Preliminary Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value and Postponement of Final Determination: Coated Free Sheet Paper from the People's Republic of China, 30758-30766 [E7-10705]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 106 / Monday, June 4, 2007 / Notices
the Department will hold a public
hearing, if timely requested, to afford
interested parties an opportunity to
comment on arguments raised in case or
rebuttal briefs, provided that such a
hearing is requested by an interested
party. If a timely request for a hearing
is made in this investigation, we intend
to hold the hearing two days after the
Weighted–Average rebuttal brief deadline date at the U.S.
Manufacturer/Exporter
Margin (percent)
Department of Commerce, 14th Street
and Constitution Avenue, NW,
PT. Pabrik Kertas Tjiwi
Washington, DC 20230, at a time and in
Kimia Tbk, PT. Pindo
a room to be determined. Parties should
Deli Pulp and Paper
Mills, and PT. Indah
confirm by telephone, the date, time,
Kiat Pulp and Paper
and location of the hearing 48 hours
Tbk (collectively, PD/
before the scheduled date.
TK) ............................
10.85
Interested parties who wish to request
All Others ......................
10.85
a hearing, or to participate in a hearing
if one is requested, must submit a
Disclosure
written request to the Assistant
We will disclose the calculations used Secretary for Import Administration,
in our analysis to parties in this
U.S. Department of Commerce, Room
proceeding in accordance with 19 CFR
1870, within 30 days of the publication
351.224(b).
of this notice. Requests should contain:
(1) The party’s name, address, and
ITC Notification
telephone number; (2) the number of
In accordance with section 733(f) of
participants; and (3) a list of the issues
the Act, we have notified the ITC of the
to be discussed. At the hearing, oral
Department’s preliminary affirmative
determination. If the Department’s final presentations will be limited to issues
raised in the briefs.
determination is affirmative, the ITC
will determine before the later of 120
Postponement of Final Determination
days after the date of this preliminary
and Extension of Provisional Measures
determination or 45 days after our final
Pursuant to section 735(a)(2) of the
determination whether imports of CFS
Act, on May 15, 2007, PD/TK requested
from Indonesia are materially injuring,
that in the event of an affirmative
or threaten material injury to, the U.S.
preliminary determination in this
industry. Because we have postponed
the deadline for our final determination investigation, the Department postpone
its final determination by 60 days. At
to 135 days from the date of the
the same time, PD/TK requested that the
publication of this preliminary
Department extend the application of
determination (see below), the ITC will
the provisional measures prescribed
make its final determination within 45
under 19 CFR 351.210(e)(2) from a fourdays of our final determination.
month period to a six-month period. In
Public Comment
accordance with section 733(d) of the
Interested parties are invited to
Act and 19 CFR 351.210(b), because (1)
comment on the preliminary
our preliminary determination is
determination. Interested parties may
affirmative, (2) the requesting exporter
submit case briefs to the Department no accounts for a significant proportion of
later than seven days after the date of
exports of the subject merchandise, and
the issuance of the final verification
(3) no compelling reasons for denial
report in this proceeding. Rebuttal
exist, we are granting this request and
briefs, the content of which is limited to are postponing the final determination
the issues raised in the case briefs, must until no later than 135 days after the
be filed within five days from the
publication of this notice in the Federal
deadline date for the submission of case Register. Suspension of liquidation will
briefs. A list of authorities used, a table
be extended accordingly.
of contents, and an executive summary
This determination is issued and
of issues should accompany any briefs
published pursuant to sections 733(f)
submitted to the Department. Executive and 777(i)(1) of the Act.
summaries should be limited to five
Dated: May 29, 2007.
pages total, including footnotes. Further,
we request that parties submitting briefs David Spooner,
Assistant Secretary for Import
and rebuttal briefs provide the
Administration.
Department with a copy of the public
[FR Doc. E7–10704 Filed 6–1–07; 8:45 am]
version of such briefs on diskette. In
accordance with section 774 of the Act,
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–S
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require a cash deposit or the posting of
a bond equal to the weighted–average
dumping margins, as indicated in the
chart below. These suspension–ofliquidation instructions will remain in
effect until further notice.
The weighted–average dumping
margins are as follows:
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[A–570–906]
Preliminary Determination of Sales at
Less Than Fair Value and
Postponement of Final Determination:
Coated Free Sheet Paper from the
People’s Republic of China
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
EFFECTIVE DATE: June 4, 2007.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce
(the ‘‘Department’’) preliminarily
determines that coated free sheet paper
(‘‘CFS’’) from the People’s Republic of
China (‘‘PRC’’) is being, or is likely to
be, sold in the United States at less than
fair value (‘‘LTFV’’), as provided in
section 733 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
amended (‘‘Act’’). The estimated
dumping margins are shown in the
‘‘Preliminary Determination’’ section of
this notice.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Magd Zalok or Drew Jackson, AD/CVD
Operations, Office 4, Import
Administration, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution
Avenue, NW, Washington, DC, 20230;
telephone: (202) 482–4162 or 482–4406,
respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
AGENCY:
Background
On October 31, 2006, the Department
received petitions concerning imports of
CFS from the PRC, Indonesia, and the
Republic of Korea (‘‘Korea’’) filed in
proper form by NewPage Corporation
(‘‘petitioner’’) on behalf of the domestic
industry. The Department initiated
antidumping duty investigations of CFS
from the above–mentioned countries on
November 20, 2006. See Initiation of
Antidumping Duty Investigations:
Coated Free Sheet Paper from
Indonesia, the People’s Republic of
China, and the Republic of Korea, 71 FR
68537 (November 27, 2006) (‘‘Initiation
Notice’’). On December 22, 2006, the
International Trade Commission (‘‘ITC’’)
preliminarily determined that there is a
reasonable indication that imports of
CFS from the PRC, Indonesia, and Korea
are materially injuring the U.S. industry.
See Coated Free Sheet Paper From
China, Indonesia, and Korea,
Investigation Nos. 701–TA–444–446 and
731–TA–1107–1109 (Preliminary), 71 FR
78464 (December 29, 2006).
On November 29, 2006, the
Department requested quantity and
value (‘‘Q&V’’) information from 14
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companies identified in the petition as
potential producers or exporters of CFS
from the PRC. See Exhibit 5, Volume I,
of the October 31, 2006 Petition for the
Imposition of Antidumping and
Countervailing Duties.
On December 27, 2006, the
Department received Q&V responses
from four interested parties.
Additionally, on January 3, 2007, the
Department received an untimely Q&V
response from UPM–Kymmene
(Changshu) Paper Industry Co., Ltd.
(‘‘UPM’’), which we rejected. See letter
to UPM concerning ‘‘Return of Untimely
Submission of Quantity and Value
Information’’ dated January 11, 2007.
On December 27, 2006, the
Department received a separate–rate
application from Yanzhou Tianzhang
Paper Industry Co. Ltd. (‘‘Yanzhou
Tianzhang’’), a producer and exporter
not named in the petition. Additionally,
on January 26, 2007, the Department
received a separate–rate application
from UPM, which we rejected. See letter
to UPM concerning ‘‘Submissions by
UPM–Kymmene (Changshu) Paper
Industry Co., Ltd.’’ dated February 8,
2007.1
On January 10, 2007, the Department
selected Gold East Paper (Jiangsu) Co.
Ltd, (‘‘GE’’), and Shandong Chenming
Paper Holdings Limited (‘‘Chenming’’)
as mandatory respondents. See
memorandum regarding ‘‘Selection of
Respondents for the Antidumping
Investigation of Coated Free Sheet Paper
from the People’s Republic of China,’’
dated January 10, 2007 (‘‘Respondent
Selection Memorandum’’).
On January 11, 2007, we issued the
Department’s antidumping
questionnaire to the mandatory
respondents. GE and Chenming
submitted timely responses to the
Department’s questionnaire during
February and March 2007. The
Department issued supplemental
questionnaires to, and received
responses from, GE and Chenming from
February to May 2007. The petitioner
submitted comments to the Department
regarding GE’s and Chenming’s
questionnaire and supplemental
questionnaire responses from February
to April 2007.
On January 24, 2007, the Department
released a memorandum in which it
listed potential surrogate countries and
invited interested parties to comment on
surrogate country and factor value
selection. No party responded to the
Department’s invitation to comment on
1 See also the submissions to the Department from
UPM dated January 29, 2007, February 1, 2007, and
February 5, 2007, and from the petitioner dated
February 2, 2007.
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surrogate country selection. However,
from March to May, 2007, both the
petitioner and the respondents
submitted surrogate values, including
surrogate financial statements, for use in
this investigation. All of the submitted
surrogate data are from India.
On February 15, 2007, the respondent
in the antidumping duty investigation of
CFS from Korea submitted comments to
the Department regarding the
appropriate model matching criteria.
The Department received no rebuttal
comments on model matching.
On March 1, 2007, the petitioner
made a timely request, pursuant to 19
CFR 351.205(e), for a fifty-day
postponement of the preliminary
determination in this investigation. On
March 19, 2007, pursuant to section
733(c)(1)(A) of the Act, the Department
postponed the preliminary
determination until no later than May
29, 2007. See Postponement of
Preliminary Determinations in the
Antidumping Duty Investigations of
Coated Free Sheet Paper from the
People’s Republic of China, Indonesia,
and the Republic of Korea, 72 FR 12757
(March 19, 2007). On May 11, 2007, the
petitioner, the respondents, and the
Bureau of Fair Trade, Ministry of
Commerce, People’s Republic of China
(‘‘BOFT’’), submitted comments to the
Department regarding issues they would
like addressed in the preliminary
determination. In addition, on May 11,
2007, UPM filed a submission with the
Department in which it requested that
the Department reconsider its decision
not to accept the company’s untimely
Q&V response. For the reasons given in
the Department’s January 11, and
February 8, 2007 letters to UPM, the
Department has not reversed its earlier
decision to reject UPM’s separate–rate
application and untimely Q&V
response.
Also, on May 11, 2007, GE requested
that, in the event of an affirmative
preliminary determination in this
investigation, the Department: (1)
postpone its final determination by 60
days in accordance with 19 CFR
351.210(2)(ii) and 735(a)(2)(A) of the
Act; and (2) extend the application of
the provisional measures prescribed
under 19 CFR 351.210(e)(2) from a 4month period to a 6-month period.
Finally, on May 18, 2007, the petitioner
responded to the BOFT’s May 11, 2007
comments.
Period of Investigation
The period of investigation (‘‘POI’’) is
April 1, 2006, through September 30,
2006. This period comprises the two
fiscal quarters immediately prior to the
month in which the petition was filed
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30759
(October 31, 2006). See 19 CFR
351.204(b)(1).
Scope of the Investigation
The merchandise covered by this
investigation includes coated free sheet
paper and paperboard of a kind used for
writing, printing or other graphic
purposes. Coated free sheet paper is
produced from not–more-than 10
percent by weight mechanical or
combined chemical/mechanical fibers.
Coated free sheet paper is coated with
kaolin (China clay) or other inorganic
substances, with or without a binder,
and with no other coating. Coated free
sheet paper may be surface–colored,
surface–decorated, printed (except as
described below), embossed, or
perforated. The subject merchandise
includes single- and double–side-coated
free sheet paper; coated free sheet paper
in both sheet or roll form; and is
inclusive of all weights, brightness
levels, and finishes. The terms ‘‘wood
free’’ or ‘‘art’’ paper may also be used to
describe the imported product.
Excluded from the scope are: (1)
Coated free sheet paper that is imported
printed with final content printed text
or graphics; (2) base paper to be
sensitized for use in photography; and
(3) paper containing by weight 25
percent or more cotton fiber. Coated free
sheet paper is classifiable under
subheadings 4810.13.1900,
4810.13.2010, 4810.13.2090,
4810.13.5000, 4810.13.7040,
4810.14.1900, 4810.14.2010,
4810.14.2090, 4810.14.5000,
4810.14.7040, 4810.19.1900,
4810.19.2010, and 4810.19.2090 of the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the
United States (‘‘HTSUS’’). While
HTSUS subheadings are provided for
convenience and customs purposes, our
written description of the scope of this
investigation is dispositive.
Scope Comments
The Department set aside a period of
time for parties to raise issues regarding
product coverage, and encouraged all
parties to submit comments within 20
calendar days of publication of the
Initiation Notice. See Initiation Notice,
71 FR at 68538; see also Antidumping
Duties; Countervailing Duties; Final
Rule, 62 FR 27296, 27323 (May 19,
1997).
On January 12, 2007, the respondents
in the antidumping duty investigation of
CFS from Indonesia submitted timely
comments on the record of this
proceeding, in which they requested
that the Department exclude cast–coated
CFS from the scope of the investigation.
On January 19, 2007, the petitioner
responded to these comments. The
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Department has analyzed these
comments and rebuttal comments and
determined that it is not appropriate to
exclude cast–coated CFS from the scope
of the CFS investigations. See
memorandum regarding ‘‘Request to
Exclude Cast–Coated Free Sheet Paper
from the Antidumping Duty and
Countervailing Duty Investigations on
Coated Free Sheet Paper,’’ dated March
22, 2007, on file in the Central Records
Unit (‘‘CRU’’) of the main Department
building.
Non–Market-Economy (‘‘NME’’)
Treatment
The Department considers the PRC to
be an NME country. In accordance with
section 771(18)(C)(i) of the Act, any
determination that a country is an NME
country shall remain in effect until
revoked by the administering authority.
See Tapered Roller Bearings and Parts
Thereof, Finished and Unfinished,
(‘‘TRBs’’) From the People’s Republic of
China: Preliminary Results of 2001–
2002 Administrative Review and Partial
Rescission of Review, 68 FR 7500
(February 14, 2003), unchanged in TRBs
from the People’s Republic of China:
Final Results of 2001–2002
Administrative Review, 68 FR 70488
(December 18, 2003).
In its May 11, 2007 comments, the
BOFT argues that recent findings by the
Department in the countervailing duty
(‘‘CVD’’) investigation of CFS from the
PRC require the Department to treat the
PRC as a market–economy country.
Absent revocation of the PRC’s NME
status, the BOFT argues that those
recent findings require the Department
to immediately modify its NME
methodology by instituting: (1) a
presumption that all PRC exporters are
independent from government control
and entitled to separate rates; and (2) a
provision for granting market economy
treatment to certain respondents.
Additionally, the BOFT requests that, in
the instant investigation, the
Department: (1) exercise its discretion,
under the statute, and base normal value
(‘‘NV’’) on home market or third country
prices (given that home market values
were used in the companion CVD
investigation); and (2) adopt measures to
avoid imposing both antidumping and
countervailing duties to compensate for
the same unfair trade practice (‘‘double–
remedy’’).
In its May 11, 2007, comments
Chenming also argues that the
Department must adjust its antidumping
duty calculation to avoid a ‘‘double
remedy.’’
The petitioner urges the Department
to reject the BOFT’s and Chenming’s
arguments. According to the petitioner,
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the Department should reject the
BOFT’s proposal for treating the PRC as
a market economy country because the
proposal was submitted too late to be
considered in this investigation and
does not address the statutory and
regulatory criteria for granting market
economy or market–oriented industry
status. With respect to the double–
remedy, the petitioner makes the
following points: (1) adjusting the
dumping margin for domestic subsidies
is contrary to the statute; (2) the BOFT
has not supported its assertion that
domestic subsidies reduce export prices;
(3) the NME methodology was designed
to calculate NV in antidumping cases,
not provide a remedy for subsidization;
(4) the BOFT’s presumption that
surrogate values result in a subsidy–free
restatement of the NME producer’s costs
misconstrues the operation and purpose
of surrogate values (surrogate values do
not exactly replicate the NME
producer’s costs); (5) during its
accession to the World Trade
Organization (‘‘WTO’’), the PRC agreed
to be bound by the disciplines in the
WTO Agreement on Subsidies and
Countervailing Measures and the WTO
Agreement on the Implementation of
Article VI (the ‘‘Antidumping
Agreement’’), neither of which include
provisions about adjustments to be
made for domestic subsidies; and (6)
there is no basis for adjusting PRC
companies’ dumping margins for
domestic subsidies when no other U.S.
trading partner is granted such an
adjustment (in fact, the Government
Accountability Office stated that
granting special concessions to the PRC
to correct an alleged double remedy
would be ‘‘wholly inappropriate.’’).
The Department has not revoked its
determination that the PRC is a NME
country, nor has it altered in this
determination its NME methodology as
requested by the BOFT. With respect to
market–economy treatment of certain
entities, we note that on May 25, 2007,
the Department published a notice in
the Federal Register requesting
comments on whether it should
consider granting market–economy
treatment to individual respondents in
antidumping proceedings involving
China, the conditions under which
individual firms should be granted
market–economy treatment, and how
such treatment might affect our
antidumping calculation for such
qualifying respondents. See
Antidumping Methodologies in
Proceedings Involving Certain Non–
Market Economies: Market–Oriented
Enterprise, 72 FR 29302 (May 25, 2007).
The Department will address market–
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economy treatment of individual
respondents after considering the
comments submitted within that
process. We further note that the
question of whether a double remedy
has been or could be applied, or
whether the Department has the
authority to adjust for such a situation,
involves complex factual,
methodological and legal issues that
will require additional time to analyze.
In this regard, we note that the
comments we have received to date do
not address with sufficient specificity
the analytical and computational
methods by which one might attempt to
determine the existence and extent of
any alleged double remedy. Therefore,
the Department cannot at this time
determine whether an adjustment is
necessary nor, if so, calculate an
appropriate adjustment. However, the
Department will analyze comments
regarding the double remedy that are
submitted by interested parties during
the course of this investigation, and may
seek additional information on the
topic. Therefore, in this preliminary
determination, we have treated the PRC
as an NME country and applied our
current NME methodology.
Selection of a Surrogate Country
In antidumping proceedings involving
NME countries, the Department,
pursuant to section 773(c)(1) of the Act,
will generally base NV on the value of
the NME producer’s factors of
production. In accordance with section
773(c)(4) of the Act, in valuing the
factors of production, the Department
shall utilize, to the extent possible, the
prices or costs of factors of production
in one or more market–economy
countries that are at a level of economic
development comparable to that of the
NME country and are significant
producers of merchandise comparable
to the subject merchandise.
The Department has determined that
India, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, the
Philippines, and Egypt are countries
that are at a level of economic
development comparable to that of the
PRC. See memorandum regarding
‘‘Antidumping Duty Investigation of
Coated Free Sheet Paper from the
People’s Republic of China (PRC):
Request for a List of Surrogate
Countries,’’ dated January 22, 2007
(‘‘Policy Memorandum’’). From among
these economically comparable
countries, the Department has
preliminarily selected India as the
surrogate country for this investigation
because it determined that: (1) India is
a significant producer of merchandise
comparable to the subject merchandise
and (2) reliable Indian data for valuing
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the factors of production are readily
available. See memorandum regarding
‘‘Coated Free Sheet Paper from the
People’s Republic of China: Selection of
Surrogate Country’’ dated May 2, 2007.
Treating GE and Certain Other
Companies as a Single Entity
Based on record evidence, the
Department has preliminarily
determined that GE, Gold Huasheng
Paper Co., Ltd. (‘‘GHS’’), a paper
producer capable of producing subject
merchandise, and China Union (Macao
Commercial Offshore) Company Limited
(‘‘CU’’), a company that plays a role in
GE’s operations involving subject
merchandise, are affiliated pursuant to
section 771(33)(F) and (G) of the Act
(affiliation by virtue of control).
Moreover, the Department has
preliminarily determined that it is
appropriate to treat GE, GHS, and CU as
a single entity for antidumping duty
purposes. GE and GHS produce similar
merchandise and would not require
substantial retooling to restructure
manufacturing priorities.2 Additionally,
after considering the following criteria,
the Department determined that there
exists a significant potential for the
manipulation of price or production: (1)
the level of common ownership; (2) the
extent to which managerial employees
or board members of one firm sit on the
Board of Directors of an affiliated firm;
and (3) whether the companies’
operations are intertwined. See 19 CFR
351.401(f). Thus, the Department has
preliminarily collapsed GE, GHS, and
CU (collectively ‘‘GE’’). For details
regarding this decision, see
memorandum regarding ‘‘Whether to
Collapse Gold East Paper (Jiangsu) Co.,
Ltd. with Gold Huasheng Paper Co., Ltd.
and China Union (Macao Commercial
Offshore) Company Limited,’’ dated
concurrently with this notice.
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Separate Rates
In proceedings involving NME
countries, the Department has a
rebuttable presumption that all
companies within the country are
subject to government control and thus
should be assessed a single antidumping
duty rate. It is the Department’s policy
to assign all exporters of merchandise
subject to investigation involving an
NME country this single rate unless an
2 While CU is not a producer of CFS, we note that
where companies are affiliated, and there exists a
significant potential for manipulation of prices and/
or export decisions, the Department has found it
appropriate to treat those companies as a single
entity. The CIT upheld the Department’s decision
to include export decisions in its analysis of
whether there was a significant potential for
manipulation. See Hontex Enterprises v. United
States, 248 F. Supp. 2d 1323, 1343 (CIT 2003).
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exporter can demonstrate that it is
sufficiently independent so as to be
entitled to a separate rate. GE,
Chenming, and Yanzhou Tianzhang
provided company–specific information
to demonstrate that they operate
independently of de jure and de facto
government control, and therefore are
entitled to a separate rate.
The Department’s separate–rate test is
not concerned, in general, with
macroeconomic/border–type controls,
e.g., export licenses, quotas, and
minimum export prices, particularly if
these controls are imposed to prevent
dumping. See Notice of Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value: Certain Preserved
Mushrooms from the People’s Republic
of China, 63 FR 72255, 72256
(December 31, 1998). The test focuses,
rather, on controls over the investment,
pricing, and output decision–making
process at the individual firm level. See
Notice of Final Determination of Sales
at Less than Fair Value: Certain Cut–toLength Carbon Steel Plate From
Ukraine, 62 FR 61754, 61758 (November
19, 1997), and Tapered Roller Bearings
and Parts Thereof, Finished and
Unfinished, from the People’s Republic
of China: Final Results of Antidumping
Duty Administrative Review, 62 FR
61276, 61279 (November 17, 1997).
To establish whether a firm is
sufficiently independent from
government control of its export
activities to be entitled to a separate
rate, the Department analyzes each
entity exporting the subject
merchandise under a test arising from
the Notice of Final Determination of
Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Sparklers
from the People’s Republic of China, 56
FR 20588 (May 6, 1991) (‘‘Sparklers’’),
as further developed in Notice of Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value: Silicon Carbide from the
People’s Republic of China, 59 FR 22585
(May 2, 1994) (‘‘Silicon Carbide’’). In
accordance with the separate–rates
criteria, the Department assigns separate
rates in NME cases only if respondents
can demonstrate the absence of both de
jure and de facto governmental control
over export activities.
Absence of De Jure Control
The Department considers the
following de jure criteria in determining
whether an individual company may be
granted a separate rate: (1) an absence of
restrictive stipulations associated with
an individual exporter’s business and
export licenses; (2) any legislative
enactments decentralizing control of
companies; and (3) other formal
measures by the government
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30761
decentralizing control of companies. See
Sparklers, 56 FR at 20589.
Information submitted by GE,
Chenming, and Yanzhou Tianzhang
indicates that there are no restrictive
stipulations associated with their
exporter and/or business licenses; and
there are legislative enactments
decentralizing control of the companies.
Therefore, the Department has
preliminarily found a de jure absence of
government control over these
companies’ export activities. See
memorandum regarding ‘‘Separate
Rates’’ dated concurrently with this
notice (‘‘Separate Rates Memorandum’’).
Absence of De Facto Control
Typically the Department considers
four factors in evaluating whether each
respondent is subject to de facto
governmental control of its export
functions: (1) whether the export prices
are set by, or are subject to the approval
of, a governmental agency; (2) whether
the respondent has 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
disposition of profits or financing of
losses. See Silicon Carbide, 59 FR at
22586–87; see also Notice of Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value: Furfuryl Alcohol From the
People’s Republic of China, 60 FR
22544, 22545 (May 8, 1995). The
Department considers an analysis of de
facto control to be critical in
determining whether a respondent is, in
fact, subject to a degree of governmental
control that would preclude the
Department from assigning the
respondent a separate rate.
GE, Chenming, and Yanzhou
Tianzhang have each provided
information indicating that they: (1) set
export prices independent of the
government and without the approval of
a government authority; (2) have the
authority to negotiate and sign contracts
and other agreements; (3) have
autonomy from the government
regarding the selection of management;
and (4) retain proceeds from sales and
make independent decisions regarding
the disposition of profits or financing of
losses. Therefore, the Department has
preliminarily found a de facto absence
of government control over these
companies’ export activities.
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Based on the foregoing,3 the
Department has preliminarily granted
the two mandatory respondents, and
Yanzhou Tianzhang, separate,
company–specific dumping margins.
See Separate Rates Memorandum. The
Department calculated company–
specific dumping margins for GE, and
Chenming and assigned Yanzhou
Tianzhang a dumping margin equal to
the weighted–average of the dumping
margins calculated for GE and
Chenming.
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The PRC–Wide Entity
Although all PRC exporters of subject
merchandise to the United States were
given an opportunity to provide Q&V
information to the Department, not all
exporters responded to the Department’s
request for Q&V information.4 Based
upon our knowledge of the volume of
imports of subject merchandise from the
PRC, we have concluded that the
companies that responded to the Q&V
questionnaire do not account for all U.S.
imports during the POI of subject
merchandise from the PRC. We have
treated the non–responsive PRC
producers/exporters as part of the PRC–
wide entity because they did not qualify
for a separate rate.
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
subsections 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.
As noted above, the PRC–wide entity
withheld information requested by the
Department. As a result, pursuant to
section 776(a)(2)(A) of the Act, we find
it appropriate to base the PRC–wide
dumping margin on facts available. See
Notice of Preliminary Determination of
Sales at Less Than Fair Value,
Affirmative Preliminary Determination
of Critical Circumstances and
Postponement of Final Determination:
Certain Frozen Fish Fillets From the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 68 FR
3 Record information submitted regarding GHS
and CU, companies which the Department
collapsed with GE, also supports granting the
collapsed entity a separate rate. See Separate Rates
Memorandum.
4 The Department received only four timely
responses to the requests for Q&V information that
it sent to the 14 potential exporters identified in the
petition.
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4986 (January 31, 2003), unchanged in
Notice of Final Antidumping Duty
Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value and Affirmative Critical
Circumstances: Certain Frozen Fish
Fillets from the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam, 68 FR 37116 (June 23, 2003).
Section 776(b) of the Act provides
that, in selecting from among the facts
otherwise available, the Department
may employ an adverse inference if an
interested party fails to cooperate by not
acting to the best of its ability to comply
with requests for information. See
Notice of Final Determination of Sales
at Less Than Fair Value: Certain Cold–
Rolled Flat–Rolled Carbon–Quality Steel
Products From the Russian Federation,
65 FR 5510, 5518 (February 4, 2000); see
also ‘‘Statement of Administrative
Action,’’ accompanying the URAA, H.R.
Rep. No. 103–316, 870 (1994) (‘‘SAA’’).
Because the PRC–wide entity did not
respond to the Department’s request for
information, the Department has
concluded that it has failed to cooperate
to the best of its ability. Therefore, the
Department preliminarily finds that, in
selecting from among the facts available,
an adverse inference is appropriate.
Section 776(b) of the Act authorizes
the Department to use, as adverse facts
available (‘‘AFA’’), information derived
from the petition, the final
determination from the LTFV
investigation, a previous administrative
review, or any other information placed
on the record. In selecting a rate for
AFA, the Department selects one that is
sufficiently adverse ‘‘as to effectuate the
purpose of the facts available rule to
induce respondents to provide the
Department with complete and accurate
information in a timely manner.’’ See
Notice of Final Determination of Sales
at Less Than Fair Value: Static Random
Access Memory Semiconductors From
Taiwan, 63 FR 8909, 8932 (February 23,
1998). It is the Department’s practice to
select, as AFA, the higher of the (a)
highest margin alleged in the petition,
or (b) the highest calculated rate for any
respondent in the investigation. See
Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Certain Cold–Rolled
Flat–Rolled Carbon Quality Steel
Products From the People’s Republic of
China, 65 FR 34660 (May 21, 2000) and
accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum, at ‘‘Facts Available’’
section. Because the dumping margin
derived from the petition is higher than
the calculated weighted–average
margins for the mandatory respondents,
we examined whether it was
appropriate to base the PRC–wide
dumping margin on the secondary
information in the petition.
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Sfmt 4703
When the Department relies on
secondary information, rather than
information obtained in the course of an
investigation, section 776(c) of the Act
requires it to, to the extent practicable,
corroborate that information from
independent sources reasonably at its
disposal.5 The SAA also states that the
independent sources may include
published price lists, official import
statistics and customs data, and
information obtained from interested
parties during the particular
investigation. See SAA at 870.
The SAA also clarifies that
‘‘corroborate’’ means that the
Department will satisfy itself that the
secondary information to be used has
probative value. See SAA at 870. To
corroborate secondary information, the
Department will, to the extent
practicable, examine the reliability and
relevance of the information used. See
Tapered Roller Bearings and Parts
Thereof, Finished and Unfinished, From
Japan, and Tapered Roller Bearings,
Four Inches or Less in Outside
Diameter, and Components Thereof,
From Japan; Preliminary Results of
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Reviews and Partial Termination of
Administrative Reviews, 61 FR 57391,
57392 (November 6, 1996), unchanged
in Tapered Roller Bearings and Parts
Thereof, Finished and Unfinished, From
Japan, and Tapered Roller Bearings,
Four Inches or Less in Outside
Diameter, and Components Thereof,
From Japan: Final Results of
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Reviews and Termination in Part, 62 FR
11825 (March 13, 1997).
To corroborate the petition margin,
we compared the range of control
number–specific dumping margins
calculated for the preliminary
determination to the dumping margin
alleged in the petition. Based on this
comparison, we have preliminarily
corroborated the 99.65 percent dumping
from the petition. See memorandum
regarding ‘‘Corroboration of the PRC–
Wide Facts Available Rate for the
Preliminary Determination in the
Antidumping Duty Investigation of
Coated Free Sheet Paper from the
People’s Republic of China,’’ dated
concurrently with this notice. This
PRC–wide dumping margin applies to
all entries of the merchandise under
investigation except for entries of
subject merchandise from GE,
Chenming, and Yanzhou Tianzhang.
5 Secondary information is described in the SAA
as ‘‘information derived from the petition that gave
rise to the investigation or review, the final
determination concerning subject merchandise, or
any previous review under section 751 concerning
the subject merchandise.’’ See SAA at 870.
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Fair Value Comparisons
To determine whether GE or
Chenming sold CFS to the United States
at LTFV, we compared the weighted–
average export price (‘‘EP’’) or
constructed export price (‘‘CEP’’), as
appropriate, of the CFS to the NV of the
CFS, as described in the ‘‘U.S. Price,’’
and ‘‘NV’’ sections of this notice.
U.S. Price
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
EP
In accordance with section 772(a) of
the Act, we based the U.S. price for
certain sales on EP because the first sale
to an unaffiliated purchaser was made
prior to importation, and the use of CEP
was not otherwise warranted. In
accordance with section 772(c) of the
Act, we calculated EP by deducting,
where applicable, the following
expenses from the starting price (gross
unit price) charged to the first
unaffiliated customer in the United
States: rebates, foreign movement
expenses, marine insurance,
international freight, and foreign and
U.S. brokerage and handling expenses.
We based these movement expenses
on surrogate values where a PRC
company provided the service and was
paid in Renminbi (‘‘RMB’’). If market–
economy service providers, who were
paid in a market economy currency,
provided movement services for over 33
percent of subject merchandise
shipments, by volume, we based the
movement expenses on the actual price
charged by the service provider. If
market–economy service providers, who
were paid in a market economy
currency, provided movement services
for less than 33 percent of subject
merchandise shipments, by volume, we
calculated the movement expenses by
weight–averaging surrogate values with
the actual price charged by the service
provider. See Antidumping
Methodologies: Market Economy Inputs,
Expected Non–Market Economy Wages,
Duty Drawback; and Request for
Comments, 71 FR 61716 (October 19,
2006) (‘‘Notice for Antidumping
Methodologies’’). For details regarding
our EP calculation, see analysis
memoranda for GE and Chenming dated
concurrently with this notice.
CEP
In accordance with section 772(b) of
the Act, we based the U.S. price for
certain sales on CEP because these sales
were made by GE’s and Chenming’s U.S.
affiliates. In accordance with section
772(c)(2)(A) of the Act, we calculated
CEP by deducting, where applicable, the
following expenses from the starting
price (gross unit price) charged to the
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20:34 Jun 01, 2007
Jkt 211001
first unaffiliated customer in the United
States: early payment discounts, billing
adjustments, rebates, foreign movement
expenses, international freight, marine
insurance, and U.S. movement
expenses, including brokerage and
handling. Further, in accordance with
section 772(d)(1) of the Act and 19 CFR
351.402(b), where appropriate, we
deducted from the starting price the
following selling expenses associated
with economic activities occurring in
the United States: credit expenses,
warranty expenses, other direct selling
expenses, and indirect selling expenses.
In addition, pursuant to section 772(3)
of the Act, we made an adjustment to
the starting price for CEP profit. We
based movement expenses on either
surrogate values, actual expenses, or an
average of the two as explained above in
the ‘‘EP’’ section of this notice.
NV
In accordance with section 773(c) of
the Act, we constructed NV from the
factors of production employed by the
respondents to manufacture subject
merchandise during the POI.
Specifically, we calculated NV by
adding together the value of the factors
of production, general expenses, profit,
and packing costs. We valued the factors
of production using prices and financial
statements from the surrogate country,
India, or, where appropriate, the market
economy prices paid for the factor (see
further discussion below). In selecting
surrogate values, we followed, to the
extent practicable, the Department’s
practice of choosing values which are
non–export average values,
contemporaneous with, or closest in
time to, the POI, product–specific, and
tax–exclusive. See e.g., Notice of
Preliminary Determination of Sales at
Less Than Fair Value, Negative
Preliminary Determination of Critical
Circumstances and Postponement of
Final Determination: Certain Frozen
and Canned Warmwater Shrimp From
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 69 FR
42672, 42682 (July 16, 2004), unchanged
in Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Certain Frozen and
Canned Warmwater Shrimp from the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 69 FR
71005 (December 8, 2004) (‘‘Shrimp
from Vietnam’’). We also considered the
quality of the source of surrogate
information in selecting surrogate
values.
We valued material inputs and
packing by multiplying the amount of
the factor consumed in producing
subject merchandise by the average unit
value of the factor. We derived the
average unit value of the factor from
Indian import statistics. In addition, we
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Sfmt 4703
30763
added freight costs to the surrogate costs
that we calculated for material inputs.
We calculated freight costs by
multiplying surrogate freight rates by
the shorter of the reported distance from
the domestic supplier to the factory that
produced the subject merchandise or
the distance from the nearest seaport to
the factory that produced the subject
merchandise, as appropriate. This
adjustment is in accordance with the
Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit’s decision in Sigma Corp. v.
United States, 117 F. 3d 1401, 1407–
1408 (Fed. Cir. 1997). Where we could
only obtain surrogate values that were
not contemporaneous with the POI, we
inflated (or deflated) the surrogate
values using, where appropriate, the
Indian Wholesale Price Index (‘‘WPI’’)
as published in the International
Financial Statistics of the International
Monetary Fund.
Further, in calculating surrogate
values from Indian imports, we
disregarded imports from Indonesia,
South Korea, and Thailand because, in
other proceedings, the Department
found that these countries maintain
broadly available, non–industry-specific
export subsidies. Therefore, it is
reasonable to infer that all exports to all
markets from these countries may be
subsidized. See Notice of Amended
Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Certain Automotive
Replacement Glass Windshields from
the People’s Republic of China, 67 FR
11670 (March 15, 2002); see also Notice
of Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value and Negative Final
Determination of Critical
Circumstances: Certain Color Television
Receivers From the People’s Republic of
China, 69 FR 20594 (April 16, 2004).6
Therefore, we have not used prices from
these countries either in calculating the
Indian import–based surrogate values or
in calculating market–economy input
values. In instances where a market–
economy input was obtained solely
from suppliers located in these
countries, we used Indian import–based
surrogate values to value the input. See
Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Certain Automotive
Replacement Glass Windshields From
The People’s Republic of China, 67 FR
6482 (February 12, 2002), and
accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum at Comment 1.
6 We note that legislative history directs the
Department not to conduct a formal investigation to
ensure that such prices are not subsidized. See H.R.
Rep. 100-576 at 590 (1988). Rather, Congress
directed the Department to base its decision on
information that is available to it at the time it
makes its determination.
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rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
During the POI, GE and Chenming
purchased all or a portion of certain
inputs from a market economy supplier
and paid for the inputs in a market
economy currency. The Department has
instituted a rebuttable presumption that
market economy input prices are the
best available information for valuing an
input when the total volume of the
input purchased from all market
economy sources during the period of
investigation or review exceeds 33
percent of the total volume of the input
purchased from all sources during the
period.7 In these cases, unless case–
specific facts provide adequate grounds
to rebut the Department’s presumption,
the Department will use the weighted–
average market economy purchase price
to value the input. Alternatively, when
the volume of an NME firm’s purchases
of an input from market economy
suppliers during the period is below 33
percent of its total volume of purchases
of the input during the period, but
where these purchases are otherwise
valid and there is no reason to disregard
the prices, the Department will weight–
average the weighted–average market
economy purchase price with an
appropriate surrogate value according to
their respective shares of the total
volume of purchases, unless case–
specific facts provide adequate grounds
to rebut the presumption. When a firm
has made market economy input
purchases that may have been dumped
or subsidized, are not bona fide, or are
otherwise not acceptable for use in a
dumping calculation, the Department
will exclude them from the numerator
of the ratio to ensure a fair
determination of whether valid market
economy purchases meet the 33 percent
threshold. See Notice for Antidumping
Methodologies. Accordingly, we valued
GE’s and Chenming’s inputs using the
market economy prices paid for the
inputs where the total volume of the
input purchased from all market
economy sources during the POI
exceeded 33 percent of the total volume
of the input purchased from all sources
during that period. Alternatively, when
the volume of GE’s or Chenming’s
purchases of an input from market
economy suppliers during the POI was
below 33 percent of the company’s total
7 Notwithstanding the determination the
Department reached in Shrimp from Vietnam, at
Comment 8, the Department will examine if and
when the inputs were used in the production
process when case-specific conditions demand it.
Unless there are case-specific reasons to examine
other criteria, the Department will base its decision
on whether to accept market economy input
purchases to value the input on the relative share
of market economy purchases during the period of
investigation or review to total purchases during
that period.
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20:34 Jun 01, 2007
Jkt 211001
volume of purchases of the input during
the POI, we weight–averaged the
weighted–average market economy
purchase price with an appropriate
surrogate value according to their
respective shares of the total volume of
purchases, as appropriate. Where
appropriate, we increased the market
economy prices of inputs by freight and
brokerage and handling expenses. See
GE’s Factor Value Memorandum and
Chenming’s Factor Value Memorandum.
We valued raw materials and packing
materials using Indian Import Statistics,
except as noted below.
We valued diesel fuel and purchased
electricity using rates from Key World
Energy Statistics 2005, and Key World
Energy Statistics 2003, respectively,
published by the International Energy
Agency. Because these data were not
contemporaneous with the POI, we
inflated the values using the WPI. See
Factor Value Memoranda.
We valued natural gas using a value
obtained from the Gas Authority of
India Ltd.’s website, a supplier of
natural gas in India. See https://
www.gailonline.com/gailnewsite/
index.html. The value relates to the
period January through June 2002.
Therefore, we inflated the value using
the appropriate WPI inflator. In
addition, we added transportation
charges to the value. See Surrogate
Value Memorandum and Polyvinyl
Alcohol From the People’s Republic of
China: Final Results of Antidumping
Duty Administrative Review, 71 FR
27991 (May 15, 2006), and
accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum at Comment 2.
Consistent with 19 CFR 351.408(c)(3),
we valued direct, indirect, and packing
labor, using the most recently calculated
regression–based wage rate, which relies
on 2004 data. This wage rate can
currently be found on the Department’s
website on Import Administration’s
home page, Import Library, Expected
Wages of Selected NME Countries,
revised in January 2007, https://
ia.ita.doc.gov/wages/. The
source of these wage–rate data on the
Import Administration’s web site is the
Yearbook of Labour Statistics 2002, ILO
(Geneva: 2002), Chapter 5B: Wages in
Manufacturing. 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 GE and Chenming. See
Factor Value Memoranda.
We valued water using data from the
Maharashtra Industrial Development
Corporation (www.midcindia.org) since
it includes a wide range of industrial
water tariffs. This source provides 386
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
industrial water rates within the
Maharashtra province from June 2003:
193 for the ‘‘inside industrial areas’’
usage category and 193 for the ‘‘outside
industrial areas’’ usage category.
Because the value was not
contemporaneous with the POI, we
inflated the rate using the WPI. See
Factor Value Memoranda.
We valued truck freight expenses
using a per kilometer per kilogram
average rate from data obtained from the
web site of an Indian transportation
company, InFreight Technologies India
Limited. See https://www.infreight.com/.
This average rate was used by the
Department in the antidumping duty
administrative review of Saccharin from
the People’s Republic of China;
Preliminary Results of the 2005–2006
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review, 72 FR 25247 (May 4, 2007).
Because this value is not
contemporaneous with the POI, we
inflated the rate using the WPI. See
Factor Value Memoranda.
We used two sources to calculate the
surrogate value for domestic brokerage
and handling expenses. We averaged
publicly available brokerage and
handling data reported by Essar Steel in
the antidumping duty administrative
review of hot–rolled carbon steel flat
products from India with publicly
available brokerage and handling data
reported by Agro Dutch Industries
Limited (‘‘Agro Dutch’’) in the
antidumping duty administrative review
of certain preserved mushrooms from
India. See Certain Hot–Rolled Carbon
Steel Flat Products From India:
Preliminary Results of Antidumping
Duty Administrative Review, 71 FR
2018, 2022 (January 12, 2006) (Essar
Steel’s February 28, 2005, submission);
see also Certain Preserved Mushrooms
From India: Final Results of
Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review, 70 FR 37757 (June 30, 2005)
(Agro Dutch’s May 24, 2005,
submission). See Factor Value
Memoranda.
We valued marine insurance using a
price quote from https://
www.rjgconsultants.com/
insurance.html, a market–economy
provider of marine insurance. See GE’s
Factor Value Memorandum.
We valued factory overhead, selling,
general, and administrative (SG&A)
expenses, and profit, using the audited
financial statements from the following
Indian companies: Seshasayee Paper
and Boards Ltd., JK Paper, Ltd., and
Ballarpur Industries Ltd.. See Factor
Value Memoranda. We selected the
above–referenced financial statements
from among the financial statements
placed on the record by interested
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parties because these companies
produce subject merchandise and, like
the respondents, do so by producing
wood free paper and coating it.
Because the financial statements that
we are using as surrogates do not
separately report manufacturing and
non–manufacturing labor costs, the
petitioner proposes allocating the line
item for labor costs on these financial
statements between manufacturing labor
costs and SG&A labor costs.
Specifically, the petitioner suggests
allocating the line item for labor costs
using data from an annual survey of the
Indian paper and paper products
industry which identifies wages paid to
all employees and wages paid to
workers (defined as persons employed
in any manufacturing process).
Generally, the Department does not
adjust the data used to calculate
financial ratios because it is concerned
that such adjustments may introduce
unintended distortions into the data.
See Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Wooden Bedroom
Furniture From the People’s Republic of
China, 69 FR 67313 (November 17,
2004) and accompanying Issues and
Decision Memorandum at Comment 12.
Thus, for the preliminary determination,
we have not adjusted labor costs in the
surrogate financial statements.
Nevertheless, the Department intends to
revisit this issue for the final
determination.
In accordance with 19 CFR
351.301(c)(3)(i), interested parties may
submit publicly available information
with which to value factors of
production in the final determination
within 40 days after the date of
publication of the preliminary
determination.
Currency Conversion
We made currency conversions into
U.S. dollars, in accordance with section
773A(a) of the Act, based on the
exchange rates in effect on the dates of
the U.S. sales as certified by the Federal
Reserve Bank.
Verification
As provided in section 782(i)(1) of the
Act, we intend to verify the information
upon which we will rely in making our
final determination.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
Combination Rates
In the Initiation Notice, the
Department stated that it would
calculate combination rates for certain
respondents that are eligible for a
separate rate in this investigation. See
Initiation Notice. This change in
practice is described in Policy Bulletin
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20:34 Jun 01, 2007
Jkt 211001
05.1, available at https://ia.ita.doc.gov/.
Policy Bulletin 05.1, states:
{w}hile continuing the practice of
assigning separate rates only to
exporters, all separate rates that the
Department will now assign in its
NME investigations will be specific
to those producers that supplied the
exporter during the period of
investigation. Note, however, that
one rate is calculated for the
exporter and all of the producers
which supplied subject
merchandise to it during the period
of investigation. This practice
applies both to mandatory
respondents receiving an
individually calculated separate
rate as well as the pool of non–
investigated firms receiving the
weighted–average of the
individually calculated rates. This
practice is referred to as the
application of ‘‘combination rates’’
because such rates apply to specific
combinations of exporters and one
or more producers. The cash–
deposit rate assigned to an exporter
will apply only to merchandise
both exported by the firm in
question and produced by a firm
that supplied the exporter during
the period of investigation.
See Policy Bulletin 05.1, ‘‘Separate Rates
Practice and Application of
Combination Rates in Antidumping
Investigations Involving Non–Market
Economy Countries.’’
30765
and Border Protection (‘‘CBP’’) to
suspend liquidation of all entries of CFS
from the PRC as described in the ‘‘Scope
of the Investigation’’ section, entered, or
withdrawn from warehouse, for
consumption from GE’s collapsed entity
(i.e., GE, GHS, and CU), Chenming,
Yanzhou Tianzhang, and the PRC–wide
entity on or after the date of publication
of this notice in the Federal Register.
We will instruct CBP to require a cash
deposit or the posting of a bond equal
to the weighted–average amount by
which the NV exceeds U.S. price, as
indicated above. The suspension of
liquidation will remain in effect until
further notice.
International Trade Commission
Notification
In accordance with section 733(f) of
the Act, we have notified the ITC of our
preliminary affirmative determination of
sales at LTFV. Section 735(b)(2) of the
Act requires the ITC to make its final
determination as to whether the
domestic industry in the United States
is materially injured, or threatened with
material injury, by reason of imports of
CFS, or sales (or the likelihood of sales)
for importation, of the subject
merchandise within 45 days of our final
determination.
Public Comment
Case briefs or other written comments
may be submitted to the Assistant
Secretary for Import Administration no
later than seven days after the date the
final verification report is issued in this
Preliminary Determination
proceeding and rebuttal briefs, limited
The weighted–average dumping
to issues raised in case briefs, no later
margins are as follows:
than five days after the deadline for
Weighted– submitting case briefs. A list of
authorities used and an executive
Exporter & Producer
Average
Margin
summary of issues should accompany
any briefs submitted to the Department.
GE’s Collapsed Entity: ................ .................. This summary should be limited to five
(Gold East Paper (Jiangsu) Co.
pages total, including footnotes.
Ltd.-Gold Hua Sheng Paper
In accordance with section 774 of the
(Suzhou Industry Park) Co.
Act, we will hold a public hearing, if
Ltd.-China Union (Macao
requested, to afford interested parties an
Commercial Offshore) Company Ltd.) ................................
23.19 % opportunity to comment on arguments
raised in case or rebuttal briefs. If a
Shandong Chenming Paper
Holdings Ltd. ...........................
48.07 % request for a hearing is made, we intend
Yanzhou Tianzhang Paper Into hold the hearing three days after the
dustry Co. Ltd. ........................
30.22 % deadline of submission of rebuttal briefs
PRC–Wide Rate .........................
99.65 % at the U.S. Department of Commerce,
14th Street and Constitution Ave, NW,
Disclosure
Washington, DC 20230, at a time and
location to be determined. Parties
We will disclose the calculations
should confirm by telephone the date,
performed within five days of the date
of publication of this notice to parties in time, and location of the hearing two
days before the scheduled date.
this proceeding in accordance with 19
Interested parties who wish to request
CFR 351.224(b).
a hearing, or to participate if one is
Suspension of Liquidation
requested, must submit a written
In accordance with section 733(d) of
request to the Assistant Secretary for
the Act, we will instruct U.S. Customs
Import Administration, U.S. Department
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
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30766
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 106 / Monday, June 4, 2007 / Notices
of Commerce, Room 1870, within 30
days after the date of publication of this
notice. See 19 CFR 351.310(c). Requests
should contain the party’s name,
address, and telephone number, the
number of participants, and a list of the
issues to be discussed. At the hearing,
each party may make an affirmative
presentation only on issues raised in
that party’s case brief and may make
rebuttal presentations only on
arguments included in that party’s
rebuttal brief.
Postponement of Final Determination
and Extension of Provisional Measures
Pursuant to section 735(a)(2) of the
Act, on May 11, 2007, GE requested that
in the event of an affirmative
preliminary determination in this
investigation, the Department postpone
its final determination by 60 days. At
the same time, GE requested that the
Department extend the application of
the provisional measures prescribed
under 19 CFR 351.210(e)(2) from a 4month period to a 6-month period. In
accordance with section 733(d) of the
Act and 19 CFR 351.210(b), because (1)
our preliminary determination is
affirmative, (2) the requesting exporter
accounts for a significant proportion of
exports of the subject merchandise, and
(3) no compelling reasons for denial
exist, we are granting the request and
are postponing the final determination
until no later than 135 days after the
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register. Suspension of liquidation will
be extended accordingly.
This determination is issued and
published in accordance with sections
733(f) and 777(i)(1) of the Act.
Dated: May 29, 2007.
David M. Spooner,
Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration.
[FR Doc. E7–10705 Filed 6–1–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[A–580–856]
Coated Free Sheet Paper from the
Republic of Korea: Notice of
Preliminary Determination of Sales at
Less Than Fair Value and
Postponement of Final Determination
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of
Commerce (‘‘the Department’’)
preliminarily determines that coated
free sheet paper (‘‘CFS paper’’) from the
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:34 Jun 01, 2007
Jkt 211001
Republic of Korea (‘‘Korea’’) is being, or
is likely to be, sold in the United States
at less than fair value (‘‘LTFV’’), as
provided in section 733(b) of the Tariff
Act of 1930, as amended (‘‘the Act’’).
The estimated margins of sales at LTFV
are listed in the ‘‘Suspension of
Liquidation’’ section of this notice.
Interested parties are invited to
comment on this preliminary
determination. Pursuant to requests
from interested parties, we are
postponing for 60 days the final
determination and extending the
provisional measure from a four-month
period to not more than six months.
Accordingly, we will make our final
determination not later than 135 days
after publication of the preliminary
determination.
EFFECTIVE DATE: June 4, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brian Ledgerwood (Kyesung Paper Co.,
Ltd.), Dennis McClure (EN Paper Mfg.
Co., Ltd.), Stephanie Moore (Moorim
Paper Co., Ltd. and Moorim SP Co.,
Ltd.), or Joy Zhang (Hankuk Paper Mfg.
Co., Ltd. and Hansol Paper Co., Ltd.),
AD/CVD Operations, Office 3, Import
Administration, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution
Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20230;
telephone (202) 482–3836, (202) 482–
5973, (202) 482–3692, or (202) 482–
1168, respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On November 27, 2006, the
Department initiated an antidumping
duty investigation of CFS from Korea.
See Initiation of Antidumping Duty
Investigations: Coated Free Sheet Paper
From Indonesia, the People’s Republic
of China, and the Republic of Korea, 71
FR 68537 (November 27, 2006)
(‘‘Initiation Notice’’). The petitioner in
this investigation is NewPage
Corporation.
The Department set aside a period of
time for parties to raise issues regarding
product coverage and encouraged all
parties to submit comments within 20
calendar days of publication of the
Initiation Notice. See Initiation Notice,
71 FR at 68538; see also Antidumping
Duties; Countervailing Duties; Final
Rule, 62 FR 27296, 27323 (May 19,
1997). On January 12, 2007, the
Indonesian Respondents submitted
scope comments. See Scope Comments
section, below.
On December 11, 2006, the petitioner
submitted comments on model–
matching criteria. On December 18,
2006, respondents Hansol Paper Co.,
Ltd. (‘‘Hansol’’), Moorim Paper Co., Ltd.
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
and Moorim SP Co., Ltd. (‘‘Moorim’’)
(formerly Shinmoorim Paper Mfg. Co.,
Ltd.), and EN Paper Mfg. Co., Ltd. (‘‘EN
Paper’’) (formerly Shinho Paper Co.,
Ltd.) submitted comments on model–
matching criteria. On February 15, 2007,
Hansol submitted additional comments
on model–matching criteria. See Model
Match section, below.
Section 777A(c)(1) of the Act directs
the Department to calculate individual
dumping margins for each known
exporter and producer of the subject
merchandise. The Department identified
a large number of producers and
exporters of CFS paper in Korea and
determined that it was not practicable to
examine each known exporter/producer
of the subject merchandise, as provided
in section 777A(c)(1) of the Act. Thus,
we selected to investigate EN Paper,
Moorim, and Hansol. These three
exporters/producers accounted for the
largest volume of subject merchandise
exported to the United States during the
period of investigation (‘‘POI’’). See
section 777A(c)(2)(i)(B) of the Act; See
Memorandum from the Team, through
Office Director Melissa Skinner, to
Deputy Assistant Secretary Stephen J.
Claeys, entitled ‘‘Regarding Selection of
Respondents,’’ dated December 21,
2006. We subsequently issued the
antidumping questionnaire1 to these
companies on December 22, 2006.
On December 22, 2006, the United
States International Trade Commission
(‘‘ITC’’) preliminarily determined that
there is a reasonable indication that
imports of CFS paper from China,
Indonesia and Korea are materially
injuring the U.S. industry and the ITC
notified the Department of its findings.
See Coated Free Sheet Paper from
China, Indonesia, and Korea,
Investigation Nos. 701–TA–444–446
(Preliminary) and 731–TA–1107–1109
(Preliminary), 71 FR 78464 (December
29, 2006).
On December 28, 2006, counsel to
petitioner met with the Department to
discuss the Department’s December 21,
2006, respondent selection
memorandum and petitioner’s
December 22, 2006, submission
requesting the Department to select an
1 Section A of the questionnaire requests general
information concerning a company’s corporate
structure and business practices, the merchandise
under investigation that it sells, and the manner in
which it sells that merchandise in all of its markets.
Section B requests a complete listing of all home
market sales or, if the home market is not viable,
of sales in the most appropriate third-country
market. Section C requests a complete listing of U.S.
sales. Section D requests information on the cost of
production of the foreign like product and the
constructed value of the merchandise under
investigation. Section E requests information on
further manufacturing.
E:\FR\FM\04JNN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 106 (Monday, June 4, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 30758-30766]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-10705]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[A-570-906]
Preliminary Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value and
Postponement of Final Determination: Coated Free Sheet Paper from the
People's Republic of China
AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
EFFECTIVE DATE: June 4, 2007.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce (the ``Department'') preliminarily
determines that coated free sheet paper (``CFS'') from the People's
Republic of China (``PRC'') is being, or is likely to be, sold in the
United States at less than fair value (``LTFV''), as provided in
section 733 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (``Act''). The
estimated dumping margins are shown in the ``Preliminary
Determination'' section of this notice.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Magd Zalok or Drew Jackson, AD/CVD
Operations, Office 4, Import Administration, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, DC, 20230; telephone: (202) 482-
4162 or 482-4406, respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On October 31, 2006, the Department received petitions concerning
imports of CFS from the PRC, Indonesia, and the Republic of Korea
(``Korea'') filed in proper form by NewPage Corporation
(``petitioner'') on behalf of the domestic industry. The Department
initiated antidumping duty investigations of CFS from the above-
mentioned countries on November 20, 2006. See Initiation of Antidumping
Duty Investigations: Coated Free Sheet Paper from Indonesia, the
People's Republic of China, and the Republic of Korea, 71 FR 68537
(November 27, 2006) (``Initiation Notice''). On December 22, 2006, the
International Trade Commission (``ITC'') preliminarily determined that
there is a reasonable indication that imports of CFS from the PRC,
Indonesia, and Korea are materially injuring the U.S. industry. See
Coated Free Sheet Paper From China, Indonesia, and Korea, Investigation
Nos. 701-TA-444-446 and 731-TA-1107-1109 (Preliminary), 71 FR 78464
(December 29, 2006).
On November 29, 2006, the Department requested quantity and value
(``Q&V'') information from 14
[[Page 30759]]
companies identified in the petition as potential producers or
exporters of CFS from the PRC. See Exhibit 5, Volume I, of the October
31, 2006 Petition for the Imposition of Antidumping and Countervailing
Duties.
On December 27, 2006, the Department received Q&V responses from
four interested parties. Additionally, on January 3, 2007, the
Department received an untimely Q&V response from UPM-Kymmene
(Changshu) Paper Industry Co., Ltd. (``UPM''), which we rejected. See
letter to UPM concerning ``Return of Untimely Submission of Quantity
and Value Information'' dated January 11, 2007.
On December 27, 2006, the Department received a separate-rate
application from Yanzhou Tianzhang Paper Industry Co. Ltd. (``Yanzhou
Tianzhang''), a producer and exporter not named in the petition.
Additionally, on January 26, 2007, the Department received a separate-
rate application from UPM, which we rejected. See letter to UPM
concerning ``Submissions by UPM-Kymmene (Changshu) Paper Industry Co.,
Ltd.'' dated February 8, 2007.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See also the submissions to the Department from UPM dated
January 29, 2007, February 1, 2007, and February 5, 2007, and from
the petitioner dated February 2, 2007.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On January 10, 2007, the Department selected Gold East Paper
(Jiangsu) Co. Ltd, (``GE''), and Shandong Chenming Paper Holdings
Limited (``Chenming'') as mandatory respondents. See memorandum
regarding ``Selection of Respondents for the Antidumping Investigation
of Coated Free Sheet Paper from the People's Republic of China,'' dated
January 10, 2007 (``Respondent Selection Memorandum'').
On January 11, 2007, we issued the Department's antidumping
questionnaire to the mandatory respondents. GE and Chenming submitted
timely responses to the Department's questionnaire during February and
March 2007. The Department issued supplemental questionnaires to, and
received responses from, GE and Chenming from February to May 2007. The
petitioner submitted comments to the Department regarding GE's and
Chenming's questionnaire and supplemental questionnaire responses from
February to April 2007.
On January 24, 2007, the Department released a memorandum in which
it listed potential surrogate countries and invited interested parties
to comment on surrogate country and factor value selection. No party
responded to the Department's invitation to comment on surrogate
country selection. However, from March to May, 2007, both the
petitioner and the respondents submitted surrogate values, including
surrogate financial statements, for use in this investigation. All of
the submitted surrogate data are from India.
On February 15, 2007, the respondent in the antidumping duty
investigation of CFS from Korea submitted comments to the Department
regarding the appropriate model matching criteria. The Department
received no rebuttal comments on model matching.
On March 1, 2007, the petitioner made a timely request, pursuant to
19 CFR 351.205(e), for a fifty-day postponement of the preliminary
determination in this investigation. On March 19, 2007, pursuant to
section 733(c)(1)(A) of the Act, the Department postponed the
preliminary determination until no later than May 29, 2007. See
Postponement of Preliminary Determinations in the Antidumping Duty
Investigations of Coated Free Sheet Paper from the People's Republic of
China, Indonesia, and the Republic of Korea, 72 FR 12757 (March 19,
2007). On May 11, 2007, the petitioner, the respondents, and the Bureau
of Fair Trade, Ministry of Commerce, People's Republic of China
(``BOFT''), submitted comments to the Department regarding issues they
would like addressed in the preliminary determination. In addition, on
May 11, 2007, UPM filed a submission with the Department in which it
requested that the Department reconsider its decision not to accept the
company's untimely Q&V response. For the reasons given in the
Department's January 11, and February 8, 2007 letters to UPM, the
Department has not reversed its earlier decision to reject UPM's
separate-rate application and untimely Q&V response.
Also, on May 11, 2007, GE requested that, in the event of an
affirmative preliminary determination in this investigation, the
Department: (1) postpone its final determination by 60 days in
accordance with 19 CFR 351.210(2)(ii) and 735(a)(2)(A) of the Act; and
(2) extend the application of the provisional measures prescribed under
19 CFR 351.210(e)(2) from a 4-month period to a 6-month period.
Finally, on May 18, 2007, the petitioner responded to the BOFT's May
11, 2007 comments.
Period of Investigation
The period of investigation (``POI'') is April 1, 2006, through
September 30, 2006. This period comprises the two fiscal quarters
immediately prior to the month in which the petition was filed (October
31, 2006). See 19 CFR 351.204(b)(1).
Scope of the Investigation
The merchandise covered by this investigation includes coated free
sheet paper and paperboard of a kind used for writing, printing or
other graphic purposes. Coated free sheet paper is produced from not-
more-than 10 percent by weight mechanical or combined chemical/
mechanical fibers. Coated free sheet paper is coated with kaolin (China
clay) or other inorganic substances, with or without a binder, and with
no other coating. Coated free sheet paper may be surface-colored,
surface-decorated, printed (except as described below), embossed, or
perforated. The subject merchandise includes single- and double-side-
coated free sheet paper; coated free sheet paper in both sheet or roll
form; and is inclusive of all weights, brightness levels, and finishes.
The terms ``wood free'' or ``art'' paper may also be used to describe
the imported product.
Excluded from the scope are: (1) Coated free sheet paper that is
imported printed with final content printed text or graphics; (2) base
paper to be sensitized for use in photography; and (3) paper containing
by weight 25 percent or more cotton fiber. Coated free sheet paper is
classifiable under subheadings 4810.13.1900, 4810.13.2010,
4810.13.2090, 4810.13.5000, 4810.13.7040, 4810.14.1900, 4810.14.2010,
4810.14.2090, 4810.14.5000, 4810.14.7040, 4810.19.1900, 4810.19.2010,
and 4810.19.2090 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States
(``HTSUS''). While HTSUS subheadings are provided for convenience and
customs purposes, our written description of the scope of this
investigation is dispositive.
Scope Comments
The Department set aside a period of time for parties to raise
issues regarding product coverage, and encouraged all parties to submit
comments within 20 calendar days of publication of the Initiation
Notice. See Initiation Notice, 71 FR at 68538; see also Antidumping
Duties; Countervailing Duties; Final Rule, 62 FR 27296, 27323 (May 19,
1997).
On January 12, 2007, the respondents in the antidumping duty
investigation of CFS from Indonesia submitted timely comments on the
record of this proceeding, in which they requested that the Department
exclude cast-coated CFS from the scope of the investigation. On January
19, 2007, the petitioner responded to these comments. The
[[Page 30760]]
Department has analyzed these comments and rebuttal comments and
determined that it is not appropriate to exclude cast-coated CFS from
the scope of the CFS investigations. See memorandum regarding ``Request
to Exclude Cast-Coated Free Sheet Paper from the Antidumping Duty and
Countervailing Duty Investigations on Coated Free Sheet Paper,'' dated
March 22, 2007, on file in the Central Records Unit (``CRU'') of the
main Department building.
Non-Market-Economy (``NME'') Treatment
The Department considers the PRC to be an NME country. In
accordance with section 771(18)(C)(i) of the Act, any determination
that a country is an NME country shall remain in effect until revoked
by the administering authority. See Tapered Roller Bearings and Parts
Thereof, Finished and Unfinished, (``TRBs'') From the People's Republic
of China: Preliminary Results of 2001-2002 Administrative Review and
Partial Rescission of Review, 68 FR 7500 (February 14, 2003), unchanged
in TRBs from the People's Republic of China: Final Results of 2001-2002
Administrative Review, 68 FR 70488 (December 18, 2003).
In its May 11, 2007 comments, the BOFT argues that recent findings
by the Department in the countervailing duty (``CVD'') investigation of
CFS from the PRC require the Department to treat the PRC as a market-
economy country. Absent revocation of the PRC's NME status, the BOFT
argues that those recent findings require the Department to immediately
modify its NME methodology by instituting: (1) a presumption that all
PRC exporters are independent from government control and entitled to
separate rates; and (2) a provision for granting market economy
treatment to certain respondents. Additionally, the BOFT requests that,
in the instant investigation, the Department: (1) exercise its
discretion, under the statute, and base normal value (``NV'') on home
market or third country prices (given that home market values were used
in the companion CVD investigation); and (2) adopt measures to avoid
imposing both antidumping and countervailing duties to compensate for
the same unfair trade practice (``double-remedy'').
In its May 11, 2007, comments Chenming also argues that the
Department must adjust its antidumping duty calculation to avoid a
``double remedy.''
The petitioner urges the Department to reject the BOFT's and
Chenming's arguments. According to the petitioner, the Department
should reject the BOFT's proposal for treating the PRC as a market
economy country because the proposal was submitted too late to be
considered in this investigation and does not address the statutory and
regulatory criteria for granting market economy or market-oriented
industry status. With respect to the double-remedy, the petitioner
makes the following points: (1) adjusting the dumping margin for
domestic subsidies is contrary to the statute; (2) the BOFT has not
supported its assertion that domestic subsidies reduce export prices;
(3) the NME methodology was designed to calculate NV in antidumping
cases, not provide a remedy for subsidization; (4) the BOFT's
presumption that surrogate values result in a subsidy-free restatement
of the NME producer's costs misconstrues the operation and purpose of
surrogate values (surrogate values do not exactly replicate the NME
producer's costs); (5) during its accession to the World Trade
Organization (``WTO''), the PRC agreed to be bound by the disciplines
in the WTO Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures and the
WTO Agreement on the Implementation of Article VI (the ``Antidumping
Agreement''), neither of which include provisions about adjustments to
be made for domestic subsidies; and (6) there is no basis for adjusting
PRC companies' dumping margins for domestic subsidies when no other
U.S. trading partner is granted such an adjustment (in fact, the
Government Accountability Office stated that granting special
concessions to the PRC to correct an alleged double remedy would be
``wholly inappropriate.'').
The Department has not revoked its determination that the PRC is a
NME country, nor has it altered in this determination its NME
methodology as requested by the BOFT. With respect to market-economy
treatment of certain entities, we note that on May 25, 2007, the
Department published a notice in the Federal Register requesting
comments on whether it should consider granting market-economy
treatment to individual respondents in antidumping proceedings
involving China, the conditions under which individual firms should be
granted market-economy treatment, and how such treatment might affect
our antidumping calculation for such qualifying respondents. See
Antidumping Methodologies in Proceedings Involving Certain Non-Market
Economies: Market-Oriented Enterprise, 72 FR 29302 (May 25, 2007). The
Department will address market-economy treatment of individual
respondents after considering the comments submitted within that
process. We further note that the question of whether a double remedy
has been or could be applied, or whether the Department has the
authority to adjust for such a situation, involves complex factual,
methodological and legal issues that will require additional time to
analyze. In this regard, we note that the comments we have received to
date do not address with sufficient specificity the analytical and
computational methods by which one might attempt to determine the
existence and extent of any alleged double remedy. Therefore, the
Department cannot at this time determine whether an adjustment is
necessary nor, if so, calculate an appropriate adjustment. However, the
Department will analyze comments regarding the double remedy that are
submitted by interested parties during the course of this
investigation, and may seek additional information on the topic.
Therefore, in this preliminary determination, we have treated the PRC
as an NME country and applied our current NME methodology.
Selection of a Surrogate Country
In antidumping proceedings involving NME countries, the Department,
pursuant to section 773(c)(1) of the Act, will generally base NV on the
value of the NME producer's factors of production. In accordance with
section 773(c)(4) of the Act, in valuing the factors of production, the
Department shall utilize, to the extent possible, the prices or costs
of factors of production in one or more market-economy countries that
are at a level of economic development comparable to that of the NME
country and are significant producers of merchandise comparable to the
subject merchandise.
The Department has determined that India, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, the
Philippines, and Egypt are countries that are at a level of economic
development comparable to that of the PRC. See memorandum regarding
``Antidumping Duty Investigation of Coated Free Sheet Paper from the
People's Republic of China (PRC): Request for a List of Surrogate
Countries,'' dated January 22, 2007 (``Policy Memorandum''). From among
these economically comparable countries, the Department has
preliminarily selected India as the surrogate country for this
investigation because it determined that: (1) India is a significant
producer of merchandise comparable to the subject merchandise and (2)
reliable Indian data for valuing
[[Page 30761]]
the factors of production are readily available. See memorandum
regarding ``Coated Free Sheet Paper from the People's Republic of
China: Selection of Surrogate Country'' dated May 2, 2007.
Treating GE and Certain Other Companies as a Single Entity
Based on record evidence, the Department has preliminarily
determined that GE, Gold Huasheng Paper Co., Ltd. (``GHS''), a paper
producer capable of producing subject merchandise, and China Union
(Macao Commercial Offshore) Company Limited (``CU''), a company that
plays a role in GE's operations involving subject merchandise, are
affiliated pursuant to section 771(33)(F) and (G) of the Act
(affiliation by virtue of control). Moreover, the Department has
preliminarily determined that it is appropriate to treat GE, GHS, and
CU as a single entity for antidumping duty purposes. GE and GHS produce
similar merchandise and would not require substantial retooling to
restructure manufacturing priorities.\2\ Additionally, after
considering the following criteria, the Department determined that
there exists a significant potential for the manipulation of price or
production: (1) the level of common ownership; (2) the extent to which
managerial employees or board members of one firm sit on the Board of
Directors of an affiliated firm; and (3) whether the companies'
operations are intertwined. See 19 CFR 351.401(f). Thus, the Department
has preliminarily collapsed GE, GHS, and CU (collectively ``GE''). For
details regarding this decision, see memorandum regarding ``Whether to
Collapse Gold East Paper (Jiangsu) Co., Ltd. with Gold Huasheng Paper
Co., Ltd. and China Union (Macao Commercial Offshore) Company
Limited,'' dated concurrently with this notice.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ While CU is not a producer of CFS, we note that where
companies are affiliated, and there exists a significant potential
for manipulation of prices and/or export decisions, the Department
has found it appropriate to treat those companies as a single
entity. The CIT upheld the Department's decision to include export
decisions in its analysis of whether there was a significant
potential for manipulation. See Hontex Enterprises v. United States,
248 F. Supp. 2d 1323, 1343 (CIT 2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Separate Rates
In proceedings involving NME countries, the Department has a
rebuttable presumption that all companies within the country are
subject to government control and thus should be assessed a single
antidumping duty rate. It is the Department's policy to assign all
exporters of merchandise subject to investigation involving an NME
country this single rate unless an exporter can demonstrate that it is
sufficiently independent so as to be entitled to a separate rate. GE,
Chenming, and Yanzhou Tianzhang provided company-specific information
to demonstrate that they operate independently of de jure and de facto
government control, and therefore are entitled to a separate rate.
The Department's separate-rate test is not concerned, in general,
with macroeconomic/border-type controls, e.g., export licenses, quotas,
and minimum export prices, particularly if these controls are imposed
to prevent dumping. See Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Certain Preserved Mushrooms from the People's Republic
of China, 63 FR 72255, 72256 (December 31, 1998). The test focuses,
rather, on controls over the investment, pricing, and output decision-
making process at the individual firm level. See Notice of Final
Determination of Sales at Less than Fair Value: Certain Cut-to-Length
Carbon Steel Plate From Ukraine, 62 FR 61754, 61758 (November 19,
1997), and Tapered Roller Bearings and Parts Thereof, Finished and
Unfinished, from the People's Republic of China: Final Results of
Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 62 FR 61276, 61279 (November
17, 1997).
To establish whether a firm is sufficiently independent from
government control of its export activities to be entitled to a
separate rate, the Department analyzes each entity exporting the
subject merchandise under a test arising from the Notice of Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Sparklers from the
People's Republic of China, 56 FR 20588 (May 6, 1991) (``Sparklers''),
as further developed in Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Silicon Carbide from the People's Republic of China,
59 FR 22585 (May 2, 1994) (``Silicon Carbide''). In accordance with the
separate-rates criteria, the Department assigns separate rates in NME
cases only if respondents can demonstrate the absence of both de jure
and de facto governmental control over export activities.
Absence of De Jure Control
The Department considers the following de jure criteria in
determining whether an individual company may be granted a separate
rate: (1) an absence of restrictive stipulations associated with an
individual exporter's business and export licenses; (2) any legislative
enactments decentralizing control of companies; and (3) other formal
measures by the government decentralizing control of companies. See
Sparklers, 56 FR at 20589.
Information submitted by GE, Chenming, and Yanzhou Tianzhang
indicates that there are no restrictive stipulations associated with
their exporter and/or business licenses; and there are legislative
enactments decentralizing control of the companies. Therefore, the
Department has preliminarily found a de jure absence of government
control over these companies' export activities. See memorandum
regarding ``Separate Rates'' dated concurrently with this notice
(``Separate Rates Memorandum'').
Absence of De Facto Control
Typically the Department considers four factors in evaluating
whether each respondent is subject to de facto governmental control of
its export functions: (1) whether the export prices are set by, or are
subject to the approval of, a governmental agency; (2) whether the
respondent has 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 disposition of profits or
financing of losses. See Silicon Carbide, 59 FR at 22586-87; see also
Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value:
Furfuryl Alcohol From the People's Republic of China, 60 FR 22544,
22545 (May 8, 1995). The Department considers an analysis of de facto
control to be critical in determining whether a respondent is, in fact,
subject to a degree of governmental control that would preclude the
Department from assigning the respondent a separate rate.
GE, Chenming, and Yanzhou Tianzhang have each provided information
indicating that they: (1) set export prices independent of the
government and without the approval of a government authority; (2) have
the authority to negotiate and sign contracts and other agreements; (3)
have autonomy from the government regarding the selection of
management; and (4) retain proceeds from sales and make independent
decisions regarding the disposition of profits or financing of losses.
Therefore, the Department has preliminarily found a de facto absence of
government control over these companies' export activities.
[[Page 30762]]
Based on the foregoing,\3\ the Department has preliminarily granted
the two mandatory respondents, and Yanzhou Tianzhang, separate,
company-specific dumping margins. See Separate Rates Memorandum. The
Department calculated company-specific dumping margins for GE, and
Chenming and assigned Yanzhou Tianzhang a dumping margin equal to the
weighted-average of the dumping margins calculated for GE and Chenming.
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\3\ Record information submitted regarding GHS and CU, companies
which the Department collapsed with GE, also supports granting the
collapsed entity a separate rate. See Separate Rates Memorandum.
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The PRC-Wide Entity
Although all PRC exporters of subject merchandise to the United
States were given an opportunity to provide Q&V information to the
Department, not all exporters responded to the Department's request for
Q&V information.\4\ Based upon our knowledge of the volume of imports
of subject merchandise from the PRC, we have concluded that the
companies that responded to the Q&V questionnaire do not account for
all U.S. imports during the POI of subject merchandise from the PRC. We
have treated the non-responsive PRC producers/exporters as part of the
PRC-wide entity because they did not qualify for a separate rate.
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\4\ The Department received only four timely responses to the
requests for Q&V information that it sent to the 14 potential
exporters identified in the petition.
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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 subsections 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.
As noted above, the PRC-wide entity withheld information requested
by the Department. As a result, pursuant to section 776(a)(2)(A) of the
Act, we find it appropriate to base the PRC-wide dumping margin on
facts available. See Notice of Preliminary Determination of Sales at
Less Than Fair Value, Affirmative Preliminary Determination of Critical
Circumstances and Postponement of Final Determination: Certain Frozen
Fish Fillets From the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 68 FR 4986
(January 31, 2003), unchanged in Notice of Final Antidumping Duty
Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value and Affirmative Critical
Circumstances: Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic
of Vietnam, 68 FR 37116 (June 23, 2003).
Section 776(b) of the Act provides that, in selecting from among
the facts otherwise available, the Department may employ an adverse
inference if an interested party fails to cooperate by not acting to
the best of its ability to comply with requests for information. See
Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Certain
Cold-Rolled Flat-Rolled Carbon-Quality Steel Products From the Russian
Federation, 65 FR 5510, 5518 (February 4, 2000); see also ``Statement
of Administrative Action,'' accompanying the URAA, H.R. Rep. No. 103-
316, 870 (1994) (``SAA''). Because the PRC-wide entity did not respond
to the Department's request for information, the Department has
concluded that it has failed to cooperate to the best of its ability.
Therefore, the Department preliminarily finds that, in selecting from
among the facts available, an adverse inference is appropriate.
Section 776(b) of the Act authorizes the Department to use, as
adverse facts available (``AFA''), information derived from the
petition, the final determination from the LTFV investigation, a
previous administrative review, or any other information placed on the
record. In selecting a rate for AFA, the Department selects one that is
sufficiently adverse ``as to effectuate the purpose of the facts
available rule to induce respondents to provide the Department with
complete and accurate information in a timely manner.'' See Notice of
Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Static Random
Access Memory Semiconductors From Taiwan, 63 FR 8909, 8932 (February
23, 1998). It is the Department's practice to select, as AFA, the
higher of the (a) highest margin alleged in the petition, or (b) the
highest calculated rate for any respondent in the investigation. See
Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Certain Cold-
Rolled Flat-Rolled Carbon Quality Steel Products From the People's
Republic of China, 65 FR 34660 (May 21, 2000) and accompanying Issues
and Decision Memorandum, at ``Facts Available'' section. Because the
dumping margin derived from the petition is higher than the calculated
weighted-average margins for the mandatory respondents, we examined
whether it was appropriate to base the PRC-wide dumping margin on the
secondary information in the petition.
When the Department relies on secondary information, rather than
information obtained in the course of an investigation, section 776(c)
of the Act requires it to, to the extent practicable, corroborate that
information from independent sources reasonably at its disposal.\5\ The
SAA also states that the independent sources may include published
price lists, official import statistics and customs data, and
information obtained from interested parties during the particular
investigation. See SAA at 870.
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\5\ Secondary information is described in the SAA as
``information derived from the petition that gave rise to the
investigation or review, the final determination concerning subject
merchandise, or any previous review under section 751 concerning the
subject merchandise.'' See SAA at 870.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The SAA also clarifies that ``corroborate'' means that the
Department will satisfy itself that the secondary information to be
used has probative value. See SAA at 870. To corroborate secondary
information, the Department will, to the extent practicable, examine
the reliability and relevance of the information used. See Tapered
Roller Bearings and Parts Thereof, Finished and Unfinished, From Japan,
and Tapered Roller Bearings, Four Inches or Less in Outside Diameter,
and Components Thereof, From Japan; Preliminary Results of Antidumping
Duty Administrative Reviews and Partial Termination of Administrative
Reviews, 61 FR 57391, 57392 (November 6, 1996), unchanged in Tapered
Roller Bearings and Parts Thereof, Finished and Unfinished, From Japan,
and Tapered Roller Bearings, Four Inches or Less in Outside Diameter,
and Components Thereof, From Japan: Final Results of Antidumping Duty
Administrative Reviews and Termination in Part, 62 FR 11825 (March 13,
1997).
To corroborate the petition margin, we compared the range of
control number-specific dumping margins calculated for the preliminary
determination to the dumping margin alleged in the petition. Based on
this comparison, we have preliminarily corroborated the 99.65 percent
dumping from the petition. See memorandum regarding ``Corroboration of
the PRC-Wide Facts Available Rate for the Preliminary Determination in
the Antidumping Duty Investigation of Coated Free Sheet Paper from the
People's Republic of China,'' dated concurrently with this notice. This
PRC-wide dumping margin applies to all entries of the merchandise under
investigation except for entries of subject merchandise from GE,
Chenming, and Yanzhou Tianzhang.
[[Page 30763]]
Fair Value Comparisons
To determine whether GE or Chenming sold CFS to the United States
at LTFV, we compared the weighted-average export price (``EP'') or
constructed export price (``CEP''), as appropriate, of the CFS to the
NV of the CFS, as described in the ``U.S. Price,'' and ``NV'' sections
of this notice.
U.S. Price
EP
In accordance with section 772(a) of the Act, we based the U.S.
price for certain sales on EP because the first sale to an unaffiliated
purchaser was made prior to importation, and the use of CEP was not
otherwise warranted. In accordance with section 772(c) of the Act, we
calculated EP by deducting, where applicable, the following expenses
from the starting price (gross unit price) charged to the first
unaffiliated customer in the United States: rebates, foreign movement
expenses, marine insurance, international freight, and foreign and U.S.
brokerage and handling expenses.
We based these movement expenses on surrogate values where a PRC
company provided the service and was paid in Renminbi (``RMB''). If
market-economy service providers, who were paid in a market economy
currency, provided movement services for over 33 percent of subject
merchandise shipments, by volume, we based the movement expenses on the
actual price charged by the service provider. If market-economy service
providers, who were paid in a market economy currency, provided
movement services for less than 33 percent of subject merchandise
shipments, by volume, we calculated the movement expenses by weight-
averaging surrogate values with the actual price charged by the service
provider. See Antidumping Methodologies: Market Economy Inputs,
Expected Non-Market Economy Wages, Duty Drawback; and Request for
Comments, 71 FR 61716 (October 19, 2006) (``Notice for Antidumping
Methodologies''). For details regarding our EP calculation, see
analysis memoranda for GE and Chenming dated concurrently with this
notice.
CEP
In accordance with section 772(b) of the Act, we based the U.S.
price for certain sales on CEP because these sales were made by GE's
and Chenming's U.S. affiliates. In accordance with section 772(c)(2)(A)
of the Act, we calculated CEP by deducting, where applicable, the
following expenses from the starting price (gross unit price) charged
to the first unaffiliated customer in the United States: early payment
discounts, billing adjustments, rebates, foreign movement expenses,
international freight, marine insurance, and U.S. movement expenses,
including brokerage and handling. Further, in accordance with section
772(d)(1) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.402(b), where appropriate, we
deducted from the starting price the following selling expenses
associated with economic activities occurring in the United States:
credit expenses, warranty expenses, other direct selling expenses, and
indirect selling expenses. In addition, pursuant to section 772(3) of
the Act, we made an adjustment to the starting price for CEP profit. We
based movement expenses on either surrogate values, actual expenses, or
an average of the two as explained above in the ``EP'' section of this
notice.
NV
In accordance with section 773(c) of the Act, we constructed NV
from the factors of production employed by the respondents to
manufacture subject merchandise during the POI. Specifically, we
calculated NV by adding together the value of the factors of
production, general expenses, profit, and packing costs. We valued the
factors of production using prices and financial statements from the
surrogate country, India, or, where appropriate, the market economy
prices paid for the factor (see further discussion below). In selecting
surrogate values, we followed, to the extent practicable, the
Department's practice of choosing values which are non-export average
values, contemporaneous with, or closest in time to, the POI, product-
specific, and tax-exclusive. See e.g., Notice of Preliminary
Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value, Negative Preliminary
Determination of Critical Circumstances and Postponement of Final
Determination: Certain Frozen and Canned Warmwater Shrimp From the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 69 FR 42672, 42682 (July 16, 2004),
unchanged in Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value:
Certain Frozen and Canned Warmwater Shrimp from the Socialist Republic
of Vietnam, 69 FR 71005 (December 8, 2004) (``Shrimp from Vietnam'').
We also considered the quality of the source of surrogate information
in selecting surrogate values.
We valued material inputs and packing by multiplying the amount of
the factor consumed in producing subject merchandise by the average
unit value of the factor. We derived the average unit value of the
factor from Indian import statistics. In addition, we added freight
costs to the surrogate costs that we calculated for material inputs. We
calculated freight costs by multiplying surrogate freight rates by the
shorter of the reported distance from the domestic supplier to the
factory that produced the subject merchandise or the distance from the
nearest seaport to the factory that produced the subject merchandise,
as appropriate. This adjustment is in accordance with the Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit's decision in Sigma Corp. v. United
States, 117 F. 3d 1401, 1407-1408 (Fed. Cir. 1997). Where we could only
obtain surrogate values that were not contemporaneous with the POI, we
inflated (or deflated) the surrogate values using, where appropriate,
the Indian Wholesale Price Index (``WPI'') as published in the
International Financial Statistics of the International Monetary Fund.
Further, in calculating surrogate values from Indian imports, we
disregarded imports from Indonesia, South Korea, and Thailand because,
in other proceedings, the Department found that these countries
maintain broadly available, non-industry-specific export subsidies.
Therefore, it is reasonable to infer that all exports to all markets
from these countries may be subsidized. See Notice of Amended Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Certain Automotive
Replacement Glass Windshields from the People's Republic of China, 67
FR 11670 (March 15, 2002); see also Notice of Final Determination of
Sales at Less Than Fair Value and Negative Final Determination of
Critical Circumstances: Certain Color Television Receivers From the
People's Republic of China, 69 FR 20594 (April 16, 2004).\6\ Therefore,
we have not used prices from these countries either in calculating the
Indian import-based surrogate values or in calculating market-economy
input values. In instances where a market-economy input was obtained
solely from suppliers located in these countries, we used Indian
import-based surrogate values to value the input. See Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Certain Automotive
Replacement Glass Windshields From The People's Republic of China, 67
FR 6482 (February 12, 2002), and accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum at Comment 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ We note that legislative history directs the Department not
to conduct a formal investigation to ensure that such prices are not
subsidized. See H.R. Rep. 100-576 at 590 (1988). Rather, Congress
directed the Department to base its decision on information that is
available to it at the time it makes its determination.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 30764]]
During the POI, GE and Chenming purchased all or a portion of
certain inputs from a market economy supplier and paid for the inputs
in a market economy currency. The Department has instituted a
rebuttable presumption that market economy input prices are the best
available information for valuing an input when the total volume of the
input purchased from all market economy sources during the period of
investigation or review exceeds 33 percent of the total volume of the
input purchased from all sources during the period.\7\ In these cases,
unless case-specific facts provide adequate grounds to rebut the
Department's presumption, the Department will use the weighted-average
market economy purchase price to value the input. Alternatively, when
the volume of an NME firm's purchases of an input from market economy
suppliers during the period is below 33 percent of its total volume of
purchases of the input during the period, but where these purchases are
otherwise valid and there is no reason to disregard the prices, the
Department will weight-average the weighted-average market economy
purchase price with an appropriate surrogate value according to their
respective shares of the total volume of purchases, unless case-
specific facts provide adequate grounds to rebut the presumption. When
a firm has made market economy input purchases that may have been
dumped or subsidized, are not bona fide, or are otherwise not
acceptable for use in a dumping calculation, the Department will
exclude them from the numerator of the ratio to ensure a fair
determination of whether valid market economy purchases meet the 33
percent threshold. See Notice for Antidumping Methodologies.
Accordingly, we valued GE's and Chenming's inputs using the market
economy prices paid for the inputs where the total volume of the input
purchased from all market economy sources during the POI exceeded 33
percent of the total volume of the input purchased from all sources
during that period. Alternatively, when the volume of GE's or
Chenming's purchases of an input from market economy suppliers during
the POI was below 33 percent of the company's total volume of purchases
of the input during the POI, we weight-averaged the weighted-average
market economy purchase price with an appropriate surrogate value
according to their respective shares of the total volume of purchases,
as appropriate. Where appropriate, we increased the market economy
prices of inputs by freight and brokerage and handling expenses. See
GE's Factor Value Memorandum and Chenming's Factor Value Memorandum.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Notwithstanding the determination the Department reached in
Shrimp from Vietnam, at Comment 8, the Department will examine if
and when the inputs were used in the production process when case-
specific conditions demand it. Unless there are case-specific
reasons to examine other criteria, the Department will base its
decision on whether to accept market economy input purchases to
value the input on the relative share of market economy purchases
during the period of investigation or review to total purchases
during that period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We valued raw materials and packing materials using Indian Import
Statistics, except as noted below.
We valued diesel fuel and purchased electricity using rates from
Key World Energy Statistics 2005, and Key World Energy Statistics 2003,
respectively, published by the International Energy Agency. Because
these data were not contemporaneous with the POI, we inflated the
values using the WPI. See Factor Value Memoranda.
We valued natural gas using a value obtained from the Gas Authority
of India Ltd.'s website, a supplier of natural gas in India. See http:/
/www.gailonline.com/gailnewsite/. The value relates to the
period January through June 2002. Therefore, we inflated the value
using the appropriate WPI inflator. In addition, we added
transportation charges to the value. See Surrogate Value Memorandum and
Polyvinyl Alcohol From the People's Republic of China: Final Results of
Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 71 FR 27991 (May 15, 2006), and
accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum at Comment 2.
Consistent with 19 CFR 351.408(c)(3), we valued direct, indirect,
and packing labor, using the most recently calculated regression-based
wage rate, which relies on 2004 data. This wage rate can currently be
found on the Department's website on Import Administration's home page,
Import Library, Expected Wages of Selected NME Countries, revised in
January 2007, https://ia.ita.doc.gov/wages/. The source of
these wage-rate data on the Import Administration's web site is the
Yearbook of Labour Statistics 2002, ILO (Geneva: 2002), Chapter 5B:
Wages in Manufacturing. 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 GE and Chenming. See Factor Value Memoranda.
We valued water using data from the Maharashtra Industrial
Development Corporation (www.midcindia.org) since it includes a wide
range of industrial water tariffs. This source provides 386 industrial
water rates within the Maharashtra province from June 2003: 193 for the
``inside industrial areas'' usage category and 193 for the ``outside
industrial areas'' usage category. Because the value was not
contemporaneous with the POI, we inflated the rate using the WPI. See
Factor Value Memoranda.
We valued truck freight expenses using a per kilometer per kilogram
average rate from data obtained from the web site of an Indian
transportation company, InFreight Technologies India Limited. See
https://www.infreight.com/. This average rate was used by the Department
in the antidumping duty administrative review of Saccharin from the
People's Republic of China; Preliminary Results of the 2005-2006
Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 72 FR 25247 (May 4, 2007).
Because this value is not contemporaneous with the POI, we inflated the
rate using the WPI. See Factor Value Memoranda.
We used two sources to calculate the surrogate value for domestic
brokerage and handling expenses. We averaged publicly available
brokerage and handling data reported by Essar Steel in the antidumping
duty administrative review of hot-rolled carbon steel flat products
from India with publicly available brokerage and handling data reported
by Agro Dutch Industries Limited (``Agro Dutch'') in the antidumping
duty administrative review of certain preserved mushrooms from India.
See Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products From India:
Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 71 FR
2018, 2022 (January 12, 2006) (Essar Steel's February 28, 2005,
submission); see also Certain Preserved Mushrooms From India: Final
Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 70 FR 37757 (June
30, 2005) (Agro Dutch's May 24, 2005, submission). See Factor Value
Memoranda.
We valued marine insurance using a price quote from https://
www.rjgconsultants.com/insurance.html, a market-economy provider of
marine insurance. See GE's Factor Value Memorandum.
We valued factory overhead, selling, general, and administrative
(SG&A) expenses, and profit, using the audited financial statements
from the following Indian companies: Seshasayee Paper and Boards Ltd.,
JK Paper, Ltd., and Ballarpur Industries Ltd.. See Factor Value
Memoranda. We selected the above-referenced financial statements from
among the financial statements placed on the record by interested
[[Page 30765]]
parties because these companies produce subject merchandise and, like
the respondents, do so by producing wood free paper and coating it.
Because the financial statements that we are using as surrogates do
not separately report manufacturing and non-manufacturing labor costs,
the petitioner proposes allocating the line item for labor costs on
these financial statements between manufacturing labor costs and SG&A
labor costs. Specifically, the petitioner suggests allocating the line
item for labor costs using data from an annual survey of the Indian
paper and paper products industry which identifies wages paid to all
employees and wages paid to workers (defined as persons employed in any
manufacturing process).
Generally, the Department does not adjust the data used to
calculate financial ratios because it is concerned that such
adjustments may introduce unintended distortions into the data. See
Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Wooden Bedroom
Furniture From the People's Republic of China, 69 FR 67313 (November
17, 2004) and accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum at Comment
12. Thus, for the preliminary determination, we have not adjusted labor
costs in the surrogate financial statements. Nevertheless, the
Department intends to revisit this issue for the final determination.
In accordance with 19 CFR 351.301(c)(3)(i), interested parties may
submit publicly available information with which to value factors of
production in the final determination within 40 days after the date of
publication of the preliminary determination.
Currency Conversion
We made currency conversions into U.S. dollars, in accordance with
section 773A(a) of the Act, based on the exchange rates in effect on
the dates of the U.S. sales as certified by the Federal Reserve Bank.
Verification
As provided in section 782(i)(1) of the Act, we intend to verify
the information upon which we will rely in making our final
determination.
Combination Rates
In the Initiation Notice, the Department stated that it would
calculate combination rates for certain respondents that are eligible
for a separate rate in this investigation. See Initiation Notice. This
change in practice is described in Policy Bulletin 05.1, available at
https://ia.ita.doc.gov/. Policy Bulletin 05.1, states:
{w{time} hile continuing the practice of assigning separate rates
only to exporters, all separate rates that the Department will now
assign in its NME investigations will be specific to those producers
that supplied the exporter during the period of investigation. Note,
however, that one rate is calculated for the exporter and all of the
producers which supplied subject merchandise to it during the period of
investigation. This practice applies both to mandatory respondents
receiving an individually calculated separate rate as well as the pool
of non-investigated firms receiving the weighted-average of the
individually calculated rates. This practice is referred to as the
application of ``combination rates'' because such rates apply to
specific combinations of exporters and one or more producers. The cash-
deposit rate assigned to an exporter will apply only to merchandise
both exported by the firm in question and produced by a firm that
supplied the exporter during the period of investigation.
See Policy Bulletin 05.1, ``Separate Rates Practice and Application of
Combination Rates in Antidumping Investigations Involving Non-Market
Economy Countries.''
Preliminary Determination
The weighted-average dumping margins are as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Weighted-
Exporter & Producer Average Margin
------------------------------------------------------------------------
GE's Collapsed Entity:................................. ...............
(Gold East Paper (Jiangsu) Co. Ltd.-Gold Hua Sheng 23.19 [percnt]
Paper (Suzhou Industry Park) Co. Ltd.-China Union
(Macao Commercial Offshore) Company Ltd.).............
Shandong Chenming Paper Holdings Ltd................... 48.07 [percnt]
Yanzhou Tianzhang Paper Industry Co. Ltd............... 30.22 [percnt]
PRC-Wide Rate.......................................... 99.65 [percnt]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Disclosure
We will disclose the calculations performed within five days of the
date of publication of this notice to parties in this proceeding in
accordance with 19 CFR 351.224(b).
Suspension of Liquidation
In accordance with section 733(d) of the Act, we will instruct U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (``CBP'') to suspend liquidation of all
entries of CFS from the PRC as described in the ``Scope of the
Investigation'' section, entered, or withdrawn from warehouse, for
consumption from GE's collapsed entity (i.e., GE, GHS, and CU),
Chenming, Yanzhou Tianzhang, and the PRC-wide entity on or after the
date of publication of this notice in the Federal Register. We will
instruct CBP to require a cash deposit or the posting of a bond equal
to the weighted-average amount by which the NV exceeds U.S. price, as
indicated above. The suspension of liquidation will remain in effect
until further notice.
International Trade Commission Notification
In accordance with section 733(f) of the Act, we have notified the
ITC of our preliminary affirmative determination of sales at LTFV.
Section 735(b)(2) of the Act requires the ITC to make its final
determination as to whether the domestic industry in the United States
is materially injured, or threatened with material injury, by reason of
imports of CFS, or sales (or the likelihood of sales) for importation,
of the subject merchandise within 45 days of our final determination.
Public Comment
Case briefs or other written comments may be submitted to the
Assistant Secretary for Import Administration no later than seven days
after the date the final verification report is issued in this
proceeding and rebuttal briefs, limited to issues raised in case
briefs, no later than five days after the deadline for submitting case
briefs. A list of authorities used and an executive summary of issues
should accompany any briefs submitted to the Department. This summary
should be limited to five pages total, including footnotes.
In accordance with section 774 of the Act, we will hold a public
hearing, if requested, to afford interested parties an opportunity to
comment on arguments raised in case or rebuttal briefs. If a request
for a hearing is made, we intend to hold the hearing three days after
the deadline of submission of rebuttal briefs at the U.S. Department of
Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution Ave, NW, Washington, DC 20230,
at a time and location to be determined. Parties should confirm by
telephone the date, time, and location of the hearing two days before
the scheduled date.
Interested parties who wish to request a hearing, or to participate
if one is requested, must submit a written request to the Assistant
Secretary for Import Administration, U.S. Department
[[Page 30766]]
of Commerce, Room 1870, within 30 days after the date of publication of
this notice. See 19 CFR 351.310(c). Requests should contain the party's
name, address, and telephone number, the number of participants, and a
list of the issues to be discussed. At the hearing, each party may make
an affirmative presentation only on issues raised in that party's case
brief and may make rebuttal presentations only on arguments included in
that party's rebuttal brief.
Postponement of Final Determination and Extension of Provisional
Measures
Pursuant to section 735(a)(2) of the Act, on May 11, 2007, GE
requested that in the event of an affirmative preliminary determination
in this investigation, the Department postpone its final determination
by 60 days. At the same time, GE requested that the Department extend
the application of the provisional measures prescribed under 19 CFR
351.210(e)(2) from a 4-month period to a 6-month period. In accordance
with section 733(d) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.210(b), because (1) our
preliminary determination is affirmative, (2) the requesting exporter
accounts for a significant proportion of exports of the subject
merchandise, and (3) no compelling reasons for denial exist, we are
granting the request and are postponing the final determination until
no later than 135 days after the publication of this notice in the
Federal Register. Suspension of liquidation will be extended
accordingly.
This determination is issued and published in accordance with
sections 733(f) and 777(i)(1) of the Act.
Dated: May 29, 2007.
David M. Spooner,
Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
[FR Doc. E7-10705 Filed 6-1-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-DS-S