are provided for convenience and customs purposes, the
written description of the scope of this order is dispositive.
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
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, ``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).
Green Fresh, Guangxi Hengxian, Guangxi Yulin, and Gerber
(A) Facts Available
As stated above, Green Fresh, Guangxi Hengxian, Guangxi Yulin, and
Gerber each withheld information requested by the Department by not
submitting a response to the Department's questionnaires.
Green Fresh and Guangxi Yulin failed to properly respond to the
Department's requests for Q&V information. The information requested in
the Department's Q&V questionnaire was critical and necessary for
selecting mandatory respondents in the review. Specifically, Green
Fresh failed to submit a properly filed Q&V response despite being
provided numerous opportunities to do so. Guangxi Yulin did not attempt
to file a Q&V response at all.
Guangxi Hengxian did not submit a response to the Department's
antidumping duty questionnaire. Because Guangxi Hengxian was selected
as a mandatory respondent for this review, the information requested in
the Department's antidumping duty questionnaire is critical and
necessary to calculate Guangxi Hengxian's margin.
As stated above in the ``Background'' section, Gerber did not
respond to the Department's supplemental questionnaire which further
attempted to examine Gerber's claim that it made no shipments of
subject merchandise to the United States during the POR. Specifically,
based on documentation obtained from CBP, the Department had reason to
believe that Gerber exported subject merchandise to the United States
through one of its affiliates located in Hong Kong. As a result of this
discovery, the Department provided Gerber with an opportunity to
explain whether Gerber used its previously undisclosed Hong Kong-based
affiliate to make sales of subject merchandise to the U.S. market
during the POR. Gerber failed to respond to the Department's second
request for information. Gerber withheld requested information from the
Department and impeded this proceeding because of its failure to
participate in the instant review.
Therefore, the Department has no choice but to rely on the facts
otherwise available in order to determine a margin for Green Fresh,
Guangxi Hengxian, Guangxi Yulin, and Gerber pursuant to section
776(a)(2) of the Act because they failed to provide information
requested by the Department. See Stainless Steel Sheet and Strip in
Coils From Japan: Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review, 70 FR 18369 (April 11, 2005), (``because this
company refused to participate in this administrative review, we find
that, * * * the use of total facts available is appropriate''); see
Notice of Preliminary Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value
and Affirmative Preliminary Determination of Critical Circumstances:
Wax and Wax/Resin Thermal Transfer Ribbons From Japan, 68 FR 71072
(December 22, 2003), (``Since UC and DNP withheld information requested
by the Department, the Department has no choice but to rely on the
facts otherwise available in order to determine a margin for these
parties''). Because each of the above-mentioned respondents failed to
respond to the Department's questionnaires, the Department could not
determine whether Gerber, Green Fresh, Guangxi Hengxian, or Guangxi
Yulin is eligible for a separate rate. Accordingly, we are not granting
these companies a separate rate and are applying the PRC-wide rate to
all four companies.
(B) Adverse Inference
In applying facts otherwise available, section 776(b) of the Act
states that if 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 Department, the Department, in reaching the
applicable determination under section 776(b) of the Act, may use an
inference that is adverse to the interests of that party in selecting
from among the facts otherwise available. In the instant proceeding, we
find it appropriate to apply an adverse inference in selecting from
among the facts otherwise available for Gerber, Green Fresh, Guangxi
Hengxian, and Guangxi Yulin, which are part of the PRC-wide entity. By
failing to submit a response to the Department's questionnaires, all
four above-mentioned companies have failed to cooperate to the best of
their ability in this proceeding. Accordingly, we find
[[Page 64933]]
that an adverse inference is warranted. By applying AFA, we ensure that
the companies that fail to cooperate will not obtain a more favorable
result than those companies that complied fully with the Department's
requests in this review.
The PRC Entity
As mentioned, four exporters named in the notice of initiation did
not respond to the Department's request for information. The PRC-wide
rate applies to all entries of subject merchandise except for entries
from PRC exporters that have their own calculated rate. Companies that
have not demonstrated their entitlement to a separate rate are
appropriately considered to be part of the PRC-wide entity. Therefore,
we determine it is necessary to review the PRC-wide entity because
these four PRC exporters are subject to the instant proceeding.
Pursuant to section 776(a)(1) of the Act, the Department determines
that it must use facts otherwise available for the PRC-wide entity
because necessary information is not available on the record of this
proceeding due to the failure of the PRC-wide entity, including the
four PRC exporters mentioned, to provide responses to the Department's
requests for information in this proceeding. Because the PRC-wide
entity did not respond to requests for information in the form or
manner requested, we find it necessary, under section 776(a)(2) of the
Act, to use facts otherwise available as the basis for the preliminary
results of review for the PRC-wide entity. In addition, pursuant to
section 776(b) of the Act, we find that the PRC-wide entity failed to
cooperate by not acting to the best of its ability to comply with a
request for information. As noted above, the PRC-wide entity failed to
respond to the Department's requests for information, despite repeated
requests that it do so. Thus, because the PRC-wide entity refused to
participate fully in this proceeding, we find it appropriate to use an
inference that is adverse to the interests of the PRC-wide entity in
selecting from among the facts otherwise available. By doing so, we
ensure that the companies that are part of the PRC-wide entity will not
obtain a more favorable result by failing to cooperate than had they
cooperated fully in this review. An adverse inference may include
reliance on information derived from the petition, the final
determination in the investigation, any previous review, or any other
information placed on the record. See section 776(b) of the Act. It is
the Department's practice to assign the highest rate from any segment
of the proceeding as total AFA when a respondent fails to cooperate to
the best of its ability. See Honey from the People's Republic of China;
Final Results and Final Rescission In Part of Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review, 70 FR 38873 (July 6, 2005). Specifically, as
AFA, we have assigned to the PRC-entity 198.63 percent, which is the
current PRC-wide rate. See the ``Corroboration'' section below for a
discussion of the probative value of the PRC-wide 198.63 percent rate.
Corroboration of AFA Rate for PRC-Wide Entity, Including Gerber, Green
Fresh, Guangxi Hengxian and Guangxi Yulin
Section 776(c) of the Act requires that the Department corroborate,
to the extent practicable, the information it applies as facts
available. To be considered corroborated, information must be found to
be both reliable and relevant. We are applying as AFA the PRC-wide
rate, which is the highest rate from any segment of this administrative
proceeding, and is the highest rate from the petition in the less-than-
fair-value (``LTFV'') investigation. See Notice of Amendment of Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value and Antidumping Duty
Order: Certain Preserved Mushrooms from the People's Republic of China,
64 FR 8308, 8310 (February 19, 1999). This AFA rate has not changed
since the original LTFV determination.
For purposes of corroboration, the Department will consider whether
the AFA rate is both reliable and relevant. The AFA rate we are
applying for the current review was found to be reliable in reviews
subsequent to the LTFV investigation, including the two most recently
completed reviews. See Certain Preserved Mushrooms from the People's
Republic of China: Partial Rescission and Preliminary Results of Sixth
Administrative Review, 71 FR 11183, 11186 (March 6, 2006) and affirmed
in Certain Preserved Mushrooms From the People's Republic of China:
Final Results and Final Partial Rescission of Sixth Administrative
Review, 71 FR 40477, 40478 (July 17, 2006) (``PRC Mushrooms 6th AR'');
and PRC Mushrooms 5th AR, 70 FR at 10969 (to corroborate the AFA margin
of 198.63 percent, in the 5th review the Department compared the AFA
margin to calculated margins for certain respondents and found that
198.63 percent was within the range of margins for individual sales of
identical and/or similar products). Furthermore, no information has
been presented in the current review that calls into question the
reliability of the currently-applied PRC-wide rate.
With respect to the relevance aspect of corroboration, the
Department will consider information reasonably at its disposal to
determine whether a margin continues to have relevance. Where
circumstances indicate that the selected margin is not appropriate as
AFA, the Department will disregard the margin and determine an
appropriate margin. For example, in Fresh Cut Flowers from Mexico:
Final Results of Antidumping Administrative Review, 61 FR 6812
(February 22, 1996), the Department disregarded the highest margin in
that case as adverse best information available (the predecessor to
``facts available'') because the margin was based on another company's
uncharacteristic business expense resulting in an unusually high
margin. Similarly, the Department does not apply a margin that has been
discredited. See D&L Supply Co. v. United States, 113 F.3d 1220, 1221
(Fed. Cir. 1997) (the Department will not use a margin that has been
judicially invalidated). The information used in calculating this
margin was based on sales and production data submitted by the
respondents in the LTFV investigation, together with the most
appropriate surrogate value information available to the Department
chosen from submissions by the parties in the LTFV investigation, as
well as gathered by the Department itself. Furthermore, the calculation
of this margin was subject to comment from interested parties in the
proceeding. Moreover, as there is no information on the record of this
review that demonstrates that this rate is not appropriately used as
AFA, we determine that this rate has relevance.
Based on our analysis as described above, we find that the margin
of 198.63 percent is reliable and has relevance. As the rate is both
reliable and relevant, we determine that it has probative value.
Accordingly, we determine that the calculated rate of 198.63 percent,
which is the current PRC-wide rate, is in accordance with the
requirement of section 776(c) of the Act that secondary information be
corroborated (that it have probative value). Consequently, we have
assigned this AFA rate to exports of the subject merchandise from all
companies subject to the PRC-wide rate, including Gerber, Green Fresh,
Guangxi Hengxian, and Guangxi Yulin.
Affiliation--COFCO
To the extent that section 771(33) of the Act does not conflict
with the Department's application of separate rates and enforcement of
the non-market economy (``NME'') provision, section
[[Page 64934]]
773(c) of the Act, the Department will determine that exporters and/or
producers are affiliated if the facts of the case support such a
finding.\10\ For the reasons discussed below, we find that this
condition has not prevented us from examining whether certain exporters
and/or producers are affiliated with COFCO in this administrative
review.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ See PRC Mushrooms 5th AR, 70 FR at 10969.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In prior administrative reviews involving COFCO, the Department has
found COFCO to be affiliated with Yu Xing as a result of its direct
ownership and control in Yu Xing and affiliated with Fujian Zishan
through its parent company, China National, and Xiamen Jiahua.
Moreover, the Department has also found in prior reviews that COFCO is
affiliated with another preserved mushroom producer, COFCO Zhangzhou.
See PRC Mushrooms 5th AR, 70 FR at 10969.
COFCO claims that it is no longer affiliated with Fujian Zishan
because Xiamen Jiahua sold all of its ownership shares in Fujian Zishan
at the beginning of this POR (see page A-5 of COFCO's section A
response). The Department has examined whether COFCO and the entities
noted above are still affiliated for purposes of determining whether
they should be collapsed in this review. For further discussion on this
matter, see Memorandum From James P. Maeder, Jr., Office Director, to
Stephen Claeys, Deputy Assistant Secretary, entitled Certain Preserved
Mushrooms from the People's Republic of China: Whether To Continue To
Collapse COFCO with Some or All of its Affiliated Companies, dated
October 31, 2006 (``Affiliation/Collapsing Memo'').
Based on our analysis, we preliminarily find that during this POR,
COFCO, China National, COFCO Zhangzhou, Xiamen Jiahua, and Yu Xing were
affiliated through the common control of COFCO's parent company,
pursuant to sections 771(33)(F) and (G) of the Act. However, with
respect to Fujian Zishan, we find that during the POR, Fujian Zishan
was no longer affiliated with the above-mentioned companies based on
the facts discussed above. See Affiliation/Collapsing Memo for further
discussion.
Collapsing--COFCO
Pursuant to 19 CFR 351.401(f), the Department will collapse
producers and treat them as a single entity where (1) those producers
are affiliated, (2) the producers have production facilities for
producing similar or identical products that would not require
substantial retooling of either facility in order to restructure
manufacturing priorities, and (3) there is a significant potential for
manipulation of price or production. We also note that the rationale
for collapsing, to prevent manipulation of price and/or production (see
19 CFR 351.401(f)), applies to both producers and exporters, if the
facts indicate that they are able to manipulate price or production as
a result of control over the production and sales activities of
affiliates whose operations are intertwined.
To the extent that this provision does not conflict with the
Department's application of separate rates and enforcement of the NME
provision, section 773(c) of the Act, the Department will collapse two
or more affiliated entities in a case involving a NME country if the
facts of the case warrant such treatment. Furthermore, we note that the
factors listed in 19 CFR 351.401(f)(2) are not exhaustive, and in the
context of a NME investigation or administrative review, other factors
unique to the relationship of business entities within the NME may lead
the Department to determine that collapsing is either warranted or
unwarranted, depending on the facts of the case. See Hontex
Enterprises, Inc. v. United States, 248 F. Supp. 2d 1323, 1342 (CIT
2003) (noting that the application of collapsing in the NME context may
differ from the standard factors listed in the regulation).
In summary, if there is evidence of significant potential for
manipulation between or among affiliates which produce and/or export
similar or identical merchandise, whether or not all such merchandise
is exported to the United States, the Department may find such evidence
sufficient to apply the collapsing criteria in a NME context in order
to determine whether all or some of those affiliates should be treated
as one entity (see Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products from
the People's Republic of China, Preliminary Determination of Sales at
Less Than Fair Value, 66 FR 22183 (May 3, 2001); Notice of Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Certain Hot-Rolled
Carbon Steel Flat Products from the People's Republic of China, 66 FR
49632 (September 28, 2001) (``Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat
Products''); and Anshan Iron & Steel Co. v. United States, Slip. Op.
03-83 at 32-33 (CIT 2003) (``Anshan'')).
We find that the first and second collapsing criteria are met with
respect to COFCO's affiliated producers COFCO Zhangzhou and Yu Xing
because these producers have production facilities for producing
similar or identical products, such that no retooling at any of the
three facilities is required in order to restructure manufacturing
priorities. See factors of production data submitted by each company in
COFCO's section D response. We find that the third collapsing criterion
is also met with respect to COFCO Zhangzhou and Yu Xing because COFCO
and China National, which wholly owns COFCO, have significant ownership
in and control over the operations of COFCO Zhangzhou and Yu Xing. They
also have shared management and intertwined operations. Therefore, we
find that there is a significant potential for manipulation of price or
production between these two affiliated producers of the subject
merchandise. We also note that during the POR COFCO and Zhangzhou and
Yu Xing were legally merged into a single company. See Affiliation/
Collapsing Memo for further discussion.
In addition, based on the reasons mentioned in the Affiliation/
Collapsing Memo and the guidance of 19 CFR 351.401(f), we have
preliminarily collapsed COFCO, China National, Xiamen Jiahua and COFCO
Zhangzhou/YuXing because there is a significant potential for
manipulation of sales decisions between these parties that are
exporters of the subject merchandise or have the ability to export.
Xiamen Jiahua, a preserved mushroom exporter, is also owned, in part,
by China National which wholly owns COFCO. Yu Xing, which is treated as
a single entity with the producer COFCO Zhangzhou, also has export
rights and has directly exported since obtaining those export rights.
Consequently, we have considered COFCO and the four affiliates
mentioned above as a single entity for purposes of determining whether
or not the collapsed entity as a whole is entitled to a separate rate.
With respect to Fujian Zishan, as mentioned we find this company to be
no longer affiliated with COFCO and it is, therefore, not part of the
collapsed entity.\11\ This decision is specific to the facts presented
in this review and is based on several considerations, including the
structure of the collapsed entity, the level of control between and
among affiliates, and the level of participation by each affiliate in
the proceeding. Given the unique relationships which arise in NMEs
between individual companies and the government, a separate rate will
be granted to the collapsed entity only if
[[Page 64935]]
the facts, taken as a whole, support such a finding (see ``Separate
Rates'' section below for further discussion).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Accordingly, Fujian Zishan is not subject to this review
and the Department has not conducted a separate rates analysis on
this company. Fujian Zishan, therefore, is not entitled to a
separate rate in this review.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Separate-Rates Determination
In proceedings involving NME countries, the Department begins with
a rebuttable presumption that all companies within the country are
subject to governmental control and, thus, should be assessed a single
antidumping duty deposit rate (i.e., a PRC-wide rate). One respondent
in this review, Primera Harvest, is wholly owned by a company located
outside the PRC. Therefore, an additional separate-rates analysis is
not necessary to determine whether Primera Harvest's export activities
are independent from government control. (See e.g., Polyethylene Retail
Carrier Bags from the People's Republic of China: Preliminary Results
of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 71 FR 54021 (September 13,
2006), which cites to Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Creatine Monohydrate from the People's Republic of
China, 64 FR 71104, 71105 (December 20, 1999) (where the respondent was
wholly owned by persons located in Hong Kong)).
The other Section A respondent, Guangxi Eastwing is a limited
liability company, whereas the mandatory respondent, COFCO, is owned by
its affiliate China National, which is owned by ``all of the people.''
COFCO also owns, in part, two preserved mushroom producers, COFCO
Zhangzhou and Yu Xing. As discussed above in the ``Collapsing'' section
of this notice, we have preliminarily considered COFCO, China National,
Yu Xing, COFCO Zhangzhou, and Xiamen Jiahua a collapsed entity.
Thus, a separate-rates analysis is necessary to determine whether
the export activities of Guangxi Eastwing and COFCO's collapsed entity
are independent from government control. To establish whether a
respondent is sufficiently independent from governmental control of its
export activities so as to be entitled to a separate rate, the
Department analyzes each entity exporting the subject merchandise under
a test arising from 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) at Comment 1, and amplified in the Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Silicon Carbide from
the People's Republic of China, 59 FR 22585, 22587 (May 2, 1994)
(Silicon Carbide). In accordance with the separate-rates criteria, the
Department assigns separate rates in NME cases only if the respondent
can demonstrate the absence of both de jure and de facto governmental
control over export activities.
1. Absence of De Jure Control
Evidence supporting, though not requiring, a finding of de jure
absence of government control over exporter activities includes: (1) An
absence of restrictive stipulations associated with the 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.
The COFCO collapsed entity and Guangxi Eastwing have placed on the
administrative record the following documents to demonstrate absence of
de jure control: The 1994 ``Foreign Trade Law of the People's Republic
of China;'' the ``Company Law of the PRC,'' effective as of July 1,
1994; and ``The Enterprise Legal Person Registration Administrative
Regulations,'' promulgated on June 13, 1988. In other cases involving
products from the PRC, respondents have submitted the following
additional documents to demonstrate absence of de jure control, and the
Department has placed these additional documents on the record as well:
The ``Law of the People's Republic of China on Industrial Enterprises
Owned by the Whole People,'' adopted on April 13, 1988 (``the
Industrial Enterprises Law''); and the 1992 ``Regulations for
Transformation of Operational Mechanisms of State-Owned Industrial
Enterprises'' (``Business Operation Provisions''). (See October 31,
2006, memorandum to the file which places the above-referenced laws on
the record of this proceeding segment.)
As in prior cases, we have analyzed these laws and have found them
to establish sufficiently an absence of de jure control of joint
ventures and companies owned by ``all of the people'' absent proof on
the record to the contrary. See, e.g., Final Determination of Sales at
Less than Fair Value: Furfuryl Alcohol from the People's Republic of
China, 60 FR 22544 (May 8, 1995) (``Furfuryl Alcohol''), and
Preliminary Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Certain
Partial-Extension Steel Drawer Slides with Rollers from the People's
Republic of China, 60 FR 29571 (June 5, 1995).
2. Absence of De Facto Control
As stated in previous cases, there is some evidence that certain
enactments of the PRC central government have not been implemented
uniformly among different sectors and/or jurisdictions in the PRC. See
Silicon Carbide, 56 FR at 22587 (May 2, 1994). Therefore, the
Department has determined that an analysis of de facto control is
critical in determining whether respondents are, in fact, subject to a
degree of governmental control which would preclude the Department from
assigning separate rates.
The Department typically considers the following four factors in
evaluating whether a respondent is subject to de facto governmental
control of its export functions: (1) Whether the export prices are set
by, or subject to the approval of, a governmental agency; (2) whether
the respondent has the authority to negotiate and sign contracts and
other agreements; (3) whether the respondent has autonomy from the
government in making decisions regarding the selection of management;
and (4) whether the respondent retains the proceeds of its export sales
and makes independent decisions regarding the disposition of profits or
financing of losses. See Silicon Carbide, 59 FR at 22586-87 and
Furfuryl Alcohol, 60 FR 22545.
The affiliates in COFCO's collapsed entity (where applicable) and
Guangxi Eastwing have asserted the following: (1) Each establishes its
own export prices; (2) each negotiates contracts without guidance from
any governmental entities or organizations; (3) each makes its own
personnel decisions; and (4) each retains the proceeds of its export
sales, uses profits according to its business needs, and has the
authority to sell its assets and to obtain loans. Additionally, each
respondent's questionnaire responses indicate that each respondent's
pricing practices during the POR does not suggest coordination among
exporters. As a result, there is a sufficient basis to preliminarily
determine that each respondent listed above (including the COFCO
collapsed entity as a whole) has demonstrated a de facto absence of
government control of its export functions and is entitled to a
separate rate. Moreover, with respect to the affiliates included in the
COFCO collapsed entity, we have assigned to all of them the same
antidumping rate in these preliminary results for the above-mentioned
reasons.
Fair-Value Comparisons
To determine whether the respondents' sales of subject merchandise
were made at less than NV, we compared the export price (EP) to NV, as
described in the ``Export Price''
[[Page 64936]]
and ``Normal Value'' sections of this notice, below.
Export Price
In accordance with section 772(a) of the Act, the Department
calculated EPs for sales by COFCO to the United States because the
subject merchandise was sold directly to unaffiliated customers in the
United States (or to unaffiliated resellers outside the United States
with knowledge that the merchandise was destined for the United States)
prior to importation, and constructed export-price methodology was not
otherwise indicated. In accordance with 19 CFR 351.401(c), we made
deductions from the net sales price for foreign inland freight and
foreign brokerage and handling. Each of these services was provided by
a NME vendor and, thus, as explained in the ``Normal Value'' section
below, we based the deductions for these movement charges on values
from a surrogate country.
For the reasons stated in the ``Normal Value'' section below, we
selected India as the primary surrogate country. To value brokerage and
handling, the Department used an average of the publicly summarized
data from the following two sources which we have placed on the record
of this review: (1) Data reported in the U.S. sales listing in the
February 28, 2005, submission from Essar Steel Ltd. (``Essar Steel'')
in the antidumping duty administrative review of Certain Hot-Rolled
Carbon Steel Flat Products from India, A-533-820 (covering December
2003-November 2004), and (2) data reported in Pidilite Industries'
March 9, 2004, public version response submitted in the antidumping
duty investigation of Carbazole Violet Pigment 23 from India, A-533-838
(covering the period November 2002-September 2003). We identify the
source used to value foreign inland freight in the ``Normal Value''
section of this notice, below. We adjusted these values, as
appropriate, to account for inflation or deflation between the
effective period and the POR. We calculated the inflation or deflation
adjustments for these values using the wholesale price indices
(``WPI'') for India as published in the International Financial
Statistics Online Service maintained by the Statistics Department of
the International Monetary Fund at the Web site https://
www.imfstatistics.org (``IFS'').
COFCO claims that its affiliated producer, Yu Xing, did not incur
an expense for the glass jars and caps used to export subject
merchandise to the United States during the POR because its U.S.
customers provided these items to Yu Xing free-of-charge. In response
to the Department's supplemental questionnaire, COFCO provided
documentation which sufficiently supported its claim that (1) its U.S.
customers contracted with PRC glass jar and cap producers and that
these producers had indeed delivered these items to Yu Xing in a
certain quantity on a certain date, free-of-charge; and (2) that these
free-of-charge glass jars and caps were used in the required quantities
for certain subject merchandise sold to its applicable U.S. customers
during the POR.
Therefore, for the reasons mentioned above, the Department has
adjusted the U.S. price of certain preserved mushroom transactions
reported by COFCO by assigning Indian surrogate values to the glass jar
and caps used in those preserved mushroom transactions to reflect its
U.S. customers' expenditures for these items. This preliminary decision
on this matter is consistent with the Department's decision in PRC
Mushrooms 5th AR, 70 FR at 10973.
Normal Value
For exports from NME countries, section 773(c)(1) of the Act
provides that the Department shall determine NV using a factors-of-
production (``FOP'') methodology if the subject merchandise is exported
from an NME country and available 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. Section 351.408 of
the Department's regulations sets forth the methodology the Department
uses to calculate the NV of merchandise exported from NME countries.
The Department has treated the PRC as a NME country in every proceeding
involving the PRC. Because none of the parties to this proceeding
contested such treatment, we calculated NV in accordance with sections
773(c)(3) and (4) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.408(c).
In accordance with section 773(c)(3) of the Act, the FOPs which
COFCO's suppliers used in producing certain preserved mushrooms
include, but are not limited to, the following inputs: (1) Hours of
labor required, (2) quantities of raw materials employed, (3) amounts
of energy and other utilities consumed, and (4) representative capital
costs, including depreciation. In accordance with section 773(c)(4) of
the Act, the Department valued the FOPs, to the extent possible, using
the costs of the FOP in one or more market-economy countries that are
at a level of economic development comparable to that of the PRC and
are significant producers of comparable merchandise. We determined that
India is comparable to the PRC in terms of per capita gross national
product and the national distribution of labor. Furthermore, India is a
significant producer of comparable merchandise. See Memorandum from Ron
Lorentzen, Director, Office of Policy, to Irene Darzenta Tzafolias,
Acting Office Director, Office 2, dated May 4, 2006, regarding
potential surrogate countries, which is available in the CRU--Public
File.
Section 773(c)(3) of the Act states that ``the factors of
production utilized in producing merchandise include, but are not
limited to, the quantities of raw materials employed.'' Therefore, the
Department is required under the Act to value all inputs (including
inputs which the respondent claims were provided to it purportedly free
of charge). As explained in the ``Export Price'' section above, COFCO
sufficiently supported its claim that each of its applicable U.S.
customers provided its affiliated supplier, Yu Xing, the glass jars and
caps, which were used for the preserved mushrooms sold to those same
U.S. customers free-of-charge. For this reason, we have adjusted, where
applicable, COFCO's reported U.S. prices to include the value of glass
jars and caps for certain sales of preserved mushrooms in these
preliminary results. In addition to making the above-referenced
adjustment to COFCO's U.S. prices reported for sales of the subject
merchandise which contained glass jars and caps, section 773(c)(3) of
the Act requires the Department to value each factor of production used
to produce the subject merchandise. Accordingly, for these preliminary
results, the Department has valued the glass jars and caps usage
amounts reported by COFCO for specific preserved mushrooms by using an
Indian surrogate value for each input (see Factor Valuation Memo).
In accordance with section 773(c)(1) of the Act, for purposes of
calculating NV, we attempted to value the FOPs using surrogate values
that were in effect during the POR. If we were unable to obtain
surrogate values that were in effect during the POR, we adjusted the
values, as appropriate, to account for inflation or deflation between
the effective period and the POR. We calculated the inflation or
deflation adjustments for all factor values, as applicable, except
labor, using the WPI for the appropriate surrogate country as published
in the IFS. We valued the FOPs as follows:
(1) Except for rice straw, cow manure, and steam coal, we valued
all reported material inputs using Indian import data from the World
Trade Atlas (``WTA'')
[[Page 64937]]
for February 2005 through January 2006, in accordance with the
Department's established practice in this case (see e.g., PRC Mushrooms
6th AR, 71 FR at 40477, and accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum
at Comments 1 through 6).
(2) We valued rice straw using data from the 2005-2006 financial
statement of Flex Foods Limited (``Flex Foods''), an Indian producer of
the subject merchandise.
(3) We valued cow manure using data from the 2004-2005 financial
statement of Agro Dutch Industries Limited (``Agro Dutch''), an Indian
producer of the subject merchandise.
(4) We valued electricity using rates from Energy Prices and Taxes:
Second Quarter 2003 (Energy Prices), published by the International
Energy Agency. We valued water using data from the Maharashtra
Industrial Development Corporation. We valued steam coal using the Teri
Energy Data Directory & Yearbook (2004).
(5) We valued labor, consistent with 19 CFR 351.408(c)(3), using
the PRC regression-based wage rate as reported on Import
Administration's home page, Import Library, Expected Wages of Selected
NME Countries, revised in November 2005, and posted to Import
Administration's Web site at https://ia.ita.doc.gov/wages. The source of
this wage rate data is the Yearbook of Labour Statistics 2003,
International Labour Office, (Geneva: 2003), Chapter 5B: Wages in
Manufacturing (https://laborsta.ilo.org). The years of the reported wage
rates range from 1998 to 2003. Because this regression-based wage rate
does not separate the labor rates into different skill levels or types
of labor, we have applied the same wage rate to all skill levels and
types of labor reported by the respondent.
(6) We derived ratios for factory overhead, selling, general and
administrative (``SG&A'') expenses, and profit using the 2004-2005 and
2005-2006 financial statements of Agro Dutch and Flex Foods. From this
information, we were able to calculate factory overhead as a percentage
of direct materials, labor, and energy expenses, SG&A expenses as a
percentage of the total cost of manufacturing, and profit as a
percentage of the sum of the total cost of manufacturing and SG&A
expenses.
(7) We used truck rates published at https://www.infreight.com to
value freight services provided to transport (a) the finished product
to the port; and (b) direct materials, packing materials, and coal from
the suppliers of the inputs to the producers.
For further discussion of the surrogate values we used for these
preliminary results of review, see Memorandum From Terre Keaton
Regarding Factors-of-Production Valuation for Preliminary Results
(October 31, 2006), which is on file in the CRU--Public File.
Preliminary Results of Review
As a result of our review, we preliminarily determine that the
following margins exist for the period February 1, 2005, through
January 31, 2006:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Margin
Manufacturer/exporter (percent)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
China Processed Food Import & Export Company (which 195.85
includes its affiliates China National Cereals, Oils &
Foodstuffs Import & Export Corporation, COFCO
(Zhangzhou) Food Industrial Co., Ltd., Xiamen Jiahua
Import & Export Trading Co., Ltd., and Fujian Yu Xing
Fruit & Vegetable Foodstuff Development Co.)\12\.......
Primera Harvest Co., Ltd................................ 195.85
Guangxi Eastwing Co., Ltd............................... 195.85
PRC-Wide Rate (which applies to the following companies 198.63
that failed to qualify for a separate rate in this
review: Gerber, Green Fresh, Guangxi Hengxian and
Guangxi Yulin).........................................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
As stated above in the ``Separate-Rates Determination'' section of
this notice, Guangxi Eastwing and Primera Harvest both qualify for a
separate rate in this review. Moreover, as stated above in the
``Background'' section of this notice, we limited this review by
selecting the largest exporters. As section A respondents, Guangxi
Eastwing and Primera Harvest will be assigned the weighted-average
dumping margin based on the calculated margins of mandatory respondents
which are not de minimis or based on AFA, in accordance with Department
practice. See e.g., Notice of Final Determinations of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Brake Drums and Brake Rotors from the People's
Republic of China, 62 FR 9160, 9174 (February 28, 1997). Accordingly,
we have assigned these two respondents the dumping margin assigned to
the COFCO collapsed entity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ For this review, we consider COFCO, COFCO Zhangzhou,
Xiamen, Jiahua, and Yu Xing to constitute a single entity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In accordance with 19 CFR 351.224(b), the Department will disclose
to interested parties within five days of the date of publication of
this notice the calculations it performed for 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 30 days of 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. We will issue a memorandum
identifying the date of a hearing, if one is requested. 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.
Assessment Rates
Upon completion of this administrative review, the Department will
determine, and CBP shall assess, antidumping duties on all appropriate
entries. For the COFCO collapsed entity, we have calculated customer-
specific antidumping duty assessment amounts for subject merchandise
based on the ratio of the total amount of antidumping duties calculated
for the examined sales to the total quantity of sales examined. We
calculated these assessment amounts because there is no information on
the record which identifies entered values or the importers of record
for the COFCO collapsed entity's reported U.S. sales transactions. For
Guangxi Eastwing and Primera Harvest (i.e., respondents which are being
assigned the margin calculated for the COFCO
[[Page 64938]]
collapsed entity), we will instruct CBP to assess antidumping duties on
these company's entries equal to the margin these companies receive in
the final results, regardless of the importer or customer.
The Department intends to issue assessment instructions to CBP 15
days after the date of publication of the final results of review. If
these preliminary results are adopted in the final results of review,
we will direct CBP to assess the resulting assessment amounts,
calculated as described above, on each of the applicable entries during
the review period.
Cash Deposit Requirements
The following deposit requirements will apply to all shipments of
certain preserved mushrooms from the PRC entered, or withdrawn from
warehouse, for consumption on or after the publication date of the
final results of this administrative review, as provided by section
751(a)(1) of the Act: (1) The cash deposit rates for the reviewed
companies named above will be the rates for those firms established in
the final results of this administrative review; (2) for any previously
reviewed or investigated PRC or non-PRC exporter, not covered in this
review, with a separate rate, the cash deposit rate will be the
company-specific rate established in the most recent segment of this
proceeding; (3) for all other PRC exporters, the cash deposit rate will
be the PRC-wide rate established in the final results of this review;
and (4) the cash deposit rate for any non-PRC exporter of subject
merchandise from the PRC will be the rate applicable to the PRC
exporter that supplied that 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 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.
We are issuing and publishing the preliminary results determination
in accordance with sections 751(a)(1) and 777(i)(1) of the Act.
Dated: October 31, 2006.
David M. Spooner,
Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
[FR Doc. E6-18662 Filed 11-3-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P