Certain New Pneumatic Off-The-Road Tires From the People's Republic of China; Preliminary Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value and Postponement of Final Determination, 9278-9292 [08-672]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 34 / Wednesday, February 20, 2008 / Notices
gas–fired power generation turbine
components (combustor baskets and
transition pieces; up to 1,800 total units
annually) at the MPSA plant (306
employees/15 acres/80,000 sq.ft. of
production area) in Orlando, Florida
(Board Order 1234, 67 FR 45456, 7–9–
2002). The applicant currently requests
that the scope of FTZ manufacturing
authority be extended to include an
additional 81,500 square feet of
production area to accommodate
additional production capacity (new
total would be 161,500 sq.ft.), which
will be added with a new facility within
the existing boundaries of Subzone 42A.
The new capacity would be used to
manufacture and repair additional
steam and gas turbine components.
MPSA’s existing FTZ authority for the
manufacture of combustor baskets and
transition pieces would remain
unchanged.
Under the proposal, MPSA would
manufacture stainless steel steam
turbine blades and vanes (up to 2,200
total units per year) for the U.S. market
and export. Activity would involve
receiving foreign–origin semi–finished
forgings (classified under HTSUS
8406.81, 8406.90) that would be
machined, finished, and coated to
produce finished steam turbine blades
and vanes. Some 70 percent of the
finished blades and vanes will be
exported.
Expanded FTZ procedures would
continue to exempt MPSA from customs
duty payments on the foreign–origin
inputs used in production for export.
On domestic shipments, the company
would be able to defer duty payments
on the foreign inputs until they would
be entered for U.S. consumption. FTZ
procedures may also result in increased
logistical/supply chain efficiencies for
MPSA’s distribution operations.
Public comment is invited from
interested parties. Submissions (original
and 3 copies) shall be addressed to the
Board’s Executive Secretary at the
following address: Office of the
Executive Secretary, Room 2111, U.S.
Department of Commerce, 1401
Constitution Avenue, NW,Washington,
DC 20230–0002. The closing period for
receipt of comments is April 21, 2008.
Rebuttal comments in response to
material submitted during the foregoing
period may be submitted during the
subsequent 15-day period to May 5,
2008.
A copy of the application will be
available for public inspection at each of
the following locations: U.S.
Department of Commerce Export
Assistance Center, Suite 100, 315 East
Robinson Street, Orlando, FL 32801;
and, at the Office of the Foreign–Trade
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Zones Board’s Executive Secretary at the
address listed above. For further
information, contact Pierre Duy,
examiner, at: pierrelduy@ita.doc.gov,
or (202) 482–1378.
Dated: February 6, 2008.
Andrew McGilvray,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. E8–3152 Filed 2–19–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[A–570–912]
Certain New Pneumatic Off-The-Road
Tires From the People’s Republic of
China; Preliminary Determination of
Sales at Less Than Fair Value and
Postponement of Final Determination
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
AGENCY:
EFFECTIVE DATE: February 20, 2008.
SUMMARY: We preliminarily determine
that certain new pneumatic off-the-road
tires (‘‘OTR tires’’) from the People’s
Republic of China (‘‘PRC’’) are being, or
are 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 (‘‘the Act’’). The
estimated margins of sales at LTFV are
shown in the ‘‘Preliminary
Determination’’ section of this notice.
Pursuant to requests from interested
parties, we are postponing the final
determination and extending the
provisional measures 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.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Laurel LaCivita or Charles Riggle, AD/
CVD Operations, Office 8, Import
Administration, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20230;
telephone: (202) 482–4243 or 482–0650,
respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Case History
On June 18, 2007, Titan Tire
Corporation, a subsidiary of Titan
International, Inc. (‘‘Titan’’), and the
United Steel, Paper and Forestry,
Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied
Industrial and Service Workers
International Union, AFL–CIO–CLC
(‘‘USW’’) (collectively, ‘‘Petitioners’’),
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filed a petition in proper form on behalf
of the domestic industry and workers
producing OTR tires, concerning
imports of OTR tires from the PRC
(‘‘Petition’’).
The Department of Commerce (‘‘the
Department’’) initiated this investigation
on July 30, 2007.1 In the Notice of
Initiation, the Department applied a
process by which exporters and
producers may obtain separate-rates in
non-market economy (‘‘NME’’)
investigations. The process requires
exporters and producers to submit a
separate-rate status application
(‘‘SRA’’).2 However, the standard for
eligibility for a separate rate (which is
whether a firm can demonstrate an
absence of both de jure and de facto
government control over its export
activities) has not changed. The SRA for
this investigation was posted on the
Department’s Web site https://
ia.ita.doc.gov/ia-highlights-andnews.html on August 10, 2007. The due
date for filing an SRA was September
28, 2007.
On July 30, 2007, the Department
issued quantity and value (‘‘Q&V’’)
questionnaires to 94 companies. In
addition, on July 30, 2007, the
Department requested the assistance of
the Government of the PRC (through the
Ministry of Commerce) in transmitting
the Department’s Q&V questionnaire to
all companies that manufacture and
export subject merchandise to the
Untied States, as well as to
manufacturers that produce the subject
merchandise for companies that were
engaged in exporting subject
merchandise to the United States during
the period of investigation (‘‘POI’’).
From August 8 to August 20, 2007, 30
exporters of the subject merchandise
filed timely responses to the
Department’s Q&V questionnaire.3 One
1 See Initiation of Antidumping Duty
Investigation: Certain New Pneumatic Off-The-Road
Tires From the People’s Republic of China, 72 FR
43591 (August 6, 2007) (‘‘Notice of Initiation’’).
2 See Policy Bulletin 05.1: Separate-Rates Practice
and Application of Combination Rates in
Antidumping Investigations involving Non-market
Economy Countries (April 5, 2005) (Policy Bulletin
05.1), available at https://ia.ita.doc.gov/policy/
bull05-1.pdf.
3 Aeolus Tyre Co., Ltd (‘‘Aeolus’’), Double Coin
Holding Ltd. (‘‘Double Coin’’), Double Happiness
Tyre Industries Corp., Ltd. (‘‘Double Happiness’’),
Full-World International Trading Co., Ltd. (‘‘FullWorld’’), GITI Tire (China) Investment Company
Ltd. (‘‘GITI’’), Guizhou Tyre Co., Ltd. (‘‘Guizhou
Tyre’’), Hebei Starbright Co., Ltd. (‘‘Starbright’’),
Jiangsu Feichi Co., Ltd. (‘‘Feichi’’), KS Holding
Company Limited (‘‘KS Holding’’), Laizhou
Xiongying Rubber Industry Co., Ltd. (‘‘Xiongying’’),
Oriental Tyre Technology Limited (‘‘Oriental’’),
Qingdao Etyre International Trade Co., Ltd.
(‘‘Etyre’’), Qingdao Hengda Tyres Co., Ltd.
(‘‘Hengda’’), Qingdao Milestone Tyre Co., Ltd.
(‘‘Milestone’’), Qingdao Qihang Tyre Co., Ltd.
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of these companies, GITI, reported that
it made no sales to the United States
during the POI. The Government of the
PRC did not respond to the
Department’s letter requesting
assistance in transmitting the Q&V
questionnaire to procedures and
exporters of the subject merchandise in
the PRC.
On August 20, 2007, Petitioners;
Valmont Industries, Inc. (‘‘Valmont’’),
Carlisle Tire & Wheel (‘‘Carlisle’’),
Bridgestone Holding, Inc. and its
subsidiary, Bridgestone Firestone North
American Tire, LLC (‘‘Bridgestone’’),
and Agri-Fab, Inc. (‘‘Agri-Fab’’)
(collectively ‘‘domestic interested
parties’’); and Guizhou Tyre submitted
comments on the scope of the
investigation. In addition, Aeolus
requested to be a mandatory respondent
in this investigation. Alternatively,
Aeolus requested that if it were not
selected as a mandatory respondent,
that it be accepted as a voluntary
respondent pursuant to section 782(a) of
the Act and 19 CFR 351.204(d). On
August 27, 2007, Petitioners,
Bridgestone, and Guizhou Tyre filed
scope rebuttal comments. In addition,
the Department returned Qingdao
Aonuo Tyre Co. Ltd.’s (‘‘Aonuo’s’’)
August 8, 2007, Q&V submission
because Aonuo did not submit the final
proprietary and public versions the
following business day as required by
the Department’s regulations. See 19
CFR 351.303(c)(2).
On August 27, 2007, the United States
International Trade Commission (‘‘ITC’’)
issued its affirmative preliminary
determination that there is a reasonable
indication that an industry in the
United States is materially injured by
reason of imports of OTR tires from the
PRC. 4 Additionally, on August 31,
2007, the Department provided
interested parties to this proceeding the
opportunity to comment on the
Department’s proposed product
(‘‘Qihang’’), Qingdao Qizhou Rubber Co., Ltd.
(‘‘Qizhou’’), Qingdao Sinorient International Ltd.
(‘‘Sinorent’’), Rodeo International Trading Co., Ltd.
(‘‘Rodeo’’), Shandong Huitong Tyre Co., Ltd.
(‘‘Huitong’’), Shandong Jinyu Tyre Co., Ltd.
(‘‘Jinyu’’) Shandong Taishan Tyre Co., Ltd.
(‘‘Taishan’’), Shandong Wanda Boto Tyre Co., Ltd.
(‘‘Wanda Boto’’), Shandong Xingyuan International
Trading Co., Ltd. (‘‘Xingyuan’’), Shifeng DoubleStar Tire Co., Ltd. (‘‘Double-Star’’), Techking Tires
Limited (Techking Enterprise (H.K.) Co., Ltd.)
(‘‘Techking’’), Tianjin United Tire & Rubber
International Co., Ltd. (‘‘TUTRIC’’), Triangle Tyre
Co., Ltd. (‘‘Triangle Tyre’’), Wendeng City Sanfeng
Tyre Co., Ltd. (‘‘Sanfeng’’), Xuzhou Xugong Tyre
Company Limited (‘‘Xugong’’) and Zhaoyuan Leo
Rubber Co., Ltd. (‘‘Leo’’).
4 See Investigation Nos. 701–TA–448 and 731–
TA–1117 (Preliminary): Certain Off-the-Road Tires
From China, 72 FR 50699 (September 4, 2007).
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characteristic reporting criteria and
matching hierarchy.
On September 4, 2007, Aonuo
attempted to file its Q&V information for
the second time. On September 5, 2007,
the Department returned the August 27,
2007, Q&V submission of Landmax
International Co., Ltd. because it was
not timely filed. In addition, per the
Department’s instructions, Starbright
and TUTRIC filed amended Q&V
responses, disaggregating their Q&V
information, but continuing to argue
that they should be treated as a single
entity for the purposes of this
investigation. On September 10, 2007,
the Department returned Aonuo’s
September 4, 2007, Q&V submission
because it was not timely filed. On
September 14, 2007, Petitioners,
Bridgestone, Guizhou Tyre, GPX
International Tire Corporation (‘‘GPX’’),
a U.S. Importer of subject merchandise,
Starbright and TUTRIC filed comments
on the proposed product characteristics
criteria. In addition, Petitioners and
Guizhou Tyre filed rebuttal comments
on the scope of the investigation. On
September 17, 2007, GPX provided
comments on the affiliation and
collapsing of Starbright and TUTRIC.
On September 21, 2007, GPX requested
that the Department select Starbright
and TUTRIC as mandatory respondents.
Bridgestone also provided comments on
respondent selection. From September
24 through 27, 2007, Petitioners,
Bridgestone, Guizhou Tyre, GPX,
Starbright ad TUTRIC filed rebuttal
comments concerning product
characteristics.
From September 25 to 28, 2007, 28
producers and/or exporters of OTR tires
from the PRC 5 filed timely SRAs.
On October 1, 2007, the Department
issued its respondent selection
memorandum, selecting Guizhou Tyre,
Starbright, TUTRIC and Xugong as
mandatory respondents in this
investigation. 6 On October 2, 2007, the
Department issued an antidumping duty
questionnaire to the four above-named
mandatory respondents. On October 3,
2007, Aeolus withdrew its August 20,
2007, request to be a voluntary
respondent in this investigation. On
October 5, 2007, Double Happiness
amended its SRA.
On October 9, 2007, Petitioners filed
comments on Guizhou Tyre’s SRA and
a document containing supplementary
information entitled ‘‘First Submission
of Facts for the Record.’’ On October 11,
2007, Petitioners and Bridgestone filed
comments on the SRAs of the
mandatory respondents and the other
separate-rate applicants. In addition, on
that date, Xiongying waived its rights to
future service of all public and
proprietary submissions in this
investigation, with the exception of case
briefs and rebuttal briefs. On October
12, 2007, the Government of the PRC
(‘‘GOC’’) entered an appearance in this
investigation. On October 15, 2007,
Petitioners filed comments on TUTRIC’s
SRA.
On October 25, 2007, the Department
requested that the Office of Policy
provide a list of surrogate countries for
this investigation.7 On October 26, 2007,
the Office of Policy issued its list of
surrogate countries 8 and Guizhou Tyre,
Starbright, TUTRIC and Xugong
submitted section A responses (‘‘AQR’’).
Additionally, on October 26, 2007, the
Department issued letters requesting
comments on the appropriate surrogate
country to use in this investigation and
for publicly available information to
value factors of production (‘‘FOP’’).
On November 5, 2007, Petitioners
submitted comments objecting to the
consolidated response filed by
Starbright and TUTRIC. On November 6,
2007, Petitioners and Bridgestone
separately filed comments on Guizhou
Tyre’s SRA and Bridgestone filed
comments on Xugong’s SRA. On
November 8 and 9, 2007, Petitioners
filed comments on Xugong’s and
TUTRIC’s AQR respectively.
On November 9, 2007, Petitioners,
Bridgestone, Starbright and TUTRIC
filed comments on the selection of a
surrogate country. Petitioners and
Bridgestone specified India as the most
appropriate surrogate country, whereas
Starbright and TUTRIC identified Sri
Lanka as the most appropriate surrogate
country.
On November 13 and 14, 2007,
Bridgestone provided comments on the
5 Aeolus, Double Coin, Double Happiness, FullWorld, Guizhou Tyre, Starbright, Feichi, KS
Holding, Xiongying, Oriental, Etyre, Hengda,
Milestone, Qihang, Qizhou, Sinorent, Huitong,
Jinyu, Taishan, Wanda Boto, Xingyuan, DoubleStar, Techking, TUTRIC, Triangle Tyre, Sanfeng,
Xugong, and Leo.
6 See Memorandum to the File, ‘‘Selection of
Respondents for the Antidumping Investigation of
Certain New Pneumatic Off-The-Road Tires from
the People’s Republic of China’’ (October 1, 2007)
(‘‘Respondent Selection Memorandum’’). See also
‘‘Selection of Respondents’’ section below.
7 See Memorandum to Ron Lorentzen, Director,
Office of Policy, ‘‘Less-Than-Fair-Value
Investigation of Certain New Pneumatic Off-TheRoad Tires (‘OTR tires’) from the People’s Republic
of China (‘PRC’), Surrogate Country Selection List,’’
(October 25, 2007).
8 See Memorandum from Ron Lorentzen, Director,
Office of Policy, ‘‘Antidumping Duty Investigation
of Certain New Pneumatic Off-The-Road Tires
(‘OTR tires’) from the People’s Republic of China
(‘PRC’): Request for a List of Surrogate Countries,’’
(October 26, 2007) (‘‘Office of Policy Surrogate
Countries Memorandum’’).
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combined AQR for Starbright and
TUTRIC. Petitioners provided
comments on Starbright’s and TUTRIC’s
combined AQR on November 13, 2007.
On November 15, 2007, Petitioners
requested that the Department extend
the deadline for the preliminary
determination by 50 days until February
5, 2008. In that same letter, Petitioners
also requested that the Department
similarly extend the deadline for filing
critical circumstances and targeted
dumping allegations.
On November 19, 2007, Petitioners
and Bridgestone filed rebuttal comments
on Starbright’s and TUTRIC’s surrogatecountry-selection submission. Guizhou
filed its sections C and D responses
(‘‘CQR’’ and ‘‘DQR,’’ respectively) on
November 21, 2007. Starbright, TUTRIC
and Xugong also filed their CQRs and
DQRs on November 23, 2007.
On November 30, 2007, as instructed
by the Department, Starbright submitted
a revised section C database containing
only Starbright’s constructed export
price (‘‘CEP’’) sales to the United States.
In addition, Starbright explained why
the narrative section C response
originally submitted on behalf of both
Starbright and TUTRIC is equally valid
and complete for Starbright alone,
without further explanation, allocations
or exhibits. On December 10, 2007,
Guizhou Tyre amended its surrogate
value information.
On December 13, 2007, Petitioners
requested that the Department direct
Starbright and TUTRIC to submit the
business-proprietary versions of the
responses concerning affiliation filed in
the companion countervailing duty
(‘‘CVD’’) investigation of OTR tires. On
December 17, 2007, Petitioners,
Bridgestone, Starbright and TUTRIC
filed rebuttal comments on the surrogate
value submissions.
The Department issued a
supplemental questionnaire covering
Xugong’s AQR, CQR and DQR on
December 18, 2007. The next day,
Bridgestone filed an explanation of the
methodology that it used to prepare
Exhibit 2 of its December 4, 2007,
comments on the Section C and D
responses of Guizhou Tyre, Starbright
and TUTRIC.
On December 26, 2007, the
Department postponed the deadline for
the preliminary determination for 50
days until February 5, 2008.9
On January 4, 2008, Guizhou Tyre
submitted certain information contained
in its SRA response and AQR on the
9 See Certain New Pneumatic Off-the-Road Tires
From the People’s Republic of China: Postponement
of Preliminary Determination of Antidumping Duty
Investigation, 72 FR 72988 (December 26, 2007).
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16:47 Feb 19, 2008
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public record of this investigation. On
January 9, 2008, Xugong filed its first
supplemental questionnaire response
(‘‘SQR’’).
On January 10, 2008, Starbright and
TUTRIC filed factual information and
legal analysis in support of their
affiliation claims. Additionally, on
January 10 and 11, 2008, the
Department issued supplemental
questionnaires to certain SRA
applicants.
On January 14, 2008, Guizhou Tyre
and TUTRIC filed their respective SQRs.
The Department issued a second
supplemental questionnaire to Xugong
on January 15, 2008. On January 16,
2008, TUTRIC requested an extension of
the deadline for filing a corrected
version of its January 14, 2008,
submission, and Starbright filed its
SQR. The Department granted TUTRIC’s
extension request on the same day.
However, on January 17, 2008, the
Department also rejected Exhibit 1 of
Starbright’s January 16, 2008, SQR
(which had been submitted pursuant to
19 CFR 351.303(c)(2)) and Exhibit 1 of
TUTRIC’s January 14, 2008, SQR,
granting each company a one-day
extension to file a revised version of
Exhibit 1 which conformed to the
request for information in the
Department’s December 21, 2007,
supplemental questionnaire. The
Department explained that Starbright
and TUTRIC could include any
additional information from Exhibit 1
that they deemed directly relevant to the
issue of affiliation.10
On January 17, 2008, Starbright
submitted its SQR, and the Department
issued a third supplemental
questionnaire to Xugong. On January 18,
2008, Starbright and TUTRIC filed a
second copy of their January 10, 2008,
affiliation comments, which contained
the pages that Starbright and TUTRIC
requested that the Department insert in
their January 11, 2008, letter. In
addition, Starbright and TUTRIC each
submitted revised copies of Exhibit 1 of
their respective SQRs in accordance
with the instructions in the
Department’s January 17, 2008,
memorandum to the file.
On January 18, 2008, Xugong notified
the Department by phone that it had
inadvertently served Petitioners with all
the copies of its SQR that were due to
the Department that day, and requested
an extension of the deadline to file its
SQR for the SRA. The Department
agreed and instructed Xugong to file a
letter explaining this and requesting the
extension on the next business day,
which Xugong did. On January 23, 2008,
Xugong submitted a second request for
an extension along with a more detailed
explanation of the January 18, 2008,
filing error. At that time, Xugong also
filed a corrected version of its section C
database and corrected information
provided in its SQR. In addition,
Starbright and TUTRIC filed comments
on Bridgestone’s targeted dumping
allegation.
On January 24, 2008, Full-World,
Huitong, KS Holding, Qizhou, Triangle
and Wanda Boto submitted timely
responses to the Department’s
supplemental SRA questionnaires. On
January 25, 2008, Guizhou Tyre
submitted its second supplemental
response. On January 28, 2008,
Techking, Hengda, Sinorient and Etyre
responded to the Department’s
supplemental SRA questionnaire. On
January 28, 2008, (six days prior to the
statutory deadline for issuing the
preliminary LTFV determination) the
GOC filed pre-preliminary
determination comments arguing that
the Department should adjust the U.S.
prices calculated in the antidumping
duty case for both export and domestic
subsidies found to be countervailable in
the companion CVD investigation. In
that same submission, the GOC also
requested that the Department revisit its
determination from the AD proceeding
on Chinese CFS 11 not to modify the
existing NME AD methodology and
made a general assertion that the
Department should ‘‘reevaluate it {sic}
current AD methodology as applied to
China so that it fairly and accurately
reflects the realities of the Chinese
economy.’’12 However, the GOC did not
ask that we formally reevaluate the
PRC’s status as a non-market economy.
Therefore, based on our decision in
CFS,13 we have not reevaluated our AD
methodologies with respect to this
proceeding.
On January 29, 2008, Guizhou Tyre
filed its pre-preliminary determination
comments. We received Guizhou Tyre’s
January 29 comments too late to
consider for the preliminary
10 See Memorandum from Charles Riggle,
Program Manager, to the File ‘‘Less-than-Fair-Value
Investigation of Certain New Pneumatic Off-theRoad Tires (‘‘OTR tires’’) from the People’s
Republic of China (‘‘PRC’’): Telephone Call with
Counsel for Hebei Starbright Tire Co. (‘‘Starbright’’),
and Tianjin United Tire & Rubber International Co.,
Ltd. (‘‘TUTRIC’’) Regarding Supplemental
Questionnaire Responses’’ (January 17, 2008).
11 See Final Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value: Coated Free Sheet Paper from the
People’s Republic of China, 72 FR 60632 (October
25, 2007) (‘‘CFS’’), and accompanying Issue and
Decision Memorandum (‘‘I&D Memo’’) at Comment
1.
12 See OOC submission of January 28, 2008, at
pages 9–12.
13 See CFS, I&D Memo at Comment 1.
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determination, but will consider them
for the final determination.
Targeted Dumping Allegation
On January 2, 2008, Bridgestone filed
an allegation of targeted dumping based
on a pattern of export prices for
comparable merchandise that differ
among regions for Guizhou Tyre,
Starbright and TUTRIC, and an
allegation of targeted dumping based on
a pattern of export prices for comparable
merchandise that differ among
customers for Guizhou Tyre, Starbright,
TUTRIC and Xugong. In addition,
Bridgestone filed allegations of targeted
dumping based on a pattern of export
prices for comparable merchandise that
differ significantly among customers
and regions for Starbright—TUTRIC
combined. On January 3, 2008,
Petitioners filed a letter supporting
Bridgestone’s allegation of targeted
dumping. On January 9, 2008, Xugong
submitted comments on Bridgestone’s
targeted dumping allegation. On January
10, 2008, Bridgestone amended its
January 2, 2008, targeted dumping
allegation to include two computer files
that were omitted from its initial
allegation.
On January 10, 2008, Xugong
submitted comments regarding the
targeted dumping allegation. On January
22, 2008, the Department requested that
Bridgestone revise its targeted dumping
allegation to include customer-specific
targeted dumping allegations and to
revise its methodology for calculating
the ‘‘mean’’ prices for alleged ‘‘targeted
and ‘‘non-targeted’’ sales, and to
eliminate the bracketing of any words
that effectively constitute the statutory
requirements of the allegations, or the
methodology used to make the
allegations. On January 23, 2008,
Starbright and TUTRIC provided
comments on Bridgestone’s targeted
dumping allegations. Bridgestone filed a
supplement to its targeted dumping
allegation on January 25, 2008.
Given the timing of the allegation, the
respondent parties’ comments thereon,
as well as the extensive nature of these
comments, the Department was unable
to address the targeted dumping
allegation for this preliminary
determination. We intend to issue a
preliminary finding regarding these
allegations after the preliminary LTFV
determination, but within sufficient
time to allow all parties time to
comment for the final LTFV
determination.
Postponement of Final Determination
Section 735(a)(2)(A) of the Act
provides that a final determination may
be postponed until not later than 135
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days after the date of the publication of
the preliminary determination if, in the
event of an affirmative preliminary
determination, a request for such
postponement is made by exporters who
account for a significant proportion of
exports of the subject merchandise.
Section 351.210(e)(2) of the
Department’s regulations requires that
exporters requesting postponement of
the final determination must also
request an extension of the provisional
measures referred to in section 733( d)
of the Act from a four-month period
until not more than six months. We
received requests to postpone the final
determination from Petitioners and
Xugong on January 23, 2008, from
Starbright and TUTRIC on January 28,
2008, and from Bridgestone on January
29, 2008. In addition, Xugong,
Starbright and TUTRIC consented to the
extension of provisional measures from
a four-month period to not longer than
six months. Because this preliminary
determination is affirmative, the
requests for postponement were made
by exporters who account for a
significant proportion of exports of the
subject merchandise, and there is no
compelling reason to deny the
respondents’ requests, we have
extended the deadline for issuance of
the final determination until the 135th
day after the date of publication of this
preliminary determination in the
Federal Register and have extended
provisional measures to not longer than
six months.
Period of Investigation
The POI is October 1, 2006, through
March 31, 2007. This period
corresponds to the two most recent
fiscal quarters prior to the month of the
filing of the petition, which was June
2007.14
Scope of Investigation
The products covered by the scope of
the investigation are new pneumatic
tires designed for off-the-road and offhighway use, subject to exceptions
identified below. Certain OTR tires are
generally designed, manufactured and
offered for sale for use on off-road or offhighway surfaces, including but not
limited to, agricultural fields, forests,
construction sites, factory and
warehouse interiors, airport tarmacs,
ports and harbors, mines, quarries,
gravel yards, and steel mills. The
vehicles and equipment for which
certain OTR tires are designed for use
include, but are not limited to: (1)
Agricultural and forestry vehicles and
equipment, including agricultural
14 See
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tractors,15 combine harvesters,16
agricultural high clearance sprayers,17
industrial tractors,18 log-skidders,19
agricultural implements, highwaytowed implements, agricultural logging,
and agricultural, industrial, skid-steers/
mini-loaders; 20 (2) construction
vehicles and equipment, including
earthmover articulated dump products,
rigid frame haul trucks,21 front end
loaders,22 dozers,23 lift trucks, straddle
carriers,24 graders,25 mobile cranes,
compactors; and (3) industrial vehicles
and equipment, including smooth floor,
industrial, mining, counterbalanced lift
trucks, industrial and mining vehicles
other than smooth floor, skid-steers/
mini-loaders, and smooth floor off-theroad counterbalanced lift trucks.26 The
foregoing list of vehicles and equipment
generally have in common that they are
used for hauling, towing, lifting, and/or
15 An agricultural tractor is a four-wheeled
vehicle usually with large rear tires and small front
tires that is used to tow farming equipment.
16 A combine harvester is used to harvest crops
such as corn or wheat.
17 An agricultural sprayer is used to irrigate
agricultural fields.
18 An industrial tractor is a four-wheeled vehicle
usually with large rear tires and small front tires
that is used to tow industrial equipment.
19 A log skidder has a grappling lift arm that is
used to grasp, lift and move trees that have been
cut down to a truck or trailer for transport to a mill
or other destination.
20 A skid-steer loader is a four-wheel drive
vehicle with the left-side drive wheels independent
of the right-side drive wheels and lift arms that lie
alongside the driver with the major pivot points
behind the driver’s shoulders. Skid-steer loaders are
used in agricultural, construction and industrial
settings.
21 A haul truck, which may be either rigid frame
or articulated (i.e., able to bend in the middle) is
typically used in mines, quarries and construction
sites to haul soil, aggregate, mined ore, or debris.
22 A front loader has lift arms in front of the
vehicle. It can scrape material from one location to
another, carry material in its bucket or load material
into a truck or trailer.
23 A dozer is a large four-wheeled vehicle with a
dozer blade that is used to push large quantities of
soil, sand, rubble, etc., typically around
construction sites. They can also be used to perform
‘‘rough grading’’ in road construction.
24 A straddle carrier is a rigid frame, enginepowered machine that is used to load and offload
containers from container vessels and load them
onto (or off of) tractor trailers.
25 A grader is a vehicle with a large blade used
to create a flat surface. Graders are typically used
to perform ‘‘finish grading.’’ Graders are commonly
used in maintenance of unpaved roads and road
construction to prepare the base course onto which
asphalt or other paving material will be laid.
26 A counterbalanced lift truck is a rigid frame,
engine-powered machine with lift arms that has
additional weight incorporated into the back of the
machine to offset or counterbalance the weight of
loads that it lifts so as to prevent the vehicle from
overturning. An example of a counterbalanced lift
truck is a counterbalanced fork lift truck.
Counterbalanced lift trucks may be designed for use
on smooth floor surfaces, such as a factory or
warehouse, or other surfaces, such as construction
sites, mines, etc.
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loading a wide variety of equipment and
materials in agricultural, construction
and industrial settings. The foregoing
descriptions are illustrative of the types
of vehicles and equipment that use
certain OTR tires, but are not
necessarily all-inclusive. While the
physical characteristics of certain OTR
tires will vary depending on the specific
applications and conditions for which
the tires are designed (e.g., tread pattern
and depth), all of the tires within the
scope have in common that they are
designed for off-road and off-highway
use. Except as discussed below, OTR
tires included in the scope of the
petitions range in size (rim diameter)
generally but not exclusively from 8
inches to 54 inches. The tires may be
either tube-type or tubeless, radial or
non-radial, and intended for sale either
to original equipment manufacturers or
the replacement market. The subject
merchandise is currently classifiable
under Harmonized Tariff Schedule of
the United States (’’HTSUS’’)
subheadings: 4011.20.10.25,
4011.20.10.35, 4011.20.50.30,
4011.20.50.50, 4011.61.00.00,
4011.62.00.00, 4011.63.00.00,
4011.69.00.00, 4011.92.00.00,
4011.93.40.00, 4011.93.80.00,
4011.94.40.00, and 4011.94.80.00. While
HTSUS subheadings are provided for
convenience and customs purposes, our
written description of the scope is
dispositive.
Specifically excluded from the scope
are new pneumatic tires designed,
manufactured and offered for sale
primarily for on-highway or on-road
use, including passenger cars, race cars,
station wagons, sport utility vehicles,
minivans, mobile homes, motorcycles,
bicycles, on-road or on-highway trailers,
light trucks, and trucks and buses. Such
tires generally have in common that the
symbol ‘‘DOT’’ must appear on the
sidewall, certifying that the tire
conforms to applicable motor vehicle
safety standards. Such excluded tires
may also have the following
designations that are used by the Tire
and Rim Association:
Prefix letter designations:
• P—Identifies a tire intended
primarily for service on passenger cars;
• LT—Identifies a tire intended
primarily for service on light trucks;
and,
• ST—Identifies a special tire for
trailers in highway service.
Suffix letter designations:
• TR—Identifies a tire for service on
trucks, buses, and other vehicles with
rims having specified rim diameter of
nominal plus 0.156″ or plus 0.250″;
• MH—Identifies a tire for Mobile
Homes;
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16:47 Feb 19, 2008
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• HC—Identifies a heavy duty tire
designated for use on ‘‘HC’’ 15’’ tapered
rims used on trucks, buses, and other
vehicles. This suffix is intended to
differentiate among tires for light trucks,
and other vehicles or other services,
which use a similar designation.
• Example: 8R17.5 LT, 8R17.5 HC;
• LT—Identifies light truck tires for
service on trucks, buses, trailers, and
multipurpose passenger vehicles used
in nominal highway service; and
• MC—Identifies tires and rims for
motorcycles.
The following types of tires are also
excluded from the scope: pneumatic
tires that are not new, including
recycled or retreaded tires and used
tires; non-pneumatic tires, including
solid rubber tires; tires of a kind used on
aircraft, all-terrain vehicles, and
vehicles for turf, lawn and garden, golf
and trailer applications; and tires of a
kind used for mining and construction
vehicles and equipment that have a rim
diameter equal to or exceeding 39
inches. Such tires may be distinguished
from other tires of similar size by the
number of plies that the construction
and mining tires contain (minimum of
16) and the weight of such tires
(minimum 1500 pounds).
Scope Comments
In accordance with the preamble to
our regulations,27 in our initiation
notice, we set aside a period of time for
parties to raise issues regarding product
coverage and encouraged all parties to
submit comments within 14 calendar
days of publication of the initiation
notice.28
On August 20, 2007, Petitioners,
several domestic interested parties, and
Guizhou Tyre filed scope comments.
Petitioners submitted comments arguing
that the existing scope description,
which focused on end-use applications,
best described the subject goods and
that no further HTSUS item-numbers
should be added. Guizhou Tyre
submitted comments proposing criteria
for model matching. Bridgestone
submitted comments requesting certain
revisions and clarifications to the scope
language. Carlisle requested
confirmation that lawn and garden tires
are excluded from the scope of the
investigation. Valmont requested
confirmation that mounted OTR tiresand-wheels are excluded from the scope
of the investigation. On August 21,
2007, Agri-Fab submitted comments in
support of defining the scope based on
27 See Antidumping Duties; Countervailing
Duties, 62 FR 27296, 27323 (May 19, 1997).
28 See Notice of Initiation, 72 FR at 43592.
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the end-use application of the subject
merchandise.
On August 27, 2007, Petitioners,
Guizhou Tyre and Bridgestone
submitted rebuttal scope comments.
Petitioners argued that the Department
should reject Guizhou Tyre’s modelmatch criteria, and that the Department
should adopt Bridgestone’s proposals
for the revision and clarification of the
scope language. They also endorsed the
comments submitted by Carlisle,
Valmont and Agri-Fab. Guizhou Tyre
requested that the Department reject
Petitioners’ interpretation of the scope
language to cover agricultural tires with
rim diameters of 72 inches and
Petitioners’ claim that tires used for
‘‘highway-towed implements’’ are
within the scope of this investigation.
Bridgestone argued that the Department
should reject Guizhou Tyre’s modelmatch criteria and that the Department
should confirm that tires are within the
scope whether entered into the United
States unmounted or mounted on rims.
The Department will review all scope
comments submitted in both the
antidumping and countervailing duty
investigations and will issue a
preliminary scope subsequent to the
issuance of the preliminary LTFV
determination but in time to allow all
parties to the proceedings an
opportunity to comment for the final
determinations.
Selection of Respondents
Section 777 A(c)(1) of the Act directs
the Department to calculate individual
weighted-average dumping margins for
each known exporter and producer of
the subject merchandise. Section 777
A(c)(2) of the Act gives the Department
discretion, when faced with a large
number of exporters/producers, to limit
its examination to a reasonable number
of such companies if it is not practicable
to examine all companies. Where it is
not practicable to examine all known
producers/exporters of subject
merchandise, this provision permits the
Department to investigate either (1) a
sample of exporters, producers, or types
of products that is statistically valid
based on the information available to
the Department at the time of selection
or (2) exporters/producers accounting
for the largest volume of the
merchandise under investigation that
can reasonably be examined. After
consideration of the complexities
expected to arise in this proceeding and
the resources available to it, the
Department determined that it was not
practicable in this investigation to
examine all known producers/exporters
of subject merchandise. We determined
we had the resources to examine four
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exporters. We further determined to
limit our examination to the four
exporters accounting for the largest
volume of the subject merchandise
pursuant to section 777 A(c)(2)(B) of the
Act. Our analysis indicates that Guizhou
Tyre, Xugong, TUTRIC and Starbright
are the four largest PRC exporters of
subject merchandise by weight, and
account for a significant percentage of
all exports of the subject merchandise
from the PRC during the POI. As a
result, we selected the above entities as
the mandatory respondents in this
investigation.29
Non-Market Economy Country
For purposes of initiation, Petitioners
submitted an LTFV analysis for the PRC
as an NME.30 In every case conducted
by the Department involving the PRC,
the PRC has been treated as an NME
country. In accordance with section
771(18)(C)(i) of the Act, any
determination that a foreign country is
an NME country shall remain in effect
until revoked by the administering
authority.31 Therefore, we have treated
the PRC as an NME country for
purposes of this preliminary
determination.
Surrogate Country
When the Department is investigating
imports from an NME country or
producer, section 773(c)(1) of the Act
directs it to base normal value (‘‘NV’’),
in most circumstances, on the NME
producer’s FOPs valued in a surrogate
market-economy country or countries
considered to be appropriate by the
Department. In accordance with section
773(c)(4) of the Act, in valuing the
FOPs, the Department shall utilize, to
the extent possible, the prices or costs
of FOPs in one or more market-economy
countries that are at a level of economic
development comparable to that of the
NME country and are significant
producers of comparable merchandise.
The sources of the surrogate values we
have used in this investigation are
discussed under the ‘‘Normal Value’’
section below.
The Department determined that
India, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, the
Philippines, and Egypt are countries
comparable to the PRC in terms of
economic development.32 Once the
countries that are economically
comparable to the PRC have been
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29 See
Respondent Selection Memorandum.
Notice of Initiation, 72 FR at 43593.
31 See, e.g., Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Certain Artist Canvas from the
People’s Republic of China, 71 FR 16116 (March 30,
2006) (‘‘Artist Canvas’’).
32 See Office of Policy Surrogate Countries
Memorandum.
identified, we select an appropriate
surrogate country by determining
whether an economically comparable
country is a significant producer of
comparable merchandise and whether
the data for valuing FOPs is both
available and reliable.
We have determined that there is
insufficient data from Sri Lanka and
have determined it appropriate to use
India as a surrogate country pursuant to
section 773(c)(4) of the Act based on the
following: (A) India is at a level of
economic development comparable to
that of the PRC, and (B) India is a
significant producer of comparable
merchandise. Furthermore, we have
reliable data from India that we can use
to value the FOPs.33 Thus, we have
calculated NV using Indian prices when
available and appropriate to value the
FOPs of the OTR tires producers. We
have obtained and relied upon publicly
available information wherever
possible.34
In accordance with 19 CFR
351.301(c)(3)(i), for the final
determination in an antidumping
investigation, interested parties may
submit within 40 days after the date of
publication of the preliminary
determination publicly available
information to value the FOPs.
Affiliation
Section 771(33) of the Act states that
the Department considers the following
entities to be affiliated: (A) Members of
a family, including brothers and sisters
(whether by whole or half blood),
spouse, ancestors, and lineal
descendants; (B) Any officer or director
of an organization and such
organization; (C) Partners; (D) Employer
and employee; (E) Any person directly
or indirectly owning, controlling, or
holding with power to vote, five percent
or more of the outstanding voting stock
or shares of any organization and such
organization; (F) Two or more persons
directly or indirectly controlling,
controlled by, or under common control
with, any person; and (G) Any person
who controls any other person and such
other person.
For purposes of affiliation, section
771(33) of the Act states that a person
shall be considered to control another
person if the person is legally or
operationally in a position to exercise
restraint or direction over the other
person. In order to find affiliation
between companies, the Department
30 See
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16:47 Feb 19, 2008
Jkt 214001
33 Id.
at 2.
Memorandum to Wendy J. Frankel,
‘‘Certain New Pneumatic Off-The-Road Tires from
the People’s Republic of China: Surrogate Value
Memorandum’’ (February 5, 2008) (‘‘Surrogate
Value Memorandum’’).
34 See
PO 00000
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9283
must find that at least one of the criteria
listed above is applicable to the
respondents.
To the extent that the affiliation
provisions in section 771(33) of the Act
do not conflict with the Department’s
application of separate rates and the
statutory NME provisions in section
773(c) of the Act, the Department will
determine that exporters and/or
producers are affiliated if the facts of the
case support such a finding.35
Starbright and TUTRIC
Based on our examination of the
evidence presented in Starbright,
TUTRIC and GPX’s submissions, we
preliminarily determine that GPX and
TUTRIC do not have a close supplier
relationship such that one party is
reliant upon the other and thus
preliminarily determine they are not
affiliated parties within the meaning of
section 771(33) of the Act.36 Therefore,
these companies will not be treated as
a single entity for the purposes of this
preliminary determination.
Guizhou Tyre
We preliminarily determine that
Guizhou Tyre, Guizhou Advance
Rubber Co., Ltd. (‘‘GAR’’) and Guizhou
Tyre Import and Export Co. (‘‘GTCIE’’)
are affiliated pursuant to sections
771(33)(B), (E), (F) and (G) of the Act,
and that these companies should be
treated as a single entity for the
purposes of this investigation pursuant
to 19 CFR 351.401(f). Based on our
examination of the evidence presented
in Guizhou Tyre’s questionnaire
responses, we have determined that: (1)
Guizhou Tyre wholly owns both GAR
and GTCIE; (2) Guizhou Tyre and GAR
are affiliated producers of identical or
similar merchandise; and (3) the
potential for manipulation of price or
production exists with respect to
Guizhou Tyre, GAR and GTCIE.37
35 See Certain Preserved Mushrooms From the
People’s Republic of China: Preliminary Results of
Sixth New Shipper Review and Preliminary Results
and Partial Rescission of Fourth Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review, 69 FR 10410, 10413 (March
5, 2004), unchanged in Final Results and Final
Rescission, in Part, of Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review: Certain Preserved
Mushrooms From the People’s Republic of China,
70 FR 54361 (September 14, 2005).
36 See Memorandum to the File ‘‘Antidumping
Duty Investigation on New Pneumatic Off-the-Road
Tires from the People’s Republic of China:
Affiliation and Collapsing of Hebei Starbright Tire
Co. Ltd. and Tianjin United Tire & Rubber
International Co. Ltd.’’ (February 5, 2008).
37 See Memorandum to the File, ‘‘Antidumping
Investigation of Certain New Pneumatic Off-TheRoad Tires (‘‘OTR tires’’) from the People’s
Republic of China (‘‘PRC’’): Affiliation and
Collapsing of Guizhou Tyre Co., Ltd., Guizhou
Advance Rubber Co., Ltd., and Guizhou Tyre
Import and Export Co.,’’ (February 5, 2008).
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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 in 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. Exporters can
demonstrate this independence through
the absence of both de jure and de facto
governmental control over export
activities. The Department analyzes
each entity exporting the subject
merchandise under a test arising from
the Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Sparklers from the
People’s Republic of China, 56 FR 20588
(May 6, 1991) (‘‘Sparklers’’), as further
developed in the Final Determination of
Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Silicon
Carbide from the People’s Republic of
China, 59 FR 22585 (May 2, 1994)
(‘‘Silicon Carbide’’).38 However, if the
Department determines that a company
is wholly foreign-owned or located in a
market economy, then a separate-rate
analysis is not necessary to determine
whether it is independent from
government control.
A. Separate-Rate Recipients 39
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
1. Wholly Foreign-Owned
Two separate rate companies reported
in their SRAs that they are wholly
owned by individuals or companies
located in a market economy
(collectively ‘‘Foreign-Owned SR
Applicants’’). See ‘‘Preliminary
Determination’’ section below for
companies marked with a ‘‘∧’’
38 See also Policy Bulletin 05.1, which 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 at 6.
39 All separate-rate applicants receiving a separate
rate are hereby referred to collectively as the ‘‘SR
Recipients;’’ this includes the mandatory
respondents.
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16:47 Feb 19, 2008
Jkt 214001
designating these companies as wholly
foreign-owned. Therefore, because they
are wholly foreign-owned, and we have
no evidence indicating that they are
under the control of the PRC, a separaterate analysis is not necessary to
determine whether these companies are
independent from government
control.40 Accordingly, we have
preliminarily granted a separate rate to
these companies.
2. Located in a Market Economy With
No PRC Ownership
One of the separate rate companies in
this investigation is located outside the
PRC (’’Foreign SR Applicant’’). See
‘‘Preliminary Determination’’ section
below for companies marked with a ‘‘+’’
designating these companies as located
in a market economy, with no PRC
ownership. Because there is no PRC
ownership in any of these companies,
we determine that no separate-rate
analysis is required for these exporters
because they are beyond the jurisdiction
of the PRC government.41 Accordingly,
we have preliminarily granted a
separate rate to these companies.
3. Joint Ventures Between Chinese and
Foreign Companies or Wholly ChineseOwned Companies
Twenty-four of the separate-rate
companies in this investigation stated
that they are either joint ventures
between Chinese and foreign companies
or are wholly Chinese-owned
companies (collectively ‘‘PRC SR
Applicants’’). Therefore, the Department
must analyze whether these respondents
can demonstrate the absence of both de
jure and de facto governmental control
over export activities.
a. 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.42
40 See, e.g., Notice of Final Determination of Sales
at Less Than Fair Value: Creatine Monohydrate
from the People’s Republic of China, 64 FR 71104–
05 (December 20, 1999) (where the respondent was
wholly foreign-owned and, thus, qualified for a
separate rate).
41 See, e.g., Notice of Final Determination of Sales
at Less Than Fair Value: Bicycles From the People’s
Republic of China, 61 FR 19026, 19027 (April 30,
1996), citing Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Disposable Pocket Lighters from
the People’s Republic of China, 60 FR 22359, 22361
(May 5,1995).
42 See Sparklers, 56 FR at 20589.
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The evidence provided by the
mandatory respondents and the PRC SR
Recipients supports a preliminary
finding of de jure absence of
governmental control based on the
following: (1) An absence of restrictive
stipulations associated with the
individual exporters’ business and
export licenses; (2) there are applicable
legislative enactments decentralizing
control of the companies; and (3) and
there are formal measures by the
government decentralizing control of
companies.
b. 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.43 The Department has
determined that an analysis of de facto
control is critical in determining
whether respondents are, in fact, subject
to a degree of governmental control
which would preclude the Department
from assigning separate rates.
The evidence placed on the record of
this investigation by the PRC SR
Recipients demonstrates an absence of
de jure and de facto government control
with respect to each of the exporters’
exports of the merchandise under
investigation, in accordance with the
criteria identified in Sparklers and
Silicon Carbide. See ‘‘Preliminary
Determination’’ section below for
companies marked with an ‘‘*’’
designating these companies as joint
ventures between Chinese and foreign
companies or wholly Chinese-owned
companies that have demonstrated their
eligibility for a separate rate.
B. Companies Not Receiving a Separate
Rate
The Department is not granting a
separate rate to the following separaterate applicant for the reasons discussed
below.
43 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).
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Double-Star was unable to
demonstrate that it had sales of subject
merchandise to the United States.
Double-Star explained in its SRA that its
reported U.S. sales were in fact sales to
another PRC entity that it knew resold
the merchandise to the United States. In
NME proceedings, we do not examine
sales prices between NME entities (e.g.,
transaction prices between an NME
producer of subject merchandise and
the NME exporter of subject
merchandise) since NME countries are
presumed to ‘‘not operate on market
principles of cost or pricing structures
so that the sales of merchandise in such
countr{ies} do not reflect the fair value
of the merchandise.’’ See section 771
(18) of the Act. Accordingly, nonexporting NME producers of subject
merchandise are not eligible for
examination as respondents. Based on
Double-Star’s description of the sales
chain for the merchandise it produces,
Double-Star is a producer and not an
exporter of subject merchandise, and
therefore is not eligible to receive a
separate rate in this investigation.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
Application of Facts Available
Section 776(a)(2) of the Act provides
that, if an interested party (A) withholds
information that has been requested by
the Department, (B) fails to provide such
information in a timely manner or in the
form or manner requested, subject to
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.
In reviewing the respondents’ original
and supplemental questionnaire
responses, we have determined that
certain reported items require additional
supplemental information. We have
used the reported values as facts
available for this preliminary
determination and will issue postpreliminary determination
supplemental questionnaires to the
respective respondents to address these
issues.
The PRC-Wide Entity
The record evidence indicates there
were more exporters of OTR tires from
the PRC during the POI than those that
responded to the Q&V questionnaire or
the full antidumping questionnaire.44
Specifically, we issued the Q&V
questionnaire to 94 identified PRC
exporters of the subject merchandise but
44 See
Respondent Selection Memorandum at 2.
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received responses from only 30, with
one reporting that it made no shipments
of subject merchandise during the POI.
The other 29 responses did not account
for all imports into the United States
from the PRC during the POI. Further,
evidence on the record indicates that
the 94 identified PRC exporters of
subject merchandise received our Q&V
questionnaire. See Memorandum to the
File, ‘‘Quantity and Value (‘‘Q&V’’)
Tracking,’’ dated September 4, 2007.
Based on the above facts, the
Department preliminarily determines
that there were exports of the subject
merchandise under investigation from
PRC producers/exporters that did not
respond to the Department’s
questionnaire, and we are treating these
PRC producers/exporters as part of the
countrywide entity. As a result, use of
facts available pursuant to section
776(a)(2)(A) of the Act is warranted for
the PRC entity.45
The Department will consider all
margins on the record at the time of the
final determination for the purpose of
determining the most appropriate AFA
rate for the PRC-wide entity.46
Selection of the Adverse Facts
Available Rate
Section 776(b) of the Act provides
that if an interested party fails to
cooperate by not acting to the best of its
ability to comply with requests for
information, the Department may
employ adverse inferences.47 We find
that, because the PRC-wide entity did
not respond to our request for
information, 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.
In deciding which facts to use as
AFA, section 776(b) of the Act and 19
C.F.R. 351.308(c)(1) provide that the
Department may rely on information
derived from (1) the petition, (2) a final
determination in the investigation, (3)
any previous review or determination,
or (4) any information placed on the
record. In selecting a rate for AFA, the
Department selects a rate that is
sufficiently adverse ‘‘as to effectuate the
purpose of the facts available rule to
45 See, e.g., Artist Canvas, 71 FR 16116 (March 30,
2006).
46 See Preliminary Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Saccharin from the People’s
Republic of China, 67 FR 79049, 79053–54
(December 27, 2002), unchanged in Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value:
Saccharin From the People’s Republic of China, 68
FR 27530 (May 20, 2003).
47 See, e.g., Artist Canvas, 71 FR 16116, 16118
(March 30, 2006). See also Statement of
Administrative Action accompanying the URAA,
H.R. Rep No. 103–316 (‘‘SAA’’) at 870.
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9285
induce respondents to provide the
Department with complete and accurate
information in a timely manner.48 It is
further the Department’s practice to
select a rate that ensures ‘‘that the party
does not obtain a more favorable result
by failing to cooperate than if it had
cooperated fully.49
Generally, the Department finds
selecting the highest rate in any segment
of the proceeding as AFA to be
appropriate.50 The Court of
International Trade (‘‘CIT’’) and the
Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
(‘‘Fed. Cir.’’) have affirmed decisions to
select the highest margin from any prior
segment of the proceeding as the AFA
rate on numerous occasions.51
In choosing the appropriate balance
between providing respondents with an
incentive to respond accurately and
imposing a rate that is reasonably
related to the respondents’ prior
commercial activity, selecting the
highest prior margin ‘‘reflects a common
sense inference that the highest prior
margin is the most probative evidence of
current margins, because, if it were not
so, the importer, knowing of the rule,
would have produced current
information showing the margin to be
less.52
As AFA, we have preliminarily
assigned to the PRC-wide entity a rate
of 210.48 percent, the highest calculated
rate from the petition. The Department
preliminarily determines that this
information is the most appropriate
from the available sources to effectuate
the purposes of AFA. The Department’s
reliance on the petition rate to
48 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).
49 See SAA at 870. See also, Brake Rotors From
the People’s Republic of China: Final Results and
Partial Rescission of the Seventh Administrative
Review; Final Results of the Eleventh New Shipper
Review, 70 FR 69937, 69939 (November 18, 2005).
50 See, e.g., Certain Cased Pencils from the
People’s Republic of China; Notice of Preliminary
Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review and Intent to Rescind in Part, 70 FR 76755,
76761 (December 28, 2005).
51 See Rhone Poulenc, Inc. v. United States, 899
F. 2d 1185, 1190 (Fed. Cir. 1990) (affmning the
Department’s presumption that the highest margin
was the best information of current margins)
(‘‘Rhone Poulenc’’); NSK Ltd. v. United States, 346
F. Supp. 2d 1312, 1335 (ClT 2004) (affirming a
73.55 percent total AFA rate, the highest available
dumping margin from a different respondent in an
LTFV investigation); Kompass Food Trading
International v. United States, 24 CIT 678,683
(2000) (affirming a 51.16 percent total AFA rate, the
highest available dumping margin from a different,
fully cooperative respondent); and Shanghai Taoen
International Trading Co., Ltd. v. United States, 360
F. Supp. 2d 1339, 1348 (CIT 2005) (affirming a
223.01 percent total AFA rate, the highest available
dumping margin from a different respondent in a
previous administrative review).
52 See Rhone Poulenc, 899 F. 2d at 1190.
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determine an AFA rate is subject to the
requirement to corroborate secondary
information.53
Corroboration
Section 776(c) of the Act provides
that, when the Department relies on
secondary information rather than on
information obtained in the course of an
investigation as facts available, it must,
to the extent practicable, corroborate
that information from independent
sources reasonably at its disposal.
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.’’ 54 The SAA
provides that to ‘‘corroborate’’ means
simply that the Department will satisfy
itself that the secondary information to
be used has probative value.55 The SAA
also states that independent sources
used to corroborate may include, for
example, published price lists, official
import statistics and customs data, and
information obtained from interested
parties during the particular
investigation.56 To corroborate
secondary information, the Department
will, to the extent practicable, examine
the reliability and relevance of the
information used.57
The AFA rate that the Department
used is from the petition.58 Petitioners’
methodology for calculating the export
price (‘‘EP’’) and NV in the petition is
discussed in the initiation notice.59 To
corroborate the AFA margin we have
selected, we compared that margin to
the margins we found for the
respondents. We found that the margin
of 210.48 percent has probative value
because it is in the range of margins we
found for the mandatory respondents.
Accordingly, we find that the rate of
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
53 See
the ‘‘Corroboration’’ section below.
54 See SAA at 870.
55 See id.
56 See id.
57 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 Final Results of
Antidumping Duty Administrative Reviews and
Termination in Part: 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, 62 FR 11825 (March 13, 1997).
58 See ‘‘Antidumping Duty Investigation Initiation
Checklist: Certain Off-the-Road Tires from the
People’s Republic of China (PRC)’’ at 10. See Notice
of Initiation, 72 FR at 43593.
59 See Notice of Initiation, 72 FR at 43593.
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210.48 percent is corroborated within
the meaning of section 776(c) of the Act.
Consequently, we are applying a
single antidumping rate—the PRC-wide
rate—to producers/exporters that failed
to respond to the Department’s
antidumping questionnaire, and/or the
Q&V questionnaire, or did not apply for
a separate rate, as applicable. This rate
will also apply to separate-rate
applicants which did not demonstrate
entitlement to a separate rate.60 The
PRC-wide rate applies to all entries of
the merchandise under investigation
except for entries from mandatory
respondents Guizhou Tyre, Starbright,
TUTRIC and Xugong, and from the
separate-rate recipients. These
companies and their corresponding
antidumping duty cash deposit rates are
listed below in the ‘‘Preliminary
Determination’’ section of this notice.
Margin for the Separate-Rate
Applicants
Several exporters of OTR tires from
the PRC, listed above, were not selected
as mandatory respondents in this
investigation but have applied for
separate-rate status and provided
information to the Department for this
purpose. We have established a
weighted-average margin for all
separate-rate recipients, based on the
rates we calculated for the mandatory
respondents, excluding any rates that
are zero, de minimis, or based entirely
on AFA. That rate is 24.75 percent. The
exporters given a separate rate are
identified by name in the ‘‘Preliminary
Determination’’ section of this notice.
Fair Value Comparisons
To determine whether sales of OTR
tires to the United States by the
mandatory respondents were made at
LTFV, we compared EP or CEP to NV,
as described in the ‘‘Export Price,’’
‘‘Constructed Export Price’’ and
‘‘Normal Value’’ sections of this notice.
Export Price
In accordance with section 772(a) of
the Act, EP is the price at which the
subject merchandise is first sold (or
agreed to be sold) before the date of
importation by the producer or exporter
of the subject merchandise outside of
the United States to an unaffiliated
purchaser in the United States or to an
unaffiliated purchaser for exportation to
the United States, as adjusted under
section 772(c) of the Act. In accordance
with section 772(a) of the Act, we used
EP for TUTRIC, Xugong and certain of
60 See, e.g., Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Synthetic Indigo from the People’s
Republic of China, 65 FR 25706, 25707 (May 3,
2000).
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Guizhou Tyre’s U.S. sales because the
subject merchandise was sold directly to
the unaffiliated customers in the United
States prior to importation and because
CEP was not otherwise indicated.
Xugong claimed that it sold certain sales
of subject merchandise through a U.S.
affiliate (i.e., API) in the United States
and Xugong reported these sales as CEP
sales. After examining evidence on the
record, we have determined that Xugong
is not affiliated with API within the
meaning of the Act and regulations.61
Thus, for the preliminary determination,
we have classified Xugong’s sales to API
as EP sales.
We calculated EP based on the packed
FOB, CFR, CNF, CIF or delivered prices
to unaffiliated purchasers in, or for
exportation to, the United States. We
made deductions, as appropriate, for
any movement expenses (e.g., foreign
inland freight from the plant to the port
of exportation, foreign inland insurance,
domestic brokerage) in accordance with
section 772(c)(2)(A) of the Act,62 To
value foreign inland insurance, we used
the average insurance expenses reported
in the public version of Agro Dutch’s
May 24, 2005 response submitted in the
February 2004–January 2005
administrative review of the
antidumping duty order on certain
preserved mushrooms from India.63
Constructed Export Price
In accordance with section 772(b) of
the Act, CEP is the price at which the
subject merchandise is first sold (or
agreed to be sold) in the United States
before or after the date of importation by
or for the account of the producer or
exporter of such merchandise or by a
seller affiliated with the producer or
exporter, to a purchaser not affiliated
with the producer or exporter, as
adjusted under sections 772(c) and (d)
of the Act. In accordance with section
61 See section 771(33) of the Act and 19 CFR
351.102(b).
62 For a detailed description of all adjustments,
see Memorandum to the File, ‘‘Certain New
Pneumatic Off-The-Road Tires from the People’s
Republic of China: Analysis Memorandum for the
Preliminary Determination: Tianjin United Tire &
Rubber International Co., Ltd. (‘TUTRIC’)’’
(February 5, 2008) (‘‘TUTRIC Preliminary Analysis
Memorandum’’); Memorandum to the File, ‘‘Certain
New Pneumatic Off-The-Road Tires from the
People’s Republic of China: Analysis Memorandum
for the Preliminary Determination: Guizhou Tyre
Co., Ltd. (‘GTC’) and its affiliates (collectively
‘Guizhou Tyre’)’’ (February 5, 2008) (‘‘Guizhou Tyre
Preliminary Analysis Memorandum’’); and
‘‘Analysis Memorandum for the Preliminary
Determination: Xuzhou Xugong Tyre Co., Ltd.
(‘Xugong’)’’ (February 5, 2008) (‘‘Xugong
Preliminary Analysis Memorandum’’).
63 See Certain Preserved Mushrooms From India:
Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review, 70 FR 37757 (June 30, 2005). See also
Surrogate Value Memorandum.
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772(b) of the Act, we used CEP for
Starbright’s and certain of Guizhou
Tyre’s sales because the sales were
made by the U.S. affiliate in the United
States.
We calculated CEP based on delivered
prices to unaffiliated purchasers in the
United States. In accordance with
section 772(d)(1) of the Act, we made
deductions from the starting price for
billing adjustments, movement
expenses, discounts and rebates. We
made deductions from the U.S. sales
price for movement expenses in
accordance with section 772(c)(2)(A) of
the Act. These included, where
applicable, foreign inland freight and
insurance from the plant to the port of
exportation, foreign inland insurance,
ocean freight, marine insurance, U.S.
Customs duty, U.S. brokerage and
handling, U.S. inland freight from port
to the warehouse, warehousing expense
and U.S. inland freight from the
warehouse to the customer. In
accordance with section 772(d)(1) of the
Act, the Department deducted, where
applicable, commissions, credit
expenses, warranty expenses, inventory
carrying costs and indirect selling
expenses from the U.S. price, all of
which relate to commercial activity in
the United States. In addition, we
deducted CEP profit in accordance with
sections 772(d)(3) and 772(f) of the Act.
In accordance with section 773(a) of the
Act, we calculated Starbright’s credit
expenses and inventory carrying costs
based on the Federal Reserve short-term
rate.64
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
Adjustment for Domestic Subsidies
On January 28, 2008, the Bureau of
Fair Trade for Imports & Exports
(‘‘BOFT’’) of the Ministry of Commerce
of the PRC submitted a request that the
Department adjust U.S. prices 65 for
what it claims are double remedies.
While the Department has always been
determined to prevent any double
remedies from arising (see, e.g.,
Wheatland Tube v. United States, 495
F.3d 1355, 1363 (Fed. Cir. 2007), BOFT
offers no evidence supporting its
64 For a detailed description of all adjustments,
see Memorandum to the File, ‘‘Certain New
Pneumatic Off-The-Road Tires from the People’s
Republic of China: Analysis Memorandum for the
Preliminary Determination: Hebei Starbright Tire
Co., Ltd. (‘Starbright’)’’ (February 5, 2008)
(‘‘Starbright Preliminary Analysis Memorandum’’).
65 Section 772(c)(l)(C) of the Act directs the
Department to add the amount of CVDs imposed to
offset export subsidies to the U.S. price. See Notice
of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair
Value: Certain Cold-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat
Products from Korea, 67 FR 62124, 62165 (October
3, 2002), where we stated, ‘‘We believe the
economic theory implicit in section 772(c)(1)(C) of
the Act should also generally apply to our cash
deposit calculations in an investigation.’’
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16:47 Feb 19, 2008
Jkt 214001
argument that domestic subsidies
automatically lower prices (including
export prices) pro rata. Instead, BOFT
argues that U.S. law embodies the
presumption that domestic subsidies
lower prices pro rata. We do not agree.
First, despite addressing the issue of
parallel AD duties and CVDs directly,
and explicitly requiring that the amount
of any CVDs to offset export subsidies
be added to U.S. price, Congress
provided no adjustment for CVDs
imposed by reason of domestic
subsidies in NME proceedings. Second,
we fmd the assertion that the AD law
embodies the presumption that
domestic subsidies automatically lower
prices, pro rata, to be baseless.66
BOFT is correct in noting that the
purpose of adding CVDs to offset export
subsidies to U.S. prices is to prevent AD
duties from coinstituting a second
remedy for export subsidies. BOFT is
also correct that the apparent premise of
this adjustment is the presumption that
export subsidies automatically lower the
price of exported merchandise, pro rata,
increasing dumping margins
accordingly. While this presumption
may be debatable, it is not unreasonable,
given the typically direct connection
between export subsidies and exports.
In any event, the statute plainly requires
the Department to add the full amount
of CVDs imposed to offset export
subsidies to the U.S. price. See section
772(c)(1)(C) of the Act.
The premise of BOFT’s claimed
adjustment is that the AD law embodies
the presumption that domestic subsidies
automatically lower export prices, pro
rata (while having no effect upon
normal value, as determined in NME
proceedings). BOFT provides no basis
for this presumption. Whereas the
connection between export subsidies
and export prices is direct, the
connection between domestic subsidies
and export price is indirect and subject
to a number of variables. Consequently,
presuming that domestic subsidies
automatically lower export prices, pro
rata, would be speculative.67
More importantly, we find no
indication in the statute or legislative
history that Congress harbored any
presumption about the effect of
domestic subsidies upon export prices,
let alone the presumption that they
automatically reduce export prices, pro
rata. The Senate Report accompanying
the 1979 legislation states simply that,
for domestic subsidies (where the
situation with respect to the domestic
and export markets is the same) no
adjustment to U.S. price is appropriate.
66 See
67 See
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CFS, I&D Memo at Comment 2.
Frm 00015
Fmt 4703
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9287
See Trade Agreement Act of 1979,
Report of the Committee on Finance on
H.R. 4537, Senate Report No. 96–249,
96th Cong. (July 17,1979), at 79. In so
stating, Congress may have presumed
that domestic subsidies had no effect on
prices, had the same (if uncertain) effect
on domestic and export prices, or may
have presumed nothing. Thus, neither
the statute nor the Senate Report
indicates that the statute embodies the
presumption that domestic subsidies
automatically lower prices (including
export prices) pro rata.
BOFT asserts that the presumption
that domestic subsidies lower prices,
pro rata, is the whole basis for imposing
CVDs upon such subsidies. That is not
correct. While subsidies unquestionably
benefit their recipients, it is by no
means certain that those recipients
automatically respond to subsidies by
lowering their prices, pro rata, as
opposed to investing in capital
improvements, retiring debt, or any
number of other uses.
BOFT also argues that the fact that the
Department uses only surrogate values
that are ‘‘subsidy free’’ demonstrates
that the Department believes subsidy
recipients automatically lower their
prices pro rata. This is also incorrect.
The House Report cited by BOFT
establishes only that Congress believed
that Commerce should avoid using
values that may have been affected by
dumping or subsidies. Similarly, the
Department’s compliance with
Congress’ direction does not establish
that the Department has made any
assumption about the impact of
subsidies upon prices. The Department
has acknowledged simply that the
existence of dumping or subsidies may
taint the values upon which it otherwise
would rely.
BOFT also argues that the Department
previously has assumed that benefits
from domestic subsidies are fully passed
though into home-market and export
prices. This is misleading. The more
accurate statement would be that, when
it has considered the issue, the
Department has sometimes presumed
that, whatever the effect, if any, of
domestic subsidies upon the prices
subsequently charged by their
recipients, that effect would be the same
for domestic prices and export prices.68
BOFT also argues that, by recognizing
that subsidies may have no (or an
unpredictable) effect upon prices
subsequently charged by their recipients
in NME countries, the Department is
conceding that it is not possible to
measure subsidies in an NME country.
This is incorrect. In both market
68 See
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economy and NME countries,
identifying subsidies involves
measuring benefits received by a firm.
Whether such firms respond to
subsidies received by lowering their
prices, pro rata, would be a completely
separate inquiry in either a market
economy or NME country.
Because we do not accept BOFT’s
assertion that the AD law embodies the
presumption that domestic subsidies
automatically lower export prices, pro
rata, and that is the only basis on which
BOFT has claimed an adjustment, we
must deny BOFT’s request.
Normal Value
We compared NV to weighted-average
EPs and CEPs in accordance with
section 777A(d)(1) of the Act. Further,
section 773(c)(1) of the Act provides
that the Department shall determine the
NV using an FOP methodology if the
merchandise is exported from an NME
and the information does not permit the
calculation of NV using home-market
prices, third-country prices, or
constructed value under section 773(a)
of the Act. The Department bases NV on
the FOPs because the presence of
government controls on various aspects
of these economies renders price
comparisons and the calculation of
production costs invalid under its
normal methodologies.
The Department’s questionnaire
requires that the respondent provide
information regarding the weightedaverage FOPs across all of the
company’s plants that produce the
subject merchandise, not just the FOPs
from a single plant. This methodology
ensures that the Department’s
calculations are as accurate as
possible.69 The Department calculated
the FOPs using the weighted-average
factor values for all of the facilities
involved in producing the subject
merchandise for each exporter. The
Department calculated NV for each
matching control number (‘‘CONNUM’’)
based on the factors of production
reported from each of the exporters’
suppliers and then averaged the
supplier-specific NV together, weighted
by production quantity, to derive a
single, weighted-average NV for each
CONNUM exported by each exporter.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
Factor Valuations
In accordance with section 773( c) of
the Act, we calculated NV based on
FOPs reported by respondents for the
69 See, e.g., Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value and Critical Circumstances:
Certain Malleable Iron Pipe Fittings From the
People’s Republic of China, 68 FR 61395 (October
28, 2003), and the accompanying Issues and
Decision Memorandum at Comment 19.
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Jkt 214001
POI. To calculate NV, we multiplied the
reported per-unit factor-consumption
rates by publicly available Indian
surrogate values. In selecting the
surrogate values, we considered the
quality, specificity, and
contemporaneity of the data. As
appropriate, we adjusted input prices by
including freight costs to make them
delivered prices. Specifically, we added
to Indian import surrogate values a
surrogate freight cost using the shorter
of the reported distance from the
domestic supplier to the factory of
production or the distance from the
nearest seaport to the factory of
production, where appropriate. This
adjustment is in accordance with the
Fed. Cir. decision in Sigma Corp. v.
United States, 117 F. 3d 1401, 1407–
1408 (Fed. Cir. 1997).
The mandatory respondents reported
that certain of their reported raw
material inputs were sourced from a
market-economy country and paid for in
market-economy currencies. Pursuant to
19 CFR 351.408(c)(1), when a
mandatory respondent sources inputs
from a market-economy supplier in
meaningful quantities (i.e., not
insignificant quantities), we use the
actual price paid by respondents for
those inputs, except when prices may
have been distorted by findings of
dumping by the PRC and/or subsidies.70
Guizhou Tyre’s, Starbright’s, and
TUTRIC’s reported information
demonstrates that the quantities of
certain raw materials purchased from
market-economy suppliers are
significant. Where we found market
economy purchases to be in significant
quantities, in accordance with our
statement of policy as outlined in
Antidumping Methodologies: Market
Economy Inputs, we have used the
actual purchases of these inputs to value
the inputs.71 For a detailed description
of all actual values used for marketeconomy inputs, see the companyspecific analysis memoranda dated
February 5, 2008. Where the quantity of
the input purchased from marketeconomy suppliers is insignificant, the
Department will not rely on the price
paid by an NME producer to a marketeconomy supplier because it cannot
have confidence that a company could
fulfill all its needs at that price. For
Guizhou Tyre, and TUTRIC, the
Department found certain of their inputs
70 See Antidumping Duties; Countervailing
Duties; Final Rule, 62 FR 27296, 27366 (May 19,
1997).
71 See Antidumping Methodologies: Market
Economy Inputs, Expected Non-Market Economy
Wages, Duty Drawback; and Request for Comments,
71 FR 61716 (October 19, 2006) ( ‘‘Antidumping
Methodologies: Market Economy Inputs’’).
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purchased from market-economy
suppliers to be insignificant.72
For this preliminary determination, in
accordance with past practice, we used
import values from the World Trade
Atlas online (‘‘Indian Import
Statistics’’), which were published by
the Directorate General of Commercial
Intelligence and Statistics, Ministry of
Commerce of India, which were
reported in rupees and are
contemporaneous with the POI to
calculate surrogate values for the
mandatory respondents’ material inputs.
Where we found Indian Import
Statistics to be unreliable, we used
Indonesian Import Statistics from the
World Trade Atlas.73 In selecting the
best available information for valuing
FOPs in accordance with section
773(c)(1) of the Act, the Department’s
practice is to select, to the extent
practicable, surrogate values which are
non-export average values, most
contemporaneous with the POI,
product-specific, and tax-exclusive.74
Where we could not obtain publicly
available information contemporaneous
with the POI with which to value FOPs,
we adjusted the surrogate values using,
where appropriate, the Indian
Wholesale Price Index (‘‘WPI’’) as
published in the International Financial
Statistics of the International Monetary
Fund (‘‘IMF’’).
Furthermore, with regard to the
Indian import-based surrogate values,
we have disregarded import prices that
we have reason to believe or suspect
may be subsidized. We have reason to
believe or suspect that prices of inputs
from Indonesia, South Korea, and
Thailand may have been subsidized. We
have found in other proceedings that
these countries maintain broadly
available, non-industry-specific export
subsidies and, therefore, it is reasonable
to infer that all exports to all markets
from these countries may be
subsidized.75 We are also directed by
72 See Guizhou Tyre Preliminary Analysis
Memorandum, Starbright Preliminary Analysis
Memorandum, TUTRIC Preliminary Analysis
Memorandum, and Xugong Preliminary Analysis
Memorandum.
73 See Surrogate Value Memorandum.
74 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).
75 See 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
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the legislative history not to conduct a
formal investigation to ensure that such
prices are not subsidized.76 Rather,
Congress directed the Department to
base its decision on information that is
available to it at the time it makes its
determination. Therefore, we have not
used prices from these countries in
calculating the Indian import-based
surrogate 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. In
addition, we excluded Indian import
data from NME countries from our
surrogate value calculations.77
We used Indian transport information
in order to value the inland freight cost
of the raw materials. The Department
determined the best available
information for valuing truck freight to
be from https://www.infreight.com and
rail freight to be from https://
www.indianrailways.gov.in. This source
provides daily rates from six major
points of origin to five destinations in
India. The Department obtained a price
quote on the first day of each month
from June 2005 to May 2006 from each
point of origin to each destination and
averaged the data accordingly. We
adjusted these rates for inflation.
Consistent with the Department’s
practice, we used two sources to
calculate a surrogate value for domestic
brokerage expenses.78 These data were
averaged with the February 2004–
January 2005 data contained in the
May 24, 2005, public version of Agro
Dutch Industries Limited’s (‘‘Agro
Republic of China, 69 FR 20594 (April 16, 2004),
and accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum at Comment 7.
76 See Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act
of 1988, Conference Report to Accompanying H.R.
3, H.R. Rep. 100–576 at 590 (1988).
77 For a detailed description of all surrogate
values used for each respondent, see Surrogate
Value Memorandum.
78 See, e.g., Preliminary Determination of Sales at
Less Than Fair Value, Affirmative Critical
Circumstances, In Part, and Postponement of Final
Determination: Certain Lined Paper Products from
the People’s Republic of China, 71 FR 19695, 19704
(April 17, 2006) (utilizing these same data,
unchanged for the final determination); Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value,
Affirmative Critical Circumstances, In Part, and
Postponement of Final Determination: Certain
Lined Paper Products from the People’s Republic of
China, 71 FR 53079 (September 8, 2006). The
Department averaged December 2003–November
2004 data contained in the February 28, 2005,
public version of Essar Steel’s response submitted
in the antidumping duty administrative review of
hot-rolled carbon steel flat products from India. See
also Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products
From India: Preliminary Results of Antidumping
Duty Administrative Review, 71 FR 2018 (January
12, 2006) (unchanged in the final results); Certain
Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products From India:
Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review, 71 FR 40694 (July 18, 2006).
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Dutch’’) response submitted in the
administrative review of the
antidumping duty order on certain
preserved mushrooms from India.79 The
brokerage expense data reported by
Essar Steel and Agro Dutch in their
public versions are ranged data. The
Department first derived an average perunit amount from each source. Then the
Department adjusted each average rate
for inflation. Finally, the Department
averaged the two per-unit amounts to
derive an overall average rate for the
POI.
For direct, indirect, and packing
labor, consistent with 19 CFR
351.408(c)(3), we used the PRC
regression-based wage rate as reported
on Import Administration’s home page,
Import Library, Expected Wages of
Selected NME Countries, revised in
November 2005, available at https://
ia.ita.doc.gov/wages/.
Because this regression-based wage rate
does not separate the labor rates into
different skill levels or types of labor,
we have applied the same wage rate to
all skill levels and types of labor
reported by the respondent. If the NME
wage rates are updated by the
Department prior to issuance of the final
determination, we will use the updated
wage rate in the final LTFV
determination.
To value electricity, we used data
from the International Energy Agency
Key World Energy Statistics (2003
edition). Because the value was not
contemporaneous with the POI, we
adjusted the rate for inflation.
The Department valued water using
data from the Maharashtra Industrial
Development Corporation (https://
www.midcindia.org) because 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 adjusted the rate for inflation.
We valued steam using the January–
June 1999 Indian price data from PR
Newswire Association Inc. following the
methodology in Goldlink Industries Co.,
Ltd., Trust Chem Co., Ltd., Tianjin
Hanchem International Trading Co.,
Ltd. v. United States, 431 F. Supp. 2d
1323 (CIT 2006).80 Because the
information was not contemporaneous
79 See Certain Preserved Mushrooms From India:
Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative
Review, 70 FR 37757 (June 30, 2005). See also
Surrogate Value Memorandum.
80 See Surrogate Value Memorandum.
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9289
with the POI, we applied the
appropriate WPI inflator.81
To value factory overhead, selling,
general, and administrative expenses,
and profit, we used audited financial
statements for the year ending March
31, 2007, of Apollo Tyres Ltd., CEAT
Limited, Falcon Tyres Ltd., and TVS
Srichakra Limited, and the financial
statement for the year ending December
31, 2006, of Goodyear India Limited,
producers of the subject merchandise
from India.82 The Department may
consider other publicly available
financial statements for the final
determination, as appropriate.
Guizhou Tyre claimed that it
produced five separate types of byproducts consisting of the scrap of steel
curtain, rubber, tires, steel wire for
beading and nylon.83 It claimed that it
sold all five types of by-product.
However, it failed to demonstrate that it
sold scrap to unaffiliated purchasers.84
Therefore, for the preliminary
determination, we have not granted a
by-product offset for any of Guizhou
Tyre’s claimed by-products.85
In its questionnaire responses,
Xugong stated that it generates a
‘‘waste’’ by-product which it sold
during the POI. However, record
evidence indicates that Xugong’s single
reported waste by-product is comprised
of four separate by-products (i.e., steel
wire, rubber, and two different types of
fabric). Further, Xugong did not
demonstrate actual sales of the claimed
waste product during the POI. Because
Xugong reported different types of byproducts in a cumulative by-product
field, reported four different surrogate
values to one per-unit consumption of
waste, and did not demonstrate actual
sales of the individual waste products at
issue, we are not able to grant Xugong’s
requested by product offset.86
On January 17, 2008, Starbright
requested that the Department grant it a
CEP offset for differences in level of
trade between its U.S. sales and those of
the surrogate producers, under section
773(a)(7)(B) of the Act. Section
773(a)(7)(B) of the Act allows for a
reduction in NV when NV is established
at a more advanced stage of distribution
than the level of trade of the CEP, but
where the available data do not provide
an appropriate basis on which to
calculate—under section 773(a)(7)(A) of
the Act—a level-of-trade adjustment. In
81 See
Surrogate Value Memorandum.
Surrogate Value Memorandum.
83 See Guizhou DQR pg. 15.
84 See Section D pg. 5, Exhibit D–9.
85 See Guizhou Tyre Preliminary Analysis
Memorandum.
86 See Xugong Preliminary Analysis
Memorandum.
82 See
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applying the CEP offset, the Department
reduces NV by the amount of indirect
selling expenses incurred in the country
in which NV is determined on sales of
the foreign like product, but not more
than the amount of such expenses for
which a deduction is made under
section 772(d)(1)(D) of the Act
(‘‘additional adjustments to constructed
export price’’).
In NME cases, the Department
calculates NV pursuant to section 773(c)
of the Act. Consequently, normal value
for NME cases is determined under a
different subsection of the statute than
normal value for ME cases. See sections
772(a) and 772(e) of the Act. In the
subsection of the statute regarding NME
NV, there is no provision for allowing
either a level-of-trade adjustment or, by
extension, a CEP offset. Furthermore,
even if the statute contemplated
considering such an adjustment for
NME cases, the Department would have
to apply the same standards as those
used in market economy cases. In other
words, the Department would have to
issue a level-of-trade questionnaire to
determine selling functions conducted
in the country in which NV is
determined on sales of the foreign like
product. Because NV in an NME case is
calculated based on surrogate valuation
of FOPs, we do not analyze selling
functions of the PRC respondent.
Consequently, to determine whether a
CEP offset is warranted, the Department
would have to issue a level-of-trade
questionnaire to surrogate financial
companies, which is not practicable
because they are not parties to the
proceeding, and thus not subject to
verification. Furthermore, the
Department allows parties to provide
surrogate financial statements after its
preliminary findings, thus to issue a
level-of-trade questionnaire after the
preliminary findings would not allow
ample time for parties to the proceeding
to effectively comment on the
responses, and would hinder the
Department’s ability to meet its
statutory deadlines for completion of
the proceeding.
Further, we have not made
circumstance-of-sale (‘‘COS’’)
adjustments as requested by Starbright
for expenses borne by GPX, its U.S.
affiliate, on sales of subject merchandise
in the United States. Under the statute,
such expenses are direct expenses
incurred in the United States and are
properly deducted from starting price to
arrive at CEP. Because they are borne by
the U.S. affiliate and are not incurred in
the foreign country, such expenses
cannot form the basis of any COS
adjustments pursuant to section
773(a)(6)(C) of the Act.87
In a market economy proceeding, the
Department, in calculating NV, will
make COS adjustments by offsetting
expenses incurred by the exporter on
sales to one market with the
corresponding direct or indirect selling
expenses incurred by that same exporter
on sales to the other. For example, if an
exporter paid commissions on its sales
in the home market but not on its sales
to the United States, the Department
would deduct the home market
commissions from NV but add to NV the
exporter’s commissions and/or indirect
selling expenses incurred on its sales to
the United States.88
Applying that example to this NME
investigation, however, in order to make
a COS adjustment, with respect to
commissions paid by one or more of the
surrogate producers 89 but not paid by
Starbright, the Department would have
to collect and rely on data with respect
to Starbright’s indirect selling expenses
incurred in the PRC for sales to the
United States. Such expenses, however,
would be based on internal PRC pricing,
which the Department does not utilize
for purposes of antidumping
calculations because such pricing
reflects internal transactions in an NME
country, which are considered
unreliable. See section 771(18)(A) of the
Act. See also Shandong Huarong
Machinery Co., Ltd. v. United States,
2007 WL 4633315 at 13 (CIT Nov. 20,
2007).
Thus, while Starbright assumes that
the Department’s practice of making
COS adjustments in market economy
cases can be replicated in the NME
context, we are precluded from making
parallel adjustments in NME cases
where the necessary data to calculate
such adjustments cannot be relied upon
due to the fact that the relevant
expenses are incurred and priced under
NME conditions. Therefore, for the
reasons cited above, we find that we are
precluded from making COS
adjustments in this investigation.
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
from Guizhou Tyre, Starbright, TUTRIC
and Xugong upon which we will rely in
making our final determination.
Additionally, we may also verify the
information on the record submitted by
selected separate-rate applicants.
Combination Rates
In the Notice of Initiation, the
Department stated that it would
calculate combination rates for certain
respondents that are eligible for a
separate rate in this investigation.90 This
change in practice is described in Policy
Bulletin 05.1.91
87 See Torrington Co. v. United States, 156 F.3d
1361, 1363 (Fed. Cir. 1998).
88 We note that with the limited exception of
certain freight expenses, Starbright has provided no
record evidence in this investigation regarding
specific expenses incurred in the PRC by the foreign
exporter.
89 The Department’s practice is not to analyze
information or amounts utilized to construct a
surrogate producer’s financial statements as the
surrogate producer is not a party to the proceeding
and the books and records supporting these
financial statements are not subject to verification.
90 See Notice of Initiation, 72 FR at 43595.
91 See Footnote 36, supra.
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9291
Preliminary Determination
The weighted-average dumping
margins are as fol1ows:
Margin
(in percent)
Exporter
Producer
Guizhou Tyre Co., Ltd.* ..............................................................
Guizhou Tyre Co., Ltd.* ..............................................................
Hebei Starbright Co., Ltd.∧ .........................................................
Tianjin United Tire & Rubber International Co., Ltd.
(‘‘TUTRIC’’)*.
Xuzhou Xugong Tyre Company Limited* ...................................
Aeolus Tyre Co., Ltd.* ................................................................
Double Coin Holdings Ltd.* ........................................................
Double Coin Holdings Ltd.* ........................................................
Double Coin Holdings Ltd.* ........................................................
Double Happiness Tyre Industries Corp., Ltd.* ..........................
Jiangsu Feichi Co., Ltd.* .............................................................
KS Holding Limited∧ ...................................................................
KS Holding Limited∧ ...................................................................
KS Holding Limited∧ ...................................................................
Laizhou Xiongying Rubber Industry Co., Ltd.* ...........................
Oriental Tyre Technology Limited+ .............................................
Oriental Tyre Technology Limited+ .............................................
Oriental Tyre Technology Limited+ .............................................
Qingdao Etyre International Trade Co., Ltd.* .............................
Qingdao Etyre International Trade Co., Ltd.* .............................
Qingdao Etyre International Trade Co., Ltd.* .............................
Qingdao Free Trade Zone Full-World International Trading Co.,
Ltd.*
Qingdao Free Trade Zone Full-World International Trading Co.,
Ltd.*
Qingdao Free Trade Zone Full-World International Trading Co.,
Ltd.*
Qingdao Free Trade Zone Full-World International Trading Co.,
Ltd.*
Qingdao Free Trade Zone Full-World International Trading Co.,
Ltd.*
Qingdao Hengda Tyres Co., Ltd.* ..............................................
Qingdao Milestone Tyre Co., Ltd.* .............................................
Qingdao Milestone Tyre Co., Ltd.* .............................................
Qingdao Milestone Tyre Co., Ltd.* .............................................
Qingdao Milestone Tyre Co., Ltd.* .............................................
Qingdao Qinghang Tyre Co., Ltd.* .............................................
Qingdao Qizhou Rubber Co., Ltd.* .............................................
Qingdao Sinorient International Ltd.* ..........................................
Qingdao Sinorient International Ltd.* ..........................................
Qingdao Sinorient International Ltd.* ..........................................
Shandong Huitong Tyre Co., Ltd.* .............................................
Shandong Jinyu Tyre Co., Ltd.* .................................................
Shandong Taishan Tyre Co., Ltd.* .............................................
Shandong Wanda Boto Tyre Co., Ltd.* ......................................
Shandong Xingyuan International Trading Co., Ltd.* .................
Shandong Xingyuan International Trading Co., Ltd.* .................
Techking Tires Limited (Techking Enterprise (H.K.) Co., Ltd.)*
Techking Tires Limited (Techking Enterprise (H.K.) Co., Ltd.)*
Techking Tires Limited (Techking Enterprise (H.K.) Co., Ltd.)*
Triangle Tyre Co., Ltd.* ..............................................................
Wendeng Sanfeng Tyre Co., Ltd.* .............................................
Zhaoyuan Leo Rubber Co., Ltd.* ................................................
PRC-Entity ..................................................................................
Guizhou Advance Rubber ..........................................................
Guizhou Tyre Co., Ltd ...............................................................
Hebei Starbright Co., Ltd ...........................................................
Tianjin United Tire & Rubber International Co., Ltd.
(‘‘TUTRIC’’).
Xuzhou Xugong Tyre Company Limited ....................................
Aeolus Tyre Co., Ltd ..................................................................
Double Coin Holdings Ltd ..........................................................
Double Coin Group Rugao Tyre Co., Ltd ..................................
Double Coin Group Shanghai Donghai Tyre Co., Ltd ...............
Double Happiness Tyre Industries Corp., Ltd ...........................
Jiangsu Feichi Co., Ltd ..............................................................
Oriental Tyre Technology Ltd ....................................................
Shandong Taishan Tyre Co., Ltd ..............................................
Xu Zhou Xugong Tyres Co., Ltd ................................................
Laizhou Xiongying Rubber Industry Co., Ltd .............................
Midland Off the Road Tire Co., Ltd ...........................................
Midland Specialty Tire Co., Ltd .................................................
Xuzhou Hanbang Tyres Co., Ltd ...............................................
ShanGong Xingua Tyre Co. Ltd ................................................
Shandong Xingyuan International Trade Co. Ltd ......................
Shandong Xingyuan Rubber Co. Ltd .........................................
Qingdao Eastern Industrial Group Co., Ltd ...............................
16.35
16.35
19.73
10.98
Qingdao Qihang Tyre Co., Ltd ..................................................
24.75
Qingdao Shuanghe Tyre Co., Ltd ..............................................
24.75
Qingdao Yellowsea Tyre Factory ..............................................
24.75
Shandong Zhentai Tyre Co., Ltd ...............................................
24.75
Qingdao Hengda Tyres Co., Ltd ................................................
Qingdao Shuanghe Tyre Co., Ltd ..............................................
Shandong Zhentai Tyre Co., Ltd ...............................................
Shifeng Double-Star Tire Co., Ltd .............................................
Weifang Longtai Tyre Co., Ltd ...................................................
Qingdao Qinghang Tyre Co., Ltd ..............................................
Qingdao Qizhou Rubber Co., Ltd ..............................................
Qingdao Hengda Tyres Co., Ltd ................................................
Shifeng Double-Star Tire Co., Ltd .............................................
Tenzhou Broncho Tyre Co., Ltd ................................................
Shandong Huitong Tyre Co., Ltd ...............................................
Shandong Jinyu Tyre Co., Ltd ...................................................
Shandong Taishan Tyre Co., Ltd ..............................................
Shandong Wanda Boto Tyre Co., Ltd .......................................
Shangdong Xingda Tyre Co., Ltd ..............................................
Xingyuan Tyre Group Co., Ltd ...................................................
Shandong Xingda Tyre Co. Ltd .................................................
Shandong Xing International Trade Co. Ltd ..............................
Shandong Xingyuan Rubber Co. Ltd .........................................
Triangle Tyre Co., Ltd ................................................................
Wendeng Sanfeng Tyre Co., Ltd ...............................................
Zhaoyuan Leo Rubber Co., Ltd .................................................
....................................................................................................
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
210.48
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Disclosure
Suspension of Liquidation
We will disclose the calculations
performed to parties in this proceeding
within five days of the date of
publication of this notice in accordance
with 19 CFR 351.224(b).
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
subject merchandise, entered, or
withdrawn from warehouse, for
consumption on or after the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
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51.81
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
24.75
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.
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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
OTR tires, or sales (or the likelihood of
sales) for importation, of the subject
merchandise within 45 days of our final
determination.
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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 on
which the final verification report is
issued in this proceeding and rebuttal
briefs, limited to issues raised in case
briefs may be submitted no later than
five days after the deadline date for case
briefs. See 19 CFR 351.309. A table of
contents, 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.
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
of Commerce, Room 1870, within 30
days after the date of publication of this
notice.92 Requests should contain the
party’s name, address, and telephone
number, the number of participants, and
a list of the issues to be discussed. 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. See 19 CFR
351.310. Parties should confirm by
telephone the date, time, and location of
the hearing two days before the
scheduled date.
We will make our final determination
no later than 135 days after the date of
publication of this preliminary
determination, pursuant to section
735(a)(2) of the Act.
92 See
19 CFR 351.310(c).
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Jkt 214001
This determination is issued and
published in accordance with sections
733(f) and 777(i)(1) of the Act.
Dated: February 5, 2008.
Ronald K. Lorentzen,
Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration.
[FR Doc. 08–672 Filed 2–19–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–M
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[A–507–502]
Certain In–Shell Raw Pistachios from
Iran: Rescission of Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce
SUMMARY: In response to a request from
Cal Pure Pistachios, Inc. (Cal Pure), a
domestic interested party, the
Department of Commerce (the
Department) initiated an administrative
review of the antidumping duty order
on certain in–shell raw pistachios (raw
pistachios) from Iran. See Initiation of
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Administrative Reviews and Request for
Revocation in Part, 72 FR 48613 (August
24, 2007). This review covers the period
July 1, 2006, through June 30, 2007. We
are now rescinding this review due to
Cal Pure’s withdrawal of its request for
review.
EFFECTIVE DATE: February 20, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dena Crossland or John Drury, AD/CVD
Operations, Office 7, Import
Administration, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution
Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20230;
telephone: (202) 482–3362 or (202) 482–
0195, respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
AGENCY:
Background
On July 17, 1986, the Department
published in the Federal Register a
notice of the antidumping duty order on
raw pistachios from Iran. See
Antidumping Duty Order; Certain In–
Shell Pistachios from Iran, 51 FR 25922
(July 17, 1986). On July 3, 2007, the
Department published the opportunity
to request an administrative review of
the antidumping duty order on raw
pistachios from Iran for the period July
1, 2006, through June 30, 2007. See
Antidumping or Countervailing Duty
Order, Finding, or Suspended
Investigation; Opportunity to Request
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Administrative Review, 72 FR 36420
(July 3, 2007).
In accordance with 19 CFR
351.213(b)(1), on July 24, 2007, Cal
Pure, a domestic interested party,
requested an administrative review of
the sales of subject merchandise from
Iran for the following companies:
Ahmadi’s Agricultural Production,
Processing and Trade Complex
(Ahmadi); Maghsoudi Farms
(Maghsoudi); Rafsanjan Pistachio
Producers Cooperative (RPPC); Razi
Domghan Agricultural & Animal
Husbandry Co. (Razi); and Tehran
Negah Nima Trading Company Inc.
(Nima). On August 24, 2007, the
Department published in the Federal
Register a notice of initiation of this
antidumping duty administrative review
covering the period July 1, 2006,
through June 30, 2007. See Initiation of
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Administrative Reviews and Request for
Revocation in Part, 72 FR 48613 (August
24, 2007).
On September 10, 2007, the
Department issued its antidumping duty
questionnaire to Ahmadi, Maghsoudi,
Nima, Razi, and RPPC. On September
26, 2007, a former representative on
behalf of RPPC notified the Department
that it was no longer representing RPPC
and provided a new mailing address for
RPPC. On September 28, 2007, the
Department sent RPPC the original
questionnaire to the new mailing
address in Iran. See Memorandum to the
File from Judy Lao, Analyst, through
Angelica Mendoza, Program Manager,
dated October 3, 2007. On October 4,
2007, the representative for Maghsoudi,
Nima, and Razi informed the
Department that it would not be filing
responses to the Department’s
questionnaire as Maghsoudi, Nima, and
Razi did not export or ship subject
merchandise during the period of
review (POR). See Memorandum to the
File from Judy Lao, Analyst, through
Angelica Mendoza, Program Manager,
dated October 12, 2007. On October 5,
2007, the Department received notice
that the RPPC did not receive the
antidumping questionnaire, and re–sent
the original questionnaire, and changed
the due dates for RPPC’s responses, after
revising the shipping information. See
Memorandum to the File from Judy Lao,
Analyst, through Angelica Mendoza,
Program Manager, dated October 9,
2007. On October 10, 2007, Ahmadi’s
representative informed the Department
that it would not be filing responses to
the Department’s questionnaire as it did
not export or ship subject merchandise
during the POR. See Letter from
Ahmadi’s Agricultural Production,
Processing and Trade Complex, dated
E:\FR\FM\20FEN1.SGM
20FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 34 (Wednesday, February 20, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 9278-9292]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 08-672]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[A-570-912]
Certain New Pneumatic Off-The-Road Tires From the People's
Republic of China; Preliminary Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair
Value and Postponement of Final Determination
AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
EFFECTIVE DATE: February 20, 2008.
SUMMARY: We preliminarily determine that certain new pneumatic off-the-
road tires (``OTR tires'') from the People's Republic of China
(``PRC'') are being, or are 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 (``the Act''). The estimated margins of
sales at LTFV are shown in the ``Preliminary Determination'' section of
this notice. Pursuant to requests from interested parties, we are
postponing the final determination and extending the provisional
measures 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.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Laurel LaCivita or Charles Riggle, AD/
CVD Operations, Office 8, Import Administration, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20230; telephone: (202) 482-
4243 or 482-0650, respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Case History
On June 18, 2007, Titan Tire Corporation, a subsidiary of Titan
International, Inc. (``Titan''), and the United Steel, Paper and
Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied Industrial and Service
Workers International Union, AFL-CIO-CLC (``USW'') (collectively,
``Petitioners''), filed a petition in proper form on behalf of the
domestic industry and workers producing OTR tires, concerning imports
of OTR tires from the PRC (``Petition'').
The Department of Commerce (``the Department'') initiated this
investigation on July 30, 2007.\1\ In the Notice of Initiation, the
Department applied a process by which exporters and producers may
obtain separate-rates in non-market economy (``NME'') investigations.
The process requires exporters and producers to submit a separate-rate
status application (``SRA'').\2\ However, the standard for eligibility
for a separate rate (which is whether a firm can demonstrate an absence
of both de jure and de facto government control over its export
activities) has not changed. The SRA for this investigation was posted
on the Department's Web site https://ia.ita.doc.gov/ia-highlights-and-
news.html on August 10, 2007. The due date for filing an SRA was
September 28, 2007.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See Initiation of Antidumping Duty Investigation: Certain
New Pneumatic Off-The-Road Tires From the People's Republic of
China, 72 FR 43591 (August 6, 2007) (``Notice of Initiation'').
\2\ See Policy Bulletin 05.1: Separate-Rates Practice and
Application of Combination Rates in Antidumping Investigations
involving Non-market Economy Countries (April 5, 2005) (Policy
Bulletin 05.1), available at https://ia.ita.doc.gov/policy/bull05-
1.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On July 30, 2007, the Department issued quantity and value
(``Q&V'') questionnaires to 94 companies. In addition, on July 30,
2007, the Department requested the assistance of the Government of the
PRC (through the Ministry of Commerce) in transmitting the Department's
Q&V questionnaire to all companies that manufacture and export subject
merchandise to the Untied States, as well as to manufacturers that
produce the subject merchandise for companies that were engaged in
exporting subject merchandise to the United States during the period of
investigation (``POI'').
From August 8 to August 20, 2007, 30 exporters of the subject
merchandise filed timely responses to the Department's Q&V
questionnaire.\3\ One
[[Page 9279]]
of these companies, GITI, reported that it made no sales to the United
States during the POI. The Government of the PRC did not respond to the
Department's letter requesting assistance in transmitting the Q&V
questionnaire to procedures and exporters of the subject merchandise in
the PRC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Aeolus Tyre Co., Ltd (``Aeolus''), Double Coin Holding Ltd.
(``Double Coin''), Double Happiness Tyre Industries Corp., Ltd.
(``Double Happiness''), Full-World International Trading Co., Ltd.
(``Full-World''), GITI Tire (China) Investment Company Ltd.
(``GITI''), Guizhou Tyre Co., Ltd. (``Guizhou Tyre''), Hebei
Starbright Co., Ltd. (``Starbright''), Jiangsu Feichi Co., Ltd.
(``Feichi''), KS Holding Company Limited (``KS Holding''), Laizhou
Xiongying Rubber Industry Co., Ltd. (``Xiongying''), Oriental Tyre
Technology Limited (``Oriental''), Qingdao Etyre International Trade
Co., Ltd. (``Etyre''), Qingdao Hengda Tyres Co., Ltd. (``Hengda''),
Qingdao Milestone Tyre Co., Ltd. (``Milestone''), Qingdao Qihang
Tyre Co., Ltd. (``Qihang''), Qingdao Qizhou Rubber Co., Ltd.
(``Qizhou''), Qingdao Sinorient International Ltd. (``Sinorent''),
Rodeo International Trading Co., Ltd. (``Rodeo''), Shandong Huitong
Tyre Co., Ltd. (``Huitong''), Shandong Jinyu Tyre Co., Ltd.
(``Jinyu'') Shandong Taishan Tyre Co., Ltd. (``Taishan''), Shandong
Wanda Boto Tyre Co., Ltd. (``Wanda Boto''), Shandong Xingyuan
International Trading Co., Ltd. (``Xingyuan''), Shifeng Double-Star
Tire Co., Ltd. (``Double-Star''), Techking Tires Limited (Techking
Enterprise (H.K.) Co., Ltd.) (``Techking''), Tianjin United Tire &
Rubber International Co., Ltd. (``TUTRIC''), Triangle Tyre Co., Ltd.
(``Triangle Tyre''), Wendeng City Sanfeng Tyre Co., Ltd.
(``Sanfeng''), Xuzhou Xugong Tyre Company Limited (``Xugong'') and
Zhaoyuan Leo Rubber Co., Ltd. (``Leo'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On August 20, 2007, Petitioners; Valmont Industries, Inc.
(``Valmont''), Carlisle Tire & Wheel (``Carlisle''), Bridgestone
Holding, Inc. and its subsidiary, Bridgestone Firestone North American
Tire, LLC (``Bridgestone''), and Agri-Fab, Inc. (``Agri-Fab'')
(collectively ``domestic interested parties''); and Guizhou Tyre
submitted comments on the scope of the investigation. In addition,
Aeolus requested to be a mandatory respondent in this investigation.
Alternatively, Aeolus requested that if it were not selected as a
mandatory respondent, that it be accepted as a voluntary respondent
pursuant to section 782(a) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.204(d). On August
27, 2007, Petitioners, Bridgestone, and Guizhou Tyre filed scope
rebuttal comments. In addition, the Department returned Qingdao Aonuo
Tyre Co. Ltd.'s (``Aonuo's'') August 8, 2007, Q&V submission because
Aonuo did not submit the final proprietary and public versions the
following business day as required by the Department's regulations. See
19 CFR 351.303(c)(2).
On August 27, 2007, the United States International Trade
Commission (``ITC'') issued its affirmative preliminary determination
that there is a reasonable indication that an industry in the United
States is materially injured by reason of imports of OTR tires from the
PRC. \4\ Additionally, on August 31, 2007, the Department provided
interested parties to this proceeding the opportunity to comment on the
Department's proposed product characteristic reporting criteria and
matching hierarchy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See Investigation Nos. 701-TA-448 and 731-TA-1117
(Preliminary): Certain Off-the-Road Tires From China, 72 FR 50699
(September 4, 2007).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On September 4, 2007, Aonuo attempted to file its Q&V information
for the second time. On September 5, 2007, the Department returned the
August 27, 2007, Q&V submission of Landmax International Co., Ltd.
because it was not timely filed. In addition, per the Department's
instructions, Starbright and TUTRIC filed amended Q&V responses,
disaggregating their Q&V information, but continuing to argue that they
should be treated as a single entity for the purposes of this
investigation. On September 10, 2007, the Department returned Aonuo's
September 4, 2007, Q&V submission because it was not timely filed. On
September 14, 2007, Petitioners, Bridgestone, Guizhou Tyre, GPX
International Tire Corporation (``GPX''), a U.S. Importer of subject
merchandise, Starbright and TUTRIC filed comments on the proposed
product characteristics criteria. In addition, Petitioners and Guizhou
Tyre filed rebuttal comments on the scope of the investigation. On
September 17, 2007, GPX provided comments on the affiliation and
collapsing of Starbright and TUTRIC. On September 21, 2007, GPX
requested that the Department select Starbright and TUTRIC as mandatory
respondents. Bridgestone also provided comments on respondent
selection. From September 24 through 27, 2007, Petitioners,
Bridgestone, Guizhou Tyre, GPX, Starbright ad TUTRIC filed rebuttal
comments concerning product characteristics.
From September 25 to 28, 2007, 28 producers and/or exporters of OTR
tires from the PRC \5\ filed timely SRAs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Aeolus, Double Coin, Double Happiness, Full-World, Guizhou
Tyre, Starbright, Feichi, KS Holding, Xiongying, Oriental, Etyre,
Hengda, Milestone, Qihang, Qizhou, Sinorent, Huitong, Jinyu,
Taishan, Wanda Boto, Xingyuan, Double-Star, Techking, TUTRIC,
Triangle Tyre, Sanfeng, Xugong, and Leo.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On October 1, 2007, the Department issued its respondent selection
memorandum, selecting Guizhou Tyre, Starbright, TUTRIC and Xugong as
mandatory respondents in this investigation. \6\ On October 2, 2007,
the Department issued an antidumping duty questionnaire to the four
above-named mandatory respondents. On October 3, 2007, Aeolus withdrew
its August 20, 2007, request to be a voluntary respondent in this
investigation. On October 5, 2007, Double Happiness amended its SRA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See Memorandum to the File, ``Selection of Respondents for
the Antidumping Investigation of Certain New Pneumatic Off-The-Road
Tires from the People's Republic of China'' (October 1, 2007)
(``Respondent Selection Memorandum''). See also ``Selection of
Respondents'' section below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On October 9, 2007, Petitioners filed comments on Guizhou Tyre's
SRA and a document containing supplementary information entitled
``First Submission of Facts for the Record.'' On October 11, 2007,
Petitioners and Bridgestone filed comments on the SRAs of the mandatory
respondents and the other separate-rate applicants. In addition, on
that date, Xiongying waived its rights to future service of all public
and proprietary submissions in this investigation, with the exception
of case briefs and rebuttal briefs. On October 12, 2007, the Government
of the PRC (``GOC'') entered an appearance in this investigation. On
October 15, 2007, Petitioners filed comments on TUTRIC's SRA.
On October 25, 2007, the Department requested that the Office of
Policy provide a list of surrogate countries for this investigation.\7\
On October 26, 2007, the Office of Policy issued its list of surrogate
countries \8\ and Guizhou Tyre, Starbright, TUTRIC and Xugong submitted
section A responses (``AQR''). Additionally, on October 26, 2007, the
Department issued letters requesting comments on the appropriate
surrogate country to use in this investigation and for publicly
available information to value factors of production (``FOP'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See Memorandum to Ron Lorentzen, Director, Office of Policy,
``Less-Than-Fair-Value Investigation of Certain New Pneumatic Off-
The-Road Tires (`OTR tires') from the People's Republic of China
(`PRC'), Surrogate Country Selection List,'' (October 25, 2007).
\8\ See Memorandum from Ron Lorentzen, Director, Office of
Policy, ``Antidumping Duty Investigation of Certain New Pneumatic
Off-The-Road Tires (`OTR tires') from the People's Republic of China
(`PRC'): Request for a List of Surrogate Countries,'' (October 26,
2007) (``Office of Policy Surrogate Countries Memorandum'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On November 5, 2007, Petitioners submitted comments objecting to
the consolidated response filed by Starbright and TUTRIC. On November
6, 2007, Petitioners and Bridgestone separately filed comments on
Guizhou Tyre's SRA and Bridgestone filed comments on Xugong's SRA. On
November 8 and 9, 2007, Petitioners filed comments on Xugong's and
TUTRIC's AQR respectively.
On November 9, 2007, Petitioners, Bridgestone, Starbright and
TUTRIC filed comments on the selection of a surrogate country.
Petitioners and Bridgestone specified India as the most appropriate
surrogate country, whereas Starbright and TUTRIC identified Sri Lanka
as the most appropriate surrogate country.
On November 13 and 14, 2007, Bridgestone provided comments on the
[[Page 9280]]
combined AQR for Starbright and TUTRIC. Petitioners provided comments
on Starbright's and TUTRIC's combined AQR on November 13, 2007.
On November 15, 2007, Petitioners requested that the Department
extend the deadline for the preliminary determination by 50 days until
February 5, 2008. In that same letter, Petitioners also requested that
the Department similarly extend the deadline for filing critical
circumstances and targeted dumping allegations.
On November 19, 2007, Petitioners and Bridgestone filed rebuttal
comments on Starbright's and TUTRIC's surrogate-country-selection
submission. Guizhou filed its sections C and D responses (``CQR'' and
``DQR,'' respectively) on November 21, 2007. Starbright, TUTRIC and
Xugong also filed their CQRs and DQRs on November 23, 2007.
On November 30, 2007, as instructed by the Department, Starbright
submitted a revised section C database containing only Starbright's
constructed export price (``CEP'') sales to the United States. In
addition, Starbright explained why the narrative section C response
originally submitted on behalf of both Starbright and TUTRIC is equally
valid and complete for Starbright alone, without further explanation,
allocations or exhibits. On December 10, 2007, Guizhou Tyre amended its
surrogate value information.
On December 13, 2007, Petitioners requested that the Department
direct Starbright and TUTRIC to submit the business-proprietary
versions of the responses concerning affiliation filed in the companion
countervailing duty (``CVD'') investigation of OTR tires. On December
17, 2007, Petitioners, Bridgestone, Starbright and TUTRIC filed
rebuttal comments on the surrogate value submissions.
The Department issued a supplemental questionnaire covering
Xugong's AQR, CQR and DQR on December 18, 2007. The next day,
Bridgestone filed an explanation of the methodology that it used to
prepare Exhibit 2 of its December 4, 2007, comments on the Section C
and D responses of Guizhou Tyre, Starbright and TUTRIC.
On December 26, 2007, the Department postponed the deadline for the
preliminary determination for 50 days until February 5, 2008.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See Certain New Pneumatic Off-the-Road Tires From the
People's Republic of China: Postponement of Preliminary
Determination of Antidumping Duty Investigation, 72 FR 72988
(December 26, 2007).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On January 4, 2008, Guizhou Tyre submitted certain information
contained in its SRA response and AQR on the public record of this
investigation. On January 9, 2008, Xugong filed its first supplemental
questionnaire response (``SQR'').
On January 10, 2008, Starbright and TUTRIC filed factual
information and legal analysis in support of their affiliation claims.
Additionally, on January 10 and 11, 2008, the Department issued
supplemental questionnaires to certain SRA applicants.
On January 14, 2008, Guizhou Tyre and TUTRIC filed their respective
SQRs. The Department issued a second supplemental questionnaire to
Xugong on January 15, 2008. On January 16, 2008, TUTRIC requested an
extension of the deadline for filing a corrected version of its January
14, 2008, submission, and Starbright filed its SQR. The Department
granted TUTRIC's extension request on the same day. However, on January
17, 2008, the Department also rejected Exhibit 1 of Starbright's
January 16, 2008, SQR (which had been submitted pursuant to 19 CFR
351.303(c)(2)) and Exhibit 1 of TUTRIC's January 14, 2008, SQR,
granting each company a one-day extension to file a revised version of
Exhibit 1 which conformed to the request for information in the
Department's December 21, 2007, supplemental questionnaire. The
Department explained that Starbright and TUTRIC could include any
additional information from Exhibit 1 that they deemed directly
relevant to the issue of affiliation.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ See Memorandum from Charles Riggle, Program Manager, to the
File ``Less-than-Fair-Value Investigation of Certain New Pneumatic
Off-the-Road Tires (``OTR tires'') from the People's Republic of
China (``PRC''): Telephone Call with Counsel for Hebei Starbright
Tire Co. (``Starbright''), and Tianjin United Tire & Rubber
International Co., Ltd. (``TUTRIC'') Regarding Supplemental
Questionnaire Responses'' (January 17, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On January 17, 2008, Starbright submitted its SQR, and the
Department issued a third supplemental questionnaire to Xugong. On
January 18, 2008, Starbright and TUTRIC filed a second copy of their
January 10, 2008, affiliation comments, which contained the pages that
Starbright and TUTRIC requested that the Department insert in their
January 11, 2008, letter. In addition, Starbright and TUTRIC each
submitted revised copies of Exhibit 1 of their respective SQRs in
accordance with the instructions in the Department's January 17, 2008,
memorandum to the file.
On January 18, 2008, Xugong notified the Department by phone that
it had inadvertently served Petitioners with all the copies of its SQR
that were due to the Department that day, and requested an extension of
the deadline to file its SQR for the SRA. The Department agreed and
instructed Xugong to file a letter explaining this and requesting the
extension on the next business day, which Xugong did. On January 23,
2008, Xugong submitted a second request for an extension along with a
more detailed explanation of the January 18, 2008, filing error. At
that time, Xugong also filed a corrected version of its section C
database and corrected information provided in its SQR. In addition,
Starbright and TUTRIC filed comments on Bridgestone's targeted dumping
allegation.
On January 24, 2008, Full-World, Huitong, KS Holding, Qizhou,
Triangle and Wanda Boto submitted timely responses to the Department's
supplemental SRA questionnaires. On January 25, 2008, Guizhou Tyre
submitted its second supplemental response. On January 28, 2008,
Techking, Hengda, Sinorient and Etyre responded to the Department's
supplemental SRA questionnaire. On January 28, 2008, (six days prior to
the statutory deadline for issuing the preliminary LTFV determination)
the GOC filed pre-preliminary determination comments arguing that the
Department should adjust the U.S. prices calculated in the antidumping
duty case for both export and domestic subsidies found to be
countervailable in the companion CVD investigation. In that same
submission, the GOC also requested that the Department revisit its
determination from the AD proceeding on Chinese CFS \11\ not to modify
the existing NME AD methodology and made a general assertion that the
Department should ``reevaluate it {sic{time} current AD methodology as
applied to China so that it fairly and accurately reflects the
realities of the Chinese economy.''\12\ However, the GOC did not ask
that we formally reevaluate the PRC's status as a non-market economy.
Therefore, based on our decision in CFS,\13\ we have not reevaluated
our AD methodologies with respect to this proceeding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value:
Coated Free Sheet Paper from the People's Republic of China, 72 FR
60632 (October 25, 2007) (``CFS''), and accompanying Issue and
Decision Memorandum (``I&D Memo'') at Comment 1.
\12\ See OOC submission of January 28, 2008, at pages 9-12.
\13\ See CFS, I&D Memo at Comment 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On January 29, 2008, Guizhou Tyre filed its pre-preliminary
determination comments. We received Guizhou Tyre's January 29 comments
too late to consider for the preliminary
[[Page 9281]]
determination, but will consider them for the final determination.
Targeted Dumping Allegation
On January 2, 2008, Bridgestone filed an allegation of targeted
dumping based on a pattern of export prices for comparable merchandise
that differ among regions for Guizhou Tyre, Starbright and TUTRIC, and
an allegation of targeted dumping based on a pattern of export prices
for comparable merchandise that differ among customers for Guizhou
Tyre, Starbright, TUTRIC and Xugong. In addition, Bridgestone filed
allegations of targeted dumping based on a pattern of export prices for
comparable merchandise that differ significantly among customers and
regions for Starbright--TUTRIC combined. On January 3, 2008,
Petitioners filed a letter supporting Bridgestone's allegation of
targeted dumping. On January 9, 2008, Xugong submitted comments on
Bridgestone's targeted dumping allegation. On January 10, 2008,
Bridgestone amended its January 2, 2008, targeted dumping allegation to
include two computer files that were omitted from its initial
allegation.
On January 10, 2008, Xugong submitted comments regarding the
targeted dumping allegation. On January 22, 2008, the Department
requested that Bridgestone revise its targeted dumping allegation to
include customer-specific targeted dumping allegations and to revise
its methodology for calculating the ``mean'' prices for alleged
``targeted and ``non-targeted'' sales, and to eliminate the bracketing
of any words that effectively constitute the statutory requirements of
the allegations, or the methodology used to make the allegations. On
January 23, 2008, Starbright and TUTRIC provided comments on
Bridgestone's targeted dumping allegations. Bridgestone filed a
supplement to its targeted dumping allegation on January 25, 2008.
Given the timing of the allegation, the respondent parties'
comments thereon, as well as the extensive nature of these comments,
the Department was unable to address the targeted dumping allegation
for this preliminary determination. We intend to issue a preliminary
finding regarding these allegations after the preliminary LTFV
determination, but within sufficient time to allow all parties time to
comment for the final LTFV determination.
Postponement of Final Determination
Section 735(a)(2)(A) of the Act provides that a final determination
may be postponed until not later than 135 days after the date of the
publication of the preliminary determination if, in the event of an
affirmative preliminary determination, a request for such postponement
is made by exporters who account for a significant proportion of
exports of the subject merchandise. Section 351.210(e)(2) of the
Department's regulations requires that exporters requesting
postponement of the final determination must also request an extension
of the provisional measures referred to in section 733( d) of the Act
from a four-month period until not more than six months. We received
requests to postpone the final determination from Petitioners and
Xugong on January 23, 2008, from Starbright and TUTRIC on January 28,
2008, and from Bridgestone on January 29, 2008. In addition, Xugong,
Starbright and TUTRIC consented to the extension of provisional
measures from a four-month period to not longer than six months.
Because this preliminary determination is affirmative, the requests for
postponement were made by exporters who account for a significant
proportion of exports of the subject merchandise, and there is no
compelling reason to deny the respondents' requests, we have extended
the deadline for issuance of the final determination until the 135th
day after the date of publication of this preliminary determination in
the Federal Register and have extended provisional measures to not
longer than six months.
Period of Investigation
The POI is October 1, 2006, through March 31, 2007. This period
corresponds to the two most recent fiscal quarters prior to the month
of the filing of the petition, which was June 2007.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See 19 CFR 351.204(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Scope of Investigation
The products covered by the scope of the investigation are new
pneumatic tires designed for off-the-road and off-highway use, subject
to exceptions identified below. Certain OTR tires are generally
designed, manufactured and offered for sale for use on off-road or off-
highway surfaces, including but not limited to, agricultural fields,
forests, construction sites, factory and warehouse interiors, airport
tarmacs, ports and harbors, mines, quarries, gravel yards, and steel
mills. The vehicles and equipment for which certain OTR tires are
designed for use include, but are not limited to: (1) Agricultural and
forestry vehicles and equipment, including agricultural tractors,\15\
combine harvesters,\16\ agricultural high clearance sprayers,\17\
industrial tractors,\18\ log-skidders,\19\ agricultural implements,
highway-towed implements, agricultural logging, and agricultural,
industrial, skid-steers/mini-loaders; \20\ (2) construction vehicles
and equipment, including earthmover articulated dump products, rigid
frame haul trucks,\21\ front end loaders,\22\ dozers,\23\ lift trucks,
straddle carriers,\24\ graders,\25\ mobile cranes, compactors; and (3)
industrial vehicles and equipment, including smooth floor, industrial,
mining, counterbalanced lift trucks, industrial and mining vehicles
other than smooth floor, skid-steers/mini-loaders, and smooth floor
off-the-road counterbalanced lift trucks.\26\ The foregoing list of
vehicles and equipment generally have in common that they are used for
hauling, towing, lifting, and/or
[[Page 9282]]
loading a wide variety of equipment and materials in agricultural,
construction and industrial settings. The foregoing descriptions are
illustrative of the types of vehicles and equipment that use certain
OTR tires, but are not necessarily all-inclusive. While the physical
characteristics of certain OTR tires will vary depending on the
specific applications and conditions for which the tires are designed
(e.g., tread pattern and depth), all of the tires within the scope have
in common that they are designed for off-road and off-highway use.
Except as discussed below, OTR tires included in the scope of the
petitions range in size (rim diameter) generally but not exclusively
from 8 inches to 54 inches. The tires may be either tube-type or
tubeless, radial or non-radial, and intended for sale either to
original equipment manufacturers or the replacement market. The subject
merchandise is currently classifiable under Harmonized Tariff Schedule
of the United States (''HTSUS'') subheadings: 4011.20.10.25,
4011.20.10.35, 4011.20.50.30, 4011.20.50.50, 4011.61.00.00,
4011.62.00.00, 4011.63.00.00, 4011.69.00.00, 4011.92.00.00,
4011.93.40.00, 4011.93.80.00, 4011.94.40.00, and 4011.94.80.00. While
HTSUS subheadings are provided for convenience and customs purposes,
our written description of the scope is dispositive.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ An agricultural tractor is a four-wheeled vehicle usually
with large rear tires and small front tires that is used to tow
farming equipment.
\16\ A combine harvester is used to harvest crops such as corn
or wheat.
\17\ An agricultural sprayer is used to irrigate agricultural
fields.
\18\ An industrial tractor is a four-wheeled vehicle usually
with large rear tires and small front tires that is used to tow
industrial equipment.
\19\ A log skidder has a grappling lift arm that is used to
grasp, lift and move trees that have been cut down to a truck or
trailer for transport to a mill or other destination.
\20\ A skid-steer loader is a four-wheel drive vehicle with the
left-side drive wheels independent of the right-side drive wheels
and lift arms that lie alongside the driver with the major pivot
points behind the driver's shoulders. Skid-steer loaders are used in
agricultural, construction and industrial settings.
\21\ A haul truck, which may be either rigid frame or
articulated (i.e., able to bend in the middle) is typically used in
mines, quarries and construction sites to haul soil, aggregate,
mined ore, or debris.
\22\ A front loader has lift arms in front of the vehicle. It
can scrape material from one location to another, carry material in
its bucket or load material into a truck or trailer.
\23\ A dozer is a large four-wheeled vehicle with a dozer blade
that is used to push large quantities of soil, sand, rubble, etc.,
typically around construction sites. They can also be used to
perform ``rough grading'' in road construction.
\24\ A straddle carrier is a rigid frame, engine-powered machine
that is used to load and offload containers from container vessels
and load them onto (or off of) tractor trailers.
\25\ A grader is a vehicle with a large blade used to create a
flat surface. Graders are typically used to perform ``finish
grading.'' Graders are commonly used in maintenance of unpaved roads
and road construction to prepare the base course onto which asphalt
or other paving material will be laid.
\26\ A counterbalanced lift truck is a rigid frame, engine-
powered machine with lift arms that has additional weight
incorporated into the back of the machine to offset or
counterbalance the weight of loads that it lifts so as to prevent
the vehicle from overturning. An example of a counterbalanced lift
truck is a counterbalanced fork lift truck. Counterbalanced lift
trucks may be designed for use on smooth floor surfaces, such as a
factory or warehouse, or other surfaces, such as construction sites,
mines, etc.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specifically excluded from the scope are new pneumatic tires
designed, manufactured and offered for sale primarily for on-highway or
on-road use, including passenger cars, race cars, station wagons, sport
utility vehicles, minivans, mobile homes, motorcycles, bicycles, on-
road or on-highway trailers, light trucks, and trucks and buses. Such
tires generally have in common that the symbol ``DOT'' must appear on
the sidewall, certifying that the tire conforms to applicable motor
vehicle safety standards. Such excluded tires may also have the
following designations that are used by the Tire and Rim Association:
Prefix letter designations:
P--Identifies a tire intended primarily for service on
passenger cars;
LT--Identifies a tire intended primarily for service on
light trucks; and,
ST--Identifies a special tire for trailers in highway
service.
Suffix letter designations:
TR--Identifies a tire for service on trucks, buses, and
other vehicles with rims having specified rim diameter of nominal plus
0.156 or plus 0.250;
MH--Identifies a tire for Mobile Homes;
HC--Identifies a heavy duty tire designated for use on
``HC'' 15'' tapered rims used on trucks, buses, and other vehicles.
This suffix is intended to differentiate among tires for light trucks,
and other vehicles or other services, which use a similar designation.
Example: 8R17.5 LT, 8R17.5 HC;
LT--Identifies light truck tires for service on trucks,
buses, trailers, and multipurpose passenger vehicles used in nominal
highway service; and
MC--Identifies tires and rims for motorcycles.
The following types of tires are also excluded from the scope:
pneumatic tires that are not new, including recycled or retreaded tires
and used tires; non-pneumatic tires, including solid rubber tires;
tires of a kind used on aircraft, all-terrain vehicles, and vehicles
for turf, lawn and garden, golf and trailer applications; and tires of
a kind used for mining and construction vehicles and equipment that
have a rim diameter equal to or exceeding 39 inches. Such tires may be
distinguished from other tires of similar size by the number of plies
that the construction and mining tires contain (minimum of 16) and the
weight of such tires (minimum 1500 pounds).
Scope Comments
In accordance with the preamble to our regulations,\27\ in our
initiation notice, we set aside a period of time for parties to raise
issues regarding product coverage and encouraged all parties to submit
comments within 14 calendar days of publication of the initiation
notice.\28\
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\27\ See Antidumping Duties; Countervailing Duties, 62 FR 27296,
27323 (May 19, 1997).
\28\ See Notice of Initiation, 72 FR at 43592.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On August 20, 2007, Petitioners, several domestic interested
parties, and Guizhou Tyre filed scope comments. Petitioners submitted
comments arguing that the existing scope description, which focused on
end-use applications, best described the subject goods and that no
further HTSUS item-numbers should be added. Guizhou Tyre submitted
comments proposing criteria for model matching. Bridgestone submitted
comments requesting certain revisions and clarifications to the scope
language. Carlisle requested confirmation that lawn and garden tires
are excluded from the scope of the investigation. Valmont requested
confirmation that mounted OTR tires-and-wheels are excluded from the
scope of the investigation. On August 21, 2007, Agri-Fab submitted
comments in support of defining the scope based on the end-use
application of the subject merchandise.
On August 27, 2007, Petitioners, Guizhou Tyre and Bridgestone
submitted rebuttal scope comments. Petitioners argued that the
Department should reject Guizhou Tyre's model-match criteria, and that
the Department should adopt Bridgestone's proposals for the revision
and clarification of the scope language. They also endorsed the
comments submitted by Carlisle, Valmont and Agri-Fab. Guizhou Tyre
requested that the Department reject Petitioners' interpretation of the
scope language to cover agricultural tires with rim diameters of 72
inches and Petitioners' claim that tires used for ``highway-towed
implements'' are within the scope of this investigation. Bridgestone
argued that the Department should reject Guizhou Tyre's model-match
criteria and that the Department should confirm that tires are within
the scope whether entered into the United States unmounted or mounted
on rims. The Department will review all scope comments submitted in
both the antidumping and countervailing duty investigations and will
issue a preliminary scope subsequent to the issuance of the preliminary
LTFV determination but in time to allow all parties to the proceedings
an opportunity to comment for the final determinations.
Selection of Respondents
Section 777 A(c)(1) of the Act directs the Department to calculate
individual weighted-average dumping margins for each known exporter and
producer of the subject merchandise. Section 777 A(c)(2) of the Act
gives the Department discretion, when faced with a large number of
exporters/producers, to limit its examination to a reasonable number of
such companies if it is not practicable to examine all companies. Where
it is not practicable to examine all known producers/exporters of
subject merchandise, this provision permits the Department to
investigate either (1) a sample of exporters, producers, or types of
products that is statistically valid based on the information available
to the Department at the time of selection or (2) exporters/producers
accounting for the largest volume of the merchandise under
investigation that can reasonably be examined. After consideration of
the complexities expected to arise in this proceeding and the resources
available to it, the Department determined that it was not practicable
in this investigation to examine all known producers/exporters of
subject merchandise. We determined we had the resources to examine four
[[Page 9283]]
exporters. We further determined to limit our examination to the four
exporters accounting for the largest volume of the subject merchandise
pursuant to section 777 A(c)(2)(B) of the Act. Our analysis indicates
that Guizhou Tyre, Xugong, TUTRIC and Starbright are the four largest
PRC exporters of subject merchandise by weight, and account for a
significant percentage of all exports of the subject merchandise from
the PRC during the POI. As a result, we selected the above entities as
the mandatory respondents in this investigation.\29\
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\29\ See Respondent Selection Memorandum.
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Non-Market Economy Country
For purposes of initiation, Petitioners submitted an LTFV analysis
for the PRC as an NME.\30\ In every case conducted by the Department
involving the PRC, the PRC has been treated as an NME country. In
accordance with section 771(18)(C)(i) of the Act, any determination
that a foreign country is an NME country shall remain in effect until
revoked by the administering authority.\31\ Therefore, we have treated
the PRC as an NME country for purposes of this preliminary
determination.
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\30\ See Notice of Initiation, 72 FR at 43593.
\31\ See, e.g., Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair
Value: Certain Artist Canvas from the People's Republic of China, 71
FR 16116 (March 30, 2006) (``Artist Canvas'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Surrogate Country
When the Department is investigating imports from an NME country or
producer, section 773(c)(1) of the Act directs it to base normal value
(``NV''), in most circumstances, on the NME producer's FOPs valued in a
surrogate market-economy country or countries considered to be
appropriate by the Department. In accordance with section 773(c)(4) of
the Act, in valuing the FOPs, the Department shall utilize, to the
extent possible, the prices or costs of FOPs in one or more market-
economy countries that are at a level of economic development
comparable to that of the NME country and are significant producers of
comparable merchandise. The sources of the surrogate values we have
used in this investigation are discussed under the ``Normal Value''
section below.
The Department determined that India, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, the
Philippines, and Egypt are countries comparable to the PRC in terms of
economic development.\32\ Once the countries that are economically
comparable to the PRC have been identified, we select an appropriate
surrogate country by determining whether an economically comparable
country is a significant producer of comparable merchandise and whether
the data for valuing FOPs is both available and reliable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ See Office of Policy Surrogate Countries Memorandum.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We have determined that there is insufficient data from Sri Lanka
and have determined it appropriate to use India as a surrogate country
pursuant to section 773(c)(4) of the Act based on the following: (A)
India is at a level of economic development comparable to that of the
PRC, and (B) India is a significant producer of comparable merchandise.
Furthermore, we have reliable data from India that we can use to value
the FOPs.\33\ Thus, we have calculated NV using Indian prices when
available and appropriate to value the FOPs of the OTR tires producers.
We have obtained and relied upon publicly available information
wherever possible.\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Id. at 2.
\34\ See Memorandum to Wendy J. Frankel, ``Certain New Pneumatic
Off-The-Road Tires from the People's Republic of China: Surrogate
Value Memorandum'' (February 5, 2008) (``Surrogate Value
Memorandum'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In accordance with 19 CFR 351.301(c)(3)(i), for the final
determination in an antidumping investigation, interested parties may
submit within 40 days after the date of publication of the preliminary
determination publicly available information to value the FOPs.
Affiliation
Section 771(33) of the Act states that the Department considers the
following entities to be affiliated: (A) Members of a family, including
brothers and sisters (whether by whole or half blood), spouse,
ancestors, and lineal descendants; (B) Any officer or director of an
organization and such organization; (C) Partners; (D) Employer and
employee; (E) Any person directly or indirectly owning, controlling, or
holding with power to vote, five percent or more of the outstanding
voting stock or shares of any organization and such organization; (F)
Two or more persons directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by,
or under common control with, any person; and (G) Any person who
controls any other person and such other person.
For purposes of affiliation, section 771(33) of the Act states that
a person shall be considered to control another person if the person is
legally or operationally in a position to exercise restraint or
direction over the other person. In order to find affiliation between
companies, the Department must find that at least one of the criteria
listed above is applicable to the respondents.
To the extent that the affiliation provisions in section 771(33) of
the Act do not conflict with the Department's application of separate
rates and the statutory NME provisions in section 773(c) of the Act,
the Department will determine that exporters and/or producers are
affiliated if the facts of the case support such a finding.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ See Certain Preserved Mushrooms From the People's Republic
of China: Preliminary Results of Sixth New Shipper Review and
Preliminary Results and Partial Rescission of Fourth Antidumping
Duty Administrative Review, 69 FR 10410, 10413 (March 5, 2004),
unchanged in Final Results and Final Rescission, in Part, of
Antidumping Duty Administrative Review: Certain Preserved Mushrooms
From the People's Republic of China, 70 FR 54361 (September 14,
2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Starbright and TUTRIC
Based on our examination of the evidence presented in Starbright,
TUTRIC and GPX's submissions, we preliminarily determine that GPX and
TUTRIC do not have a close supplier relationship such that one party is
reliant upon the other and thus preliminarily determine they are not
affiliated parties within the meaning of section 771(33) of the
Act.\36\ Therefore, these companies will not be treated as a single
entity for the purposes of this preliminary determination.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ See Memorandum to the File ``Antidumping Duty Investigation
on New Pneumatic Off-the-Road Tires from the People's Republic of
China: Affiliation and Collapsing of Hebei Starbright Tire Co. Ltd.
and Tianjin United Tire & Rubber International Co. Ltd.'' (February
5, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Guizhou Tyre
We preliminarily determine that Guizhou Tyre, Guizhou Advance
Rubber Co., Ltd. (``GAR'') and Guizhou Tyre Import and Export Co.
(``GTCIE'') are affiliated pursuant to sections 771(33)(B), (E), (F)
and (G) of the Act, and that these companies should be treated as a
single entity for the purposes of this investigation pursuant to 19 CFR
351.401(f). Based on our examination of the evidence presented in
Guizhou Tyre's questionnaire responses, we have determined that: (1)
Guizhou Tyre wholly owns both GAR and GTCIE; (2) Guizhou Tyre and GAR
are affiliated producers of identical or similar merchandise; and (3)
the potential for manipulation of price or production exists with
respect to Guizhou Tyre, GAR and GTCIE.\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ See Memorandum to the File, ``Antidumping Investigation of
Certain New Pneumatic Off-The-Road Tires (``OTR tires'') from the
People's Republic of China (``PRC''): Affiliation and Collapsing of
Guizhou Tyre Co., Ltd., Guizhou Advance Rubber Co., Ltd., and
Guizhou Tyre Import and Export Co.,'' (February 5, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 9284]]
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 in 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.
Exporters can demonstrate this independence through the absence of both
de jure and de facto governmental control over export activities. The
Department analyzes each entity exporting the subject merchandise under
a test arising from the Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair
Value: Sparklers from the People's Republic of China, 56 FR 20588 (May
6, 1991) (``Sparklers''), as further developed in the Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Silicon Carbide from
the People's Republic of China, 59 FR 22585 (May 2, 1994) (``Silicon
Carbide'').\38\ However, if the Department determines that a company is
wholly foreign-owned or located in a market economy, then a separate-
rate analysis is not necessary to determine whether it is independent
from government control.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ See also Policy Bulletin 05.1, which 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 at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Separate-Rate Recipients \39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ All separate-rate applicants receiving a separate rate are
hereby referred to collectively as the ``SR Recipients;'' this
includes the mandatory respondents.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Wholly Foreign-Owned
Two separate rate companies reported in their SRAs that they are
wholly owned by individuals or companies located in a market economy
(collectively ``Foreign-Owned SR Applicants''). See ``Preliminary
Determination'' section below for companies marked with a ``[caret]''
designating these companies as wholly foreign-owned. Therefore, because
they are wholly foreign-owned, and we have no evidence indicating that
they are under the control of the PRC, a separate-rate analysis is not
necessary to determine whether these companies are independent from
government control.\40\ Accordingly, we have preliminarily granted a
separate rate to these companies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ See, e.g., Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Creatine Monohydrate from the People's Republic of
China, 64 FR 71104-05 (December 20, 1999) (where the respondent was
wholly foreign-owned and, thus, qualified for a separate rate).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Located in a Market Economy With No PRC Ownership
One of the separate rate companies in this investigation is located
outside the PRC (''Foreign SR Applicant''). See ``Preliminary
Determination'' section below for companies marked with a ``+''
designating these companies as located in a market economy, with no PRC
ownership. Because there is no PRC ownership in any of these companies,
we determine that no separate-rate analysis is required for these
exporters because they are beyond the jurisdiction of the PRC
government.\41\ Accordingly, we have preliminarily granted a separate
rate to these companies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ See, e.g., Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less
Than Fair Value: Bicycles From the People's Republic of China, 61 FR
19026, 19027 (April 30, 1996), citing Final Determination of Sales
at Less Than Fair Value: Disposable Pocket Lighters from the
People's Republic of China, 60 FR 22359, 22361 (May 5,1995).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Joint Ventures Between Chinese and Foreign Companies or Wholly
Chinese-Owned Companies
Twenty-four of the separate-rate companies in this investigation
stated that they are either joint ventures between Chinese and foreign
companies or are wholly Chinese-owned companies (collectively ``PRC SR
Applicants''). Therefore, the Department must analyze whether these
respondents can demonstrate the absence of both de jure and de facto
governmental control over export activities.
a. 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.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ See Sparklers, 56 FR at 20589.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The evidence provided by the mandatory respondents and the PRC SR
Recipients supports a preliminary finding of de jure absence of
governmental control based on the following: (1) An absence of
restrictive stipulations associated with the individual exporters'
business and export licenses; (2) there are applicable legislative
enactments decentralizing control of the companies; and (3) and there
are formal measures by the government decentralizing control of
companies.
b. 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.\43\ The Department has determined that an analysis
of de facto control is critical in determining whether respondents are,
in fact, subject to a degree of governmental control which would
preclude the Department from assigning separate rates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ 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 evidence placed on the record of this investigation by the PRC
SR Recipients demonstrates an absence of de jure and de facto
government control with respect to each of the exporters' exports of
the merchandise under investigation, in accordance with the criteria
identified in Sparklers and Silicon Carbide. See ``Preliminary
Determination'' section below for companies marked with an ``*''
designating these companies as joint ventures between Chinese and
foreign companies or wholly Chinese-owned companies that have
demonstrated their eligibility for a separate rate.
B. Companies Not Receiving a Separate Rate
The Department is not granting a separate rate to the following
separate-rate applicant for the reasons discussed below.
[[Page 9285]]
Double-Star was unable to demonstrate that it had sales of subject
merchandise to the United States. Double-Star explained in its SRA that
its reported U.S. sales were in fact sales to another PRC entity that
it knew resold the merchandise to the United States. In NME
proceedings, we do not examine sales prices between NME entities (e.g.,
transaction prices between an NME producer of subject merchandise and
the NME exporter of subject merchandise) since NME countries are
presumed to ``not operate on market principles of cost or pricing
structures so that the sales of merchandise in such countr{ies{time}
do not reflect the fair value of the merchandise.'' See section 771
(18) of the Act. Accordingly, non-exporting NME producers of subject
merchandise are not eligible for examination as respondents. Based on
Double-Star's description of the sales chain for the merchandise it
produces, Double-Star is a producer and not an exporter of subject
merchandise, and therefore is not eligible to receive a separate rate
in this investigation.
Application of Facts Available
Section 776(a)(2) of the Act provides that, if an interested party
(A) withholds information that has been requested by the Department,
(B) fails to provide such information in a timely manner or in the form
or manner requested, subject to 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.
In reviewing the respondents' original and supplemental
questionnaire responses, we have determined that certain reported items
require additional supplemental information. We have used the reported
values as facts available for this preliminary determination and will
issue post-preliminary determination supplemental questionnaires to the
respective respondents to address these issues.
The PRC-Wide Entity
The record evidence indicates there were more exporters of OTR
tires from the PRC during the POI than those that responded to the Q&V
questionnaire or the full antidumping questionnaire.\44\ Specifically,
we issued the Q&V questionnaire to 94 identified PRC exporters of the
subject merchandise but received responses from only 30, with one
reporting that it made no shipments of subject merchandise during the
POI. The other 29 responses did not account for all imports into the
United States from the PRC during the POI. Further, evidence on the
record indicates that the 94 identified PRC exporters of subject
merchandise received our Q&V questionnaire. See Memorandum to the File,
``Quantity and Value (``Q&V'') Tracking,'' dated September 4, 2007.
Based on the above facts, the Department preliminarily determines that
there were exports of the subject merchandise under investigation from
PRC producers/exporters that did not respond to the Department's
questionnaire, and we are treating these PRC producers/exporters as
part of the countrywide entity. As a result, use of facts available
pursuant to section 776(a)(2)(A) of the Act is warranted for the PRC
entity.\45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ See Respondent Selection Memorandum at 2.
\45\ See, e.g., Artist Canvas, 71 FR 16116 (March 30, 2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Department will consider all margins on the record at the time
of the final determination for the purpose of determining the most
appropriate AFA rate for the PRC-wide entity.\46\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ See Preliminary Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair
Value: Saccharin from the People's Republic of China, 67 FR 79049,
79053-54 (December 27, 2002), unchanged in Final Determination of
Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Saccharin From the People's Republic
of China, 68 FR 27530 (May 20, 2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Selection of the Adverse Facts Available Rate
Section 776(b) of the Act provides that if an interested party
fails to cooperate by not acting to the best of its ability to comply
with requests for information, the Department may employ adverse
inferences.\47\ We find that, because the PRC-wide entity did not
respond to our request for information, 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ See, e.g., Artist Canvas, 71 FR 16116, 16118 (March 30,
2006). See also Statement of Administrative Action accompanying the
URAA, H.R. Rep No. 103-316 (``SAA'') at 870.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In deciding which facts to use as AFA, section 776(b) of the Act
and 19 C.F.R. 351.308(c)(1) provide that the Department may rely on
information derived from (1) the petition, (2) a final determination in
the investigation, (3) any previous review or determination, or (4) any
information placed on the record. In selecting a rate for AFA, the
Department selects a rate 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.\48\ It is further the Department's
practice to select a rate that ensures ``that the party does not obtain
a more favorable result by failing to cooperate than if it had
cooperated fully.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ 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).
\49\ See SAA at 870. See also, Brake Rotors From the People's
Republic of China: Final Results and Partial Rescission of the
Seventh Administrative Review; Final Results of the Eleventh New
Shipper Review, 70 FR 69937, 69939 (November 18, 2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Generally, the Department finds selecting the highest rate in any
segment of the proceeding as AFA to be appropriate.\50\ The Court of
International Trade (``CIT'') and the Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit (``Fed. Cir.'') have affirmed decisions to select the highest
margin from any prior segment of the proceeding as the AFA rate on
numerous occasions.\51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ See, e.g., Certain Cased Pencils from the People's Republic
of China; Notice of Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty
Administrative Review and Intent to Rescind in Part, 70 FR 76755,
76761 (December 28, 2005).
\51\ See Rhone Poulenc, Inc. v. United States, 899 F. 2d 1185,
1190 (Fed. Cir. 1990) (affmning the Department's presumption that
the highest margin was the best information of current margins)
(``Rhone Poulenc''); NSK Ltd. v. United States, 346 F. Supp. 2d
1312, 1335 (ClT 2004) (affirming a 73.55 percent total AFA rate, the
highest available dumping margin from a different respondent in an
LTFV investigation); Kompass Food Trading International v. United
States, 24 CIT 678,683 (2000) (affirming a 51.16 percent total AFA
rate, the highest available dumping margin from a different, fully
cooperative respondent); and Shanghai Taoen International Trading
Co., Ltd. v. United States, 360 F. Supp. 2d 1339, 1348 (CIT 2005)
(affirming a 223.01 percent total AFA rate, the highest available
dumping margin from a different respondent in a previous
administrative review).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In choosing the appropriate balance between providing respondents
with an incentive to respond accurately and imposing a rate that is
reasonably related to the respondents' prior commercial activity,
selecting the highest prior margin ``reflects a common sense inference
that the highest prior margin is the most probative evidence of current
margins, because, if it were not so, the importer, knowing of the rule,
would have produced current information showing the margin to be
less.\52\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ See Rhone Poulenc, 899 F. 2d at 1190.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As AFA, we have preliminarily assigned to the PRC-wide entity a
rate of 210.48 percent, the highest calculated rate from the petition.
The Department preliminarily determines that this information is the
most appropriate from the available sources to effectuate the purposes
of AFA. The Department's reliance on the petition rate to
[[Page 9286]]
determine an AFA rate is subject to the requirement to corroborate
secondary information.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ See the ``Corroboration'' sect