Certain Seamless Carbon and Alloy Steel Standard, Line, and Pressure Pipe From the People's Republic of China: Preliminary Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, Preliminary Affirmative Critical Circumstances Determination, 9163-9181 [2010-4192]
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review of that party absent new
information as to the party’s location.
Moreover, if the interested party who
files a request for review is unable to
locate the producer or exporter for
which it requested the review, the
interested party must provide an
explanation of the attempts it made to
locate the producer or exporter at the
same time it files its request for review,
in order for the Secretary to determine
if the interested party’s attempts were
reasonable, pursuant to 19 CFR
351.303(f)(3)(ii).
As explained in Antidumping and
Countervailing Duty Proceedings:
Assessment of Antidumping Duties, 68
FR 23954 (May 6, 2003), the Department
has clarified its practice with respect to
the collection of final antidumping
duties on imports of merchandise where
intermediate firms are involved. The
public should be aware of this
clarification in determining whether to
request an administrative review of
merchandise subject to antidumping
findings and orders. See also the Import
Administration Web site at https://
ia.ita.doc.gov.
Six copies of the request should be
submitted to the Assistant Secretary for
Import Administration, International
Trade Administration, Room 1870, U.S.
Department of Commerce, 14th Street
and Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20230. The Department
also asks parties to serve a copy of their
requests to the Office of Antidumping/
Countervailing Operations, Attention:
Sheila Forbes, in Room 3065 of the main
Commerce Building. Further, in
accordance with 19 CFR 351.303(f)(l)(i),
a copy of each request must be served
on every party on the Department’s
service list.
The Department will publish in the
Federal Register a notice of ‘‘Initiation
of Administrative Review of
Antidumping or Countervailing Duty
Order, Finding, or Suspended
Investigation’’ for requests received by
the last day of March 2010. If the
Department does not receive, by the last
day of March 2010, a request for review
of entries covered by an order, finding,
or suspended investigation listed in this
notice and for the period identified
above, the Department will instruct CBP
to assess antidumping or countervailing
duties on those entries at a rate equal to
the cash deposit of (or bond for)
estimated antidumping or
countervailing duties required on those
entries at the time of entry, or
withdrawal from warehouse, for
consumption and to continue to collect
the cash deposit previously ordered.
For the first administrative review of
any order, there will be no assessment
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of antidumping or countervailing duties
on entries of subject merchandise
entered, or withdrawn from warehouse,
for consumption during the relevant
provisional-measures ‘‘gap’’ period, of
the order, if such a gap period is
applicable to the POR.
This notice is not required by statute
but is published as a service to the
international trading community.
Dated: February 22, 2010.
John M. Andersen,
Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Operations.
[FR Doc. 2010–4182 Filed 2–26–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[C–570–957]
Certain Seamless Carbon and Alloy
Steel Standard, Line, and Pressure
Pipe From the People’s Republic of
China: Preliminary Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination,
Preliminary Affirmative Critical
Circumstances Determination
AGENCY: Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce
preliminarily determines that
countervailable subsidies are being
provided to producers and exporters of
certain seamless carbon and alloy steel
standard, line, and pressure pipe from
the People’s Republic of China. For
information on the estimated subsidy
rates, see the ‘‘Suspension of
Liquidation’’ section of this notice. The
Department of Commerce further
preliminarily determines that critical
circumstances exist with respect to
imports of the subject merchandise.
DATES: Effective Date: March 1, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Shane Subler, Yasmin Nair, Joseph
Shuler, or Matthew Jordan, AD/CVD
Operations, Office 1, Import
Administration, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20230;
telephone: (202) 482–0189, (202) 482–
3813, (202) 482–4162, (202) 482–1293,
and (202) 482–1540, respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Case History
The following events have occurred
since the publication of the Department
of Commerce’s (‘‘Department’’) notice of
initiation in the Federal Register. See
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9163
Certain Seamless Carbon and Alloy
Steel Standard, Line, and Pressure Pipe
from the People’s Republic of China:
Initiation of Countervailing Duty
Investigation, 74 FR 52945 (October 15,
2009) (‘‘Initiation Notice’’), and the
accompanying Initiation Checklist.
On November 4, 2009, the Department
selected two Chinese producers/
exporters of certain seamless carbon and
alloy steel standard, line, and pressure
pipe (‘‘seamless pipe’’) as mandatory
respondents: (1) Hengyang Steel Tube
Group Int’l Trading Inc., Hengyang
Valin Steel Tube Co., Ltd., Hengyang
Valin MPM Tube Co., Ltd., and their
affiliate, Xigang Seamless Steel Tube
Co., Ltd. (collectively, ‘‘Hengyang’’); and
(2) Tianjin Pipe (Group) Corporation
(‘‘TPCO’’). See Memorandum to Edward
Yang, Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary
for Antidumping and Countervailing
Duty Operations, ‘‘Respondent Selection
Memo’’ (November 4, 2009). This
memorandum is on file in the
Department’s Central Records Unit
(‘‘CRU’’) in Room 1117 of the main
Department building.
On November 6, 2009, the U.S.
International Trade Commission (‘‘ITC’’)
published its affirmative preliminary
determination that there is a reasonable
indication that an industry in the
United States is threatened with
material injury by reason of allegedly
subsidized imports of seamless pipe
from the People’s Republic of China
(‘‘PRC’’). See Certain Seamless Carbon
and Alloy Steel Standard, Line, and
Pressure Pipe From China, 74 FR 57521
(November 6, 2009).
On November 9, 2009, we issued a
questionnaire to the Government of the
People’s Republic of China (‘‘GOC’’),
Hengyang, and TPCO. On December 3,
2009, the Department published a
postponement of the deadline for the
preliminary determination in this
investigation until February 16, 2010.
See Certain Seamless Carbon and Alloy
Steel Standard, Line, and Pressure Pipe
from the People’s Republic of China:
Postponement of Preliminary
Determination in the Countervailing
Duty Investigation, 74 FR 63391
(December 3, 2009).
In December 2009 and January 2010,
we received responses to our
questionnaire from the GOC, Hengyang,
and TPCO. See the GOC’s Original
Questionnaire Response (January 7,
2010) (‘‘GQR’’), Hengyang’s Original
Questionnaire Response (January 5,
2010) (‘‘HQR’’), and TPCO’s Original
Questionnaire Response (December 31,
2009) (‘‘TQR’’). We sent supplemental
questionnaires to TPCO on January 27,
2010, and February 4, 2010. We
received responses to these
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supplemental questionnaires on
February 3, 2010, and February 12,
2010. We sent supplemental
questionnaires to Hengyang on January
28, 2010, and February 4, 2010. We
received responses to these
supplemental questionnaires on
February 4, 2010, and February 12,
2010. We sent a supplemental
questionnaire to the GOC on January 28,
2010, and received a response to this
questionnaire on February 4, 2010
(‘‘G1SR’’).
On January 7, 2010, United States
Steel Corporation (‘‘U.S. Steel’’), V&M
Star L.P., TMK IPSCO, and United Steel,
Paper and Forestry, Rubber,
Manufacturing, Energy, Allied
Industrial and Service Workers
International Union (collectively,
‘‘Petitioners’’) filed an allegation of
critical circumstances with regard to
seamless pipe from the PRC. On January
22, 2010, we requested that Hengyang
and TPCO submit shipment data related
to this allegation. TPCO and Hengyang
submitted these data on February 2,
2010.
On January 7 and January 13, 2010,
Petitioners submitted new subsidy
allegations requesting the Department to
expand its countervailing duty (‘‘CVD’’)
investigation to include additional
subsidy programs.1 On February 17,
2010, the Department issued a
memorandum initiating certain of these
new subsidy allegations. See
Memorandum from Yasmin Nair,
International Trade Compliance
Analyst, Office 1 to Susan H. Kuhbach,
Director, Office 1, ‘‘New Subsidy
Allegations’’ (February 17, 2010).
On January 11, 2010, we issued a
letter requesting that the GOC update its
original questionnaire response for the
cross-owned affiliates for which the
respondent companies filed
questionnaire responses. The GOC filed
its response on January 25, 2010.
On January 14, 2010, we issued a
letter notifying the GOC that it did not
provide responses to certain questions
in the original questionnaire. In
response to this letter, on January 25,
2010, the GOC filed a submission with
information pertaining to the provision
of steel rounds.
On February 12, 2010, Petitioners
submitted comments for the preliminary
determination.
The Department originally extended
the deadline for this preliminary
determination until February 16, 2010.
As explained in the memorandum from
the Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Import Administration, the Department
1 See Petitioners’ new subsidy allegations dated
January 7, 2010, and January 13, 2010.
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has exercised its discretion to toll
deadlines for the duration of the closure
of the Federal Government from
February 5, through February 12, 2010.
Thus, all deadlines in this segment of
the proceeding have been extended by
seven days. The revised deadline for the
preliminary determination of this
investigation is now February 22, 2010.
See Memorandum to the Record from
Ronald Lorentzen, DAS for Import
Administration, regarding ‘‘Tolling of
Administrative Deadlines As a Result of
the Government Closure During the
Recent Snowstorm,’’ dated February 12,
2010.
Scope Comments
In accordance with the preamble to
the Department’s regulations, we set
aside a period of time in our Initiation
Notice for parties to raise issues
regarding product coverage, and
encouraged all parties to submit
comments within 20 calendar days of
publication of that notice. See
Antidumping Duties; Countervailing
Duties, 62 FR 27296, 27323 (May 19,
1997), and Initiation Notice, 74 FR at
52945. We did not receive comments
concerning the scope of the
antidumping duty (‘‘AD’’) and CVD
investigations of seamless pipe from the
PRC.
Scope of the Investigation
The scope of this investigation
consists of certain seamless carbon and
alloy steel (other than stainless steel)
pipes and redraw hollows, less than or
equal to 16 inches (406.4 mm) in
outside diameter, regardless of wallthickness, manufacturing process (e.g.,
hot-finished or cold-drawn), end finish
(e.g., plain end, beveled end, upset end,
threaded, or threaded and coupled), or
surface finish (e.g., bare, lacquered or
coated). Redraw hollows are any
unfinished carbon or alloy steel (other
than stainless steel) pipe or ‘‘hollow
profiles’’ suitable for cold finishing
operations, such as cold drawing, to
meet the American Society for Testing
and Materials (‘‘ASTM’’) or American
Petroleum Institute (‘‘API’’)
specifications referenced below, or
comparable specifications. Specifically
included within the scope are seamless
carbon and alloy steel (other than
stainless steel) standard, line, and
pressure pipes produced to the ASTM
A–53, ASTM A–106, ASTM A–333,
ASTM A–334, ASTM A–335, ASTM A–
589, ASTM A–795, ASTM A–1024, and
the API 5L specifications, or comparable
specifications, and meeting the physical
parameters described above, regardless
of application, with the exception of the
exclusion discussed below.
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Specifically excluded from the scope
of the investigation are unattached
couplings.
The merchandise covered by the
investigation is currently classified in
the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the
United States (‘‘HTSUS’’) under item
numbers: 7304.19.1020, 7304.19.1030,
7304.19.1045, 7304.19.1060,
7304.19.5020, 7304.19.5050,
7304.31.6050, 7304.39.0016,
7304.39.0020, 7304.39.0024,
7304.39.0028, 7304.39.0032,
7304.39.0036, 7304.39.0040,
7304.39.0044, 7304.39.0048,
7304.39.0052, 7304.39.0056,
7304.39.0062, 7304.39.0068,
7304.39.0072, 7304.51.5005,
7304.51.5060, 7304.59.6000,
7304.59.8010, 7304.59.8015,
7304.59.8020, 7304.59.8025,
7304.59.8030, 7304.59.8035,
7304.59.8040, 7304.59.8045,
7304.59.8050, 7304.59.8055,
7304.59.8060, 7304.59.8065, and
7304.59.8070.
Although the HTSUS subheadings are
provided for convenience and customs
purposes, our written description of the
merchandise subject to this scope is
dispositive.
Period of Investigation
The period for which we are
measuring subsidies, i.e., the period of
investigation (‘‘POI’’), is January 1, 2008,
through December 31, 2008.
Critical Circumstances
In their January 7, 2010, submission,
Petitioners alleged that critical
circumstances exist with respect to
imports of seamless pipe from the PRC.
Section 703(e)(1) of the Tariff Act of
1930, as amended (‘‘the Act’’) states that
if the petitioner alleges critical
circumstances, the Department will
determine, on the basis of information
available to it at the time, if there is a
reason to believe or suspect that: (A)
The alleged countervailable subsidy is
inconsistent with the World Trade
Organization (‘‘WTO’’) Agreement on
Subsidies and Countervailing Measures
(‘‘SCM Agreement’’), and (B) there have
been massive imports of the subject
merchandise over a relatively short
period.
In accordance with 19 CFR
351.206(c)(2)(i), because Petitioners
submitted a critical circumstances
allegation more than 20 days before the
scheduled date of the preliminary
determination, the Department must
issue a preliminary critical
circumstances determination not later
than the date of the preliminary
determination. See, e.g., Change in
Policy Regarding Timing of Issuance of
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Critical Circumstances Determinations,
63 FR 55364 (October 15, 1998).
As discussed in the ‘‘Analysis of
Programs’’ section below, the
Department has preliminarily
determined that TPCO and Hengyang
received countervailable export
subsidies during the POI. For ‘‘all other’’
exporters, we are basing our finding on
the experience of TPCO and Hengyang
and, therefore, we find that ‘‘all others’’
benefitted from export subsidies. Export
subsidies are inconsistent with the SCM
Agreement. Therefore, the criterion of
section 703(e)(1)(A) of the Act has been
satisfied. See Notice of Preliminary
Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Determination, Preliminary Affirmative
Critical Circumstances Determination,
and Alignment of Final Countervailing
Duty Determination With Final
Antidumping Duty Determination:
Certain Softwood Lumber Products
From Canada, 66 FR 43186, 43189–90
(August 17, 2001); unchanged in Notice
of Amended Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination and
Notice of Countervailing Duty Order:
Certain Softwood Lumber Products
From Canada, 67 FR 36070 (May 22,
2002).
In determining whether there are
‘‘massive imports’’ over a ‘‘relatively
short period’’ pursuant to section
703(e)(1)(B) of the Act, the Department
normally compares shipments of the
subject merchandise for three months
immediately preceding the filing of the
petition (i.e., the ‘‘base period’’) with the
three months following the filing of the
petition (i.e., the ‘‘comparison period’’).
In addition, 19 CFR 351.206(h)(2)
provides that an increase in imports of
15 percent during the ‘‘relatively short
period’’ of time may be considered
‘‘massive.’’ Finally, 19 CFR 351.206(i)
defines ‘‘relatively short period’’ as
normally being the period beginning on
the date the proceeding begins (i.e., the
date the petition is filed) and ending at
least three months later.
In accordance with 19 CFR 351.206(i),
we are using the three months preceding
the filing of the petition (i.e., July to
September 2009) as the base period and
the three months following the filing of
the petition (i.e., October to December
2009) as the comparison period.
Because Petitioners filed their petition
on September 16, 2009, which is the
second half of the month, September is
included in the base period.
Based upon the monthly shipment
data submitted by TPCO, we
preliminarily find that TPCO’s
shipments did not reach the minimum
threshold necessary for finding that
imports have been massive over a
relatively short period. Therefore, we
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preliminarily determine that critical
circumstances do not exist with respect
to imports of seamless pipe from TPCO.
For further discussion, see the
Memorandum to the File, ‘‘Critical
Circumstances Analysis’’ (February 22,
2010) (‘‘Critical Circumstances Analysis
Memo’’), on file in the Department’s
CRU.
Based upon the monthly shipment
data submitted by Hengyang, we
preliminarily find that Hengyang’s
seamless pipe imports increased more
than 15 percent during the ‘‘relatively
short period,’’ as required by 19 CFR
351.206(h)(2). See Critical
Circumstances Analysis Memo. Further,
as explained above, we find that
Hengyang received an export subsidy,
i.e., a subsidy inconsistent with the
SCM Agreement. Therefore, we
preliminarily determine that the
requirements of section 703(e)(1)(B) of
the Act have been satisfied, and that
critical circumstances exist for
Hengyang.
For ‘‘all other’’ exporters, we are
basing our finding on data from USITC
Dataweb.2 We preliminarily determine
that there were massive imports over a
relatively short period for ‘‘all other’’
producers/exporters of seamless pipe
from the PRC. For further discussion,
see Critical Circumstances Analysis
Memo. Further, as explained above, we
find that ‘‘all other’’ producers and
exporters received a subsidy
inconsistent with the SCM Agreement.
Therefore, we preliminarily determine
that the requirements of section
703(e)(1)(B) of the Act have been
satisfied, and that critical circumstances
exist for ‘‘all others.’’
determinations. See, e.g., Circular
Welded Carbon Quality Steel Pipe from
the People’s Republic of China: Final
Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Determination and Final Affirmative
Determination of Critical
Circumstances, 73 FR 31966 (June 5,
2008), and accompanying Issues and
Decision Memorandum (‘‘CWP Decision
Memorandum’’), at Comment 1.
Additionally, for the reasons stated in
the CWP Decision Memorandum, we are
using the date of December 11, 2001, the
date on which the PRC became a
member of the WTO, as the date from
which the Department will identify and
measure subsidies in the PRC. See CWP
Decision Memorandum, at Comment 2.
Application of the Countervailing Duty
Law to Imports From the PRC
On October 25, 2007, the Department
published Coated Free Sheet Paper from
the People’s Republic of China: Final
Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Determination, 72 FR 60645 (October
25, 2007) (‘‘CFS from the PRC’’), and the
accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum (‘‘CFS Decision
Memorandum’’). In CFS from the PRC,
the Department found that
GOC—Steel Rounds
The Department is investigating the
alleged provision of steel rounds for less
than adequate remuneration by the
GOC. We requested information from
the GOC about the PRC’s steel rounds
industry in general and the specific
companies that produced the steel
rounds purchased by the mandatory
respondents. In both respects, the GOC
has failed to provide the requested
information within the established
deadlines.
At pages 87–89 of the GQR, the GOC
responded, ‘‘No such information is
available,’’ to the following questions on
the steel rounds industry in the PRC.
The GOC provided no further
explanation on the following requested
information:
• The number of producers of steel
rounds (e.g., billets, blooms);
• the total volume and value of
domestic production of steel rounds that
is accounted for by companies in which
given the substantial difference between the
Soviet-style economies and China’s economy
in recent years, the Department’s previous
decision not to apply the CVD law to these
Soviet-style economies does not act as (a) bar
to proceeding with a CVD investigation
involving products from China.
See CFS Decision Memorandum, at
Comment 6. The Department has
affirmed its decision to apply the CVD
law to the PRC in subsequent final
2 https://dataweb.usitc.gov/
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Use of Facts Otherwise Available and
Adverse Inferences
Sections 776(a)(1) and (2) of the Act
provide that the Department shall apply
‘‘facts otherwise available’’ if necessary
information is not on the record or an
interested party or any other person: (A)
Withholds information that has been
requested; (B) fails to provide
information within the deadlines
established, or in the form and manner
requested by the Department, subject to
subsections (c)(1) and (e) of section 782
of the Act; (C) significantly impedes a
proceeding; or (D) provides information
that cannot be verified as provided by
section 782(i) of the Act.
Section 776(b) of the Act further
provides that the Department may use
an adverse inference in applying the
facts otherwise available when a party
has failed to cooperate by not acting to
the best of its ability to comply with a
request for information.
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the GOC maintains an ownership or
management interest either directly or
through other government entities; 3
• the total volume and value of
domestic consumption of steel rounds
and the total volume and value of
domestic production of steel rounds;
• the percentage of domestic
consumption accounted for by domestic
production; and
• the names and addresses of the top
ten steel rounds companies—in terms of
sales and quantity produced—in which
the GOC maintains and ownership or
management interest, and identification
of whether any of these companies have
affiliated trading companies that sell
imported or domestically produced steel
rounds.
On page 91 of the GQR, the GOC
responded that it was still gathering
information in response to the following
question:
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Are there trade publications which specify
the prices of the good/service within your
country and on the world market? Provide a
list of these publications, along with sample
pages from these publications listing the
prices of the good/service within your
country and in world markets during the
period of investigation.
With respect to the specific
companies that produced the steel
rounds purchased by the mandatory
respondents, we asked the GOC to
provide particular ownership
information for these producers so that
we could determine whether the
producers are ‘‘authorities’’ within the
meaning of section 771(5)(B) of the Act.
Specifically, we stated in our
questionnaire that the Department
normally treats producers that are
majority owned by the government or a
government entity as ‘‘authorities.’’
Thus, for any steel rounds producers
that were majority government-owned,
the GOC needed to provide the
following ownership information if it
wished to argue that those producers
were not authorities:
• Translations of the most recent
capital verification report predating the
POI and, if applicable, any capital
verification reports completed during
the POI. Translation of the most recent
articles of association, including
amendments thereto.
• The names of the ten largest
shareholders and the total number of
shareholders, a statement of whether
any of these shareholders have any
government ownership (including the
percentage of ownership), and an
3 Includes governments at all levels, including
townships and villages, ministries, or agencies of
those governments including state asset
management bureaus, state-owned enterprises and
labor unions.
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explanation of any other affiliation
between these shareholders and the
government.
• The total level (percentage) of state
ownership, either direct or indirect, of
the company’s shares; the names of all
government entities that own shares in
the company; and the amount of shares
held by each.
• Any relevant evidence to
demonstrate that the company is not
controlled by the government, e.g., that
the private, minority shareholder(s)
controls of the company.
For any suppliers that the GOC
claimed were directly, 100-percent
owned by individual persons during the
POI, we requested the following:
• Translated copies of source
documents that demonstrate the
supplier’s ownership during the POI,
such as capital verification reports,
articles of association, share transfer
agreements, or financial statements.
• Identification of the owners,
members of the board of directors, or
managers of the suppliers who were also
government or Chinese Communist
Party (‘‘CCP’’) officials during the POI.
• A discussion of whether and how
operational or strategic decisions that
are made by the management or board
of directors are subject to government
review or approval.
For input suppliers with some direct
corporate ownership or less-thanmajority state ownership during the
POI, we explained that it was necessary
to trace back the ownership to the
ultimate individual or state owners. For
these suppliers, we requested the
following:
• The total level (percentage) of state
ownership of the company’s shares; the
names of all government entities that
own shares, either directly or indirectly,
in the company; whether any of the
owners are considered ‘‘state-owned
enterprises’’ by the government; and the
amount of shares held by each
government owner.
• For each level of ownership, a
translated copy of the section(s) of the
articles of association showing the rights
and responsibilities of the shareholders
and, where appropriate, the board of
directors, including all decision making
(voting) rules for the operation of the
company.
• For each level of ownership,
identification of the owners, members of
the board of directors, or managers of
the suppliers who were also government
or CCP officials during the POI.
• A discussion of whether and how
operational or strategic decisions that
are made by the management or board
of directors are subject to government
review or approval.
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• A statement of whether any of the
shares held by government entities have
any special rights, priorities, or
privileges, e.g., with regard to voting
rights or other management or decisionmaking for the company; a statement of
whether there are any restrictions on
conducting, or acting through,
extraordinary meetings of shareholders;
whether there are any restrictions on the
shares held by private shareholders; and
the nature of the private shareholders’
interest in the company, e.g.,
operational, strategic, or investmentrelated, etc.
On page 92 of the GQR, the GOC
stated that it had not obtained complete
ownership information for the suppliers
to the mandatory respondents. The GOC
further stated that it expected to provide
such information when the Department
determined which cross-owned
affiliates of the mandatory respondents
would be required to file responses.
On January 11, 2010, we issued a
letter requesting that the GOC update its
initial questionnaire response to include
the cross-owned affiliates for which the
respondent companies filed
questionnaire responses. After the GOC
requested an extension to the deadline
for filing this response, we set a final
deadline of January 25, 2010.
On January 14, 2010, we issued a
separate letter noting that the GOC had
failed to provide the information
requested in the original questionnaire
regarding the ownership of the firms
that produce the steel rounds/billets
used by the mandatory respondents. We
pointed out that the GOC had not
requested, and the Department had not
granted, an extension of the deadline for
submitting this information. We stated
that the requested information must be
submitted by January 25, 2010.
On January 25, 2010, the GOC
submitted a list of producers of the steel
rounds that respondents purchased
during the POI. The GOC identified the
producers as state-owned enterprises
(‘‘SOEs’’), foreign-invested enterprises
(‘‘FIEs’’), privately-held, or ‘‘to be
updated.’’ The GOC also submitted
certain documentation on the
ownership of many of the producers
designated as FIEs or privately-held.
However, for producers that the GOC
claimed to be privately-owned, the GOC
did not answer the question on whether
owners, members of the board of
directors, or managers of the suppliers
were also government or CCP officials
during the POI. The GOC also did not
discuss whether and how operational or
strategic decisions that are made by the
management or board of directors are
subject to government review or
approval. For producers with some
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direct corporate ownership or less-thanmajority state ownership during the
POI, the GOC did not respond to our
requests for the following information:
• The total level (percentage) of state
ownership of the company’s shares; the
names of all government entities that
own shares, either directly or indirectly,
in the company; whether any of the
owners are considered ‘‘state-owned
enterprises’’ by the government; and the
amount of shares held by each
government owner.
• For each level of ownership,
identification of the owners, members of
the board of directors, or managers of
the suppliers who were also government
or CCP officials during the POI.
• A discussion of whether and how
operational or strategic decisions that
are made by the management or board
of directors are subject to government
review or approval.
• A statement of whether any of the
shares held by government entities have
any special rights, priorities, or
privileges, e.g., with regard to voting
rights or other management or decisionmaking for the company; a statement of
whether there are any restrictions on
conducting, or acting through,
extraordinary meetings of shareholders;
whether there are any restrictions on the
shares held by private shareholders; and
the nature of the private shareholders’
interest in the company, e.g.,
operational, strategic, or investmentrelated, etc.
Based on the above, we preliminarily
determine that the GOC has withheld
necessary information that was
requested of it and, thus, that the
Department must rely on ‘‘facts
available’’ in making our preliminary
determination. See sections 776(a)(1)
and (a)(2)(A) of the Act. Moreover, we
preliminarily determine that the GOC
has failed to cooperate by not acting to
the best of its ability to comply with our
request for information. Consequently,
an adverse inference is warranted in the
application of facts available. See
section 776(b) of the Act.
With respect to the GOC’s failure to
provide requested information about the
production and consumption of steel
rounds or billets generally, we are
assuming adversely that the GOC’s
dominance of the market in the PRC for
this input results in significant
distortion of the prices and, hence, that
use of an external benchmark is
warranted. With respect to the GOC’s
failure to provide certain requested
ownership information about the
producers of the steel rounds purchased
by the respondents, we are assuming
adversely that all of the respondents’
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16:46 Feb 26, 2010
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non-cross-owned suppliers of steel
rounds are ‘‘authorities.’’
The Department’s practice when
selecting an adverse rate from among
the possible sources of information is to
ensure that the result is sufficiently
adverse ‘‘as to effectuate the statutory
purposes of the adverse facts available
rule to induce respondents to provide
the Department with complete and
accurate information in a timely
manner.’’ See Notice of Final
Determination of Sales at Less than Fair
Value: Static Random Access Memory
Semiconductors From Taiwan, 63 FR
8909, 8932 (February 23, 1998). The
Department’s practice also ensures ‘‘that
the party does not obtain a more
favorable result by failing to cooperate
than if it had cooperated fully.’’ See
Statement of Administrative Action
(‘‘SAA’’) accompanying the Uruguay
Round Agreements Act, H.R. Doc. No.
103–316, vol. 1 at 870 (1994).
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 or review, it shall, to the
extent practicable, corroborate that
information from independent sources
that are reasonably at its disposal.
Secondary information is ‘‘information
derived from the petition that gave rise
to the investigation or review, the final
determination concerning the subject
merchandise, or any previous review
under section 751 concerning the
subject merchandise.’’ See, e.g., SAA, at
870. The Department considers
information to be corroborated if it has
probative value. See id. To corroborate
secondary information, the Department
will, to the extent practicable, examine
the reliability and relevance of the
information to be used. The SAA
emphasizes, however, that the
Department need not prove that the
selected facts available are the best
alternative information. See SAA, at
869.
To corroborate the Department’s
treatment of the companies that
produced the steel rounds and billets
purchased by the mandatory
respondents as authorities and our
finding that the GOC dominates the
domestic market for this input, we are
relying on Circular Welded Carbon
Quality Steel Line Pipe from the
People’s Republic of China: Final
Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Determination, 73 FR 70961 (November
24, 2008) (‘‘Line Pipe from the PRC’’). In
that case, the Department determined
that the GOC owned or controlled the
entire hot-rolled steel industry in the
PRC. See Line Pipe from the PRC and
accompanying Issues and Decision
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Memorandum at Comment 1. Evidence
on the record of this investigation shows
that many steel producers in the PRC
are integrated, producing both long
products (rounds and billets) and flat
products (hot-rolled steel). See
Memorandum to the File, ‘‘Additional
Information on Steel Rounds,’’ dated
February 22, 2010. Consequently,
government ownership in the hot-rolled
steel industry is a reasonable proxy for
government ownership in the steel
rounds and billets industry.
For details on the calculation of the
subsidy rate for the respondents, see
below at section I.C., ‘‘Provision of Steel
Rounds for Less Than Adequate
Remuneration.’’
GOC—Electricity
The GOC also did not provide a
complete response to the Department’s
November 9, 2009 questionnaire
regarding its alleged provision of
electricity for less than adequate
remuneration. Specifically, the
Department requested that the GOC
explain how electricity cost increases
are reflected in retail price increases.
The GOC responded that it was
gathering this information, but it did not
request an extension from the
Department for submitting this
information after the original
questionnaire deadline date. On January
14, 2010, the Department reiterated its
request for this information and notified
the GOC that this information would be
accepted if the GOC submitted it by
January 25, 2010. However, the GOC’s
subsequent supplemental questionnaire
responses did not address the missing
information. Consequently, we
preliminarily determine that the GOC
has withheld necessary information that
was requested of it and, thus, that the
Department must rely on ‘‘facts
available’’ in making our preliminary
determination. See section 776(a)(1),
section 776(a)(2)(A), and section
776(a)(2)(B) of the Act. Moreover, we
preliminarily determine that the GOC
has failed to cooperate by not acting to
the best of its ability to comply with our
request for information as it did not
respond by the deadline dates, nor did
it explain why it was unable to provide
the requested information, with the
result that an adverse inference is
warranted in the application of facts
available. See section 776(b) of the Act.
In drawing an adverse inverse inference,
we find that the GOC’s provision of
electricity constitutes a financial
contribution within the meaning of
section 771(5)(D) of the Act and is
specific within the meaning of section
771(5A) of the Act. We have also relied
on an adverse inference in selecting the
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benchmark for determining the
existence and amount of the benefit. See
section 776(b)(2) of the Act and section
776(b)(4) of the Act. The benchmark
rates we have selected are derived from
information submitted by the GOC in
the countervailing duty investigation of
‘‘Certain Kitchen Appliance Shelving
and Racks from the People’s Republic of
China’’ and information from the record
of the instant review. See Memorandum
to File from Yasmin Nair, International
Trade Compliance Analyst, Office 1,
‘‘Electricity Rate Data’’ (February 22,
2010).
For details on the calculation of the
subsidy rate for the respondents, see
below at section I.D., ‘‘Provision of
Electricity for Less Than Adequate
Remuneration.’’
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GOC—TPCO’s Other Subsidies
At pages 143–144 of TPCO Group’s
2008 Audit Report in Exhibit 6 of the
TQR and at page 14 of its February 16,
2010 supplemental questionnaire
response, TPCO reported receipt of
countervailable grants. In our January
26, 2010, supplemental questionnaire to
TPCO, we instructed TPCO to provide
information regarding other subsidies
identified in its 2008 financial
statements and to provide the GOC with
the names of the programs under which
these subsidies were given.
The Department requested that the
GOC provide information about these
grants in the initial questionnaire and
the January 27, 2010 supplemental
questionnaire. In the GOC’s February 4,
2010, supplemental response, at page
10, the GOC did not provide the
requested information, asserting that it
needed additional time to gather the
data. Although the GOC responded that
it was gathering this information, it did
not request an extension from the
Department for submitting this
information after the supplemental
questionnaire deadline date.
Because the GOC did not provide the
requested information concerning these
grants, we preliminarily determine that
necessary information is not on the
record and that the GOC did not provide
requested information by the
submission deadline. Accordingly, the
use of facts otherwise available is
appropriate. See sections 776(a)(1) and
(2)(B) of the Act. Also, we preliminarily
determine that the GOC has failed to
cooperate by not acting to the best of its
ability to comply with our request for
information as it did not respond by the
deadline dates, nor did it explain why
it is unable to provide the requested
information, with the result that an
adverse inference is warranted in the
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16:46 Feb 26, 2010
Jkt 220001
application of facts available. See
section 776(b) of the Act.
For details on the calculation of the
subsidy rate for TPCO, see below at
section I.G., ‘‘Other Subsidies Received
by TPCO.’’
Subsidies Valuation Information
Allocation Period
The average useful life (‘‘AUL’’) period
in this proceeding, as described in 19
CFR 351.524(d)(2), is 15 years according
to the U.S. Internal Revenue Service’s
1977 Class Life Asset Depreciation
Range System. See U.S. Internal
Revenue Service Publication 946 (2008),
How to Depreciate Property, at Table B–
2: Table of Class Lives and Recovery
Periods. No party in this proceeding has
disputed this allocation period.
Attribution of Subsidies
The Department’s regulations at 19
CFR 351.525(b)(6)(i) state that the
Department will normally attribute a
subsidy to the products produced by the
corporation that received the subsidy.
However, 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(ii)-(iv)
direct the Department to attribute
subsidies received by certain other
companies to the combined sales of
those companies if (1) cross-ownership
exists between the companies, and (2)
the cross-owned companies produce the
subject merchandise, are a holding or
parent company of the subject company,
or produce an input that is primarily
dedicated to the production of the
downstream product. In the case of a
transfer of a subsidy between crossowned companies, 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(v) directs the Department
to attribute the subsidy to the sales of
the company that receives the
transferred subsidy.
According to 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(vi), cross-ownership exists
between two or more corporations
where one corporation can use or direct
the individual assets of the other
corporation(s) in essentially the same
ways it can use its own assets. This
regulation states that this standard will
normally be met where there is a
majority voting interest between two
corporations or through common
ownership of two (or more)
corporations. The Court of International
Trade (‘‘CIT’’) has upheld the
Department’s authority to attribute
subsidies based on whether a company
could use or direct the subsidy benefits
of another company in essentially the
same way it could use its own subsidy
benefits. See Fabrique de Fer de
Charleroi v. United States, 166 F. Supp.
2d 593, 600–604 (CIT 2001).
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TPCO
TPCO responded to the Department’s
original and supplemental
questionnaires on behalf of itself,
Tianjin Pipe Iron Manufacturing Co.,
Ltd. (‘‘TPCO Iron’’); Tianguan Yuantong
Pipe Product Co., Ltd. (‘‘Yuantong’’);
Tianjin Pipe International Economic
and Trading Co., Ltd. (‘‘TPCO
International’’); and TPCO Charging
Development Co., Ltd. (‘‘Charging’’).
These companies are cross-owned
within the meaning 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(vi) because of TPCO’s
substantial ownership position in each
of them. See the TQR at page 2 and
Exhibits 1–3.
TPCO stated that TPCO Iron provides
‘‘pig iron and direct reduced iron’’ to
TPCO and that Yuantong provides
‘‘threading and other finishing processes
to {TPCO’s} seamless pipe
production.’’ 4 Because TPCO Iron
produced an input that is primarily
dedicated to the production of the
downstream product, we are
preliminarily attributing subsidies
received by TPCO Iron to TPCO, in
accordance with 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iv). Yuantong had direct
involvement in the production of
subject merchandise during the POI.
Thus, we are preliminarily attributing
subsidies received by Yuantong to
TPCO, in accordance with 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(ii).5
Regarding TPCO International, TPCO
stated, ‘‘{TPCO International} is the
trading company through which
{TPCO} exports all subject
merchandise.’’ Because TPCO
International exported subject
merchandise during the POI, we are
preliminarily cumulating the benefit
from subsidies received by TPCO
International with subsidies provided to
TPCO, in accordance with 19 CFR
351.525(c). We are preliminarily using
TPCO’s consolidated sales as the
denominator for subsidies to TPCO
International. On page 12 of the TQR,
TPCO stated that TPCO consolidates
directly-owned subsidiaries in which it
holds an equity share of more than 50
percent. On page 9 of the TQR, TPCO
stated that the consolidated sales totals
in its financial statements are net of
4 See
TQR at 5.
Certain Oil Country Tubular Goods From
the People’s Republic of China: Preliminary
Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination,
Preliminary Negative Critical Circumstances
Determination, 74 FR 47210, 47215 (September 15,
2009) (unchanged in Certain Oil Country Tubular
Goods From the People’s Republic of China: Final
Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination,
Final Negative Critical Circumstances
Determination, 74 FR 64045 (December 7, 2009)
(‘‘OCTG from the PRC ’’)).
5 See
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inter-company sales. Thus, TPCO’s
consolidated sales already include
TPCO International’s sales (net of intercompany sales). By using TPCO’s
consolidated sales as the denominator
for subsidies to TPCO International, we
do not double-count TPCO
International’s sales in the calculation of
the subsidy rate.
With regard to Charging, TPCO stated
on pages 4–5 of the TQR that Charging
acts as a trading company that
purchased and provided steel rounds to
TPCO during the POI. If the GOC
provided steel rounds to Charging for
less than adequate remuneration during
the POI, the supplier relationship
between Charging and TPCO may fall
under 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(iv)
(subsidies to cross-owned input
suppliers) or 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(v)
(transfer of subsidies). As we stated in
the previous paragraph, however, TPCO
consolidates the sales of directly-owned
subsidiaries in which it holds an equity
share of more than 50 percent (net of
inter-company sales). Because TPCO
consolidates Charging’s sales into its
own sales, the attribution of the subsidy
for TPCO’s purchases through Charging
is identical under 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iv) or 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(v). Under both sections of
the regulations, the attribution of the
subsidy is to TPCO’s consolidated sales.
Thus, we are preliminarily attributing
any subsidies under the provision of
steel rounds to Charging for less than
adequate remuneration to TPCO’s
consolidated sales, which includes
Charging’s sales.
On page 3 of our January 26, 2010,
supplemental questionnaire to TPCO,
we asked TPCO to explain why it did
not provide a response on behalf of
Tianjin TEDA Investment Holding Co.,
Ltd. (‘‘TEDA’’), Tianjin Pipe Investment
Holding Co., Ltd. (‘‘TPCO Holding’’), and
China Cinda Asset Management
Corporation (‘‘Cinda’’), which have held
majority interests in TPCO since
December 11, 2001. Under 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iii), we would normally
attribute to TPCO any subsidies that
these owners received while each was
cross-owned with TPCO. In its response
dated February 16, 2010, TPCO
responded that TEDA, a government
agency, is primarily involved in the
operation and management of assets and
public infrastructure, and TPCO
Holding was originally established by
the Tianjin SASAC (‘‘State-owned
Assets Supervision and Administration
Commission of the State Council’’) for
the sole purpose of holding the assets of
TPCO. In TPCO’s explanation of why it
did not file a response for Cinda, it
refers to the Department’s finding in
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16:46 Feb 26, 2010
Jkt 220001
OCTG from the PRC, in which the
Department found that TEDA and TPCO
Holding were government agencies.6
TPCO states ‘‘for the same reasons,’’
TPCO did not file a response for Cinda,
which was specifically established to
restructure debt and non-performing
assets. Based on TPCO’s response, we
preliminarily determine that these
entities were government agencies since
December 11, 2001. Thus, we are
preliminarily countervailing subsidies
that these entities provided to TPCO,
rather than any subsidies that these
entities may have received. Moreover, as
agencies of the government, we
preliminarily determine these entities to
be ‘‘government authorities.’’
In the January 26, 2010, supplemental
questionnaire, we also asked TPCO
questions about certain affiliates that
may have met the cross-ownership
standard under 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(vi)
and one or more of the attribution
standards under 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(ii)–(v). TPCO provided
responses to these questions in its
February 12, 2010, response at pages
5–6. Based on TPCO’s responses, we
preliminarily determine that none of
these affiliates met both the crossownership standard of 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(vi) and one or more of the
attribution standards under 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(ii)–(v). Thus, we have not
included any subsidies to these
companies in the subsidy calculation.
For other affiliated companies that
TPCO identified in Exhibits 1 and 2 of
the TQR, TPCO either held a small
ownership share during the POI or
identified the companies as having no
involvement with subject merchandise.
Thus, we have not included any
subsidies to these companies in the
subsidy calculation.
Regarding the sales denominator for
calculating TPCO’s subsidy rate, we
note that the Department will attribute
subsidies bestowed on a parent or
holding company to the consolidated
sales of the parent or holding company
and its subsidiaries under 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iii). TPCO was a parent
company to other companies during the
POI. On page 12 of the TQR, TPCO
stated, ‘‘{TPCO} consolidated those
directly owned subsidiaries in which it
holds more than 50% equity shares, as
well as those indirectly owned
subsidiaries in which its wholly-owned
subsidiaries hold more than 50% equity
shares.’’ In accordance with 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iii), we are preliminarily
attributing subsidies to TPCO to the
6 See OCTG from the PRC, and accompanying
Issues and Decision Memorandum at 9 and
Comment 40.
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9169
consolidated sales of TPCO and its
subsidiaries.
Therefore, based on information
currently on the record, we
preliminarily determine that crossownership within the meaning of 19
CFR 351.525(b)(6)(vi) exists between
TPCO, TPCO Iron, Yuantong, TPCO
International, and Charging. Moreover,
pursuant to 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(iii),
we are preliminarily attributing
subsidies received by TPCO to the
consolidated sales of TPCO and its
subsidiaries (net of inter-company
sales). TPCO Iron, Yuantong, and
Charging are consolidated into TPCO’s
sales; thus, we are preliminarily
attributing subsidies received by TPCO
Iron, Yuantong, and Charging to TPCO’s
consolidated sales (net of inter-company
sales). For TPCO International, we
preliminarily have cumulated TPCO
International’s subsidy benefits with
TPCO’s subsidy benefits. See 19 CFR
351.525(c). We have preliminarily used
TPCO’s consolidated sales net of intercompany sales as the denominator for
subsidies to TPCO International.
Hengyang
As of this preliminary determination,
Hengyang has responded to the
Department’s original and supplemental
questionnaires on behalf of Hengyang
Steel Tube Group International Trading,
Inc. (‘‘Hengyang Trading’’), Hengyang
Valin Steel Tube Co., Ltd. (‘‘Hengyang
Valin’’), and Hengyang Valin MPM Tube
Co., Ltd. (‘‘Hengyang MPM’’), and their
affiliated parties Xigang Seamless Steel
Tube Co., Ltd. (‘‘Xigang Seamless’’),
Wuxi Seamless Special Pipe Co., Ltd.
(‘‘Special Pipe’’), Wuxi Resources Steel
Making Co., Ltd. (‘‘Resources Steel’’),
and Jiangsu Xigang Group Co., Ltd.
(‘‘Xigang Group’’). These companies are
cross-owned within the meaning of 19
CFR 351.525(b)(6)(vi) by virtue of
common ownership.7
Hengyang reports the following roles
for each of the seven companies: 8
• Hengyang Valin: a parent company
to Hengyang MPM and Hengyang
Trading, and a producer of subject
merchandise;
• Hengyang MPM: a producer of
subject merchandise, as well as a
producer and supplier of an input to
Hengyang Valin for production of
subject merchandise;
• Hengyang Trading: an exporter of
subject merchandise on behalf of
Hengyang Valin and Hengyang MPM;
• Xigang Seamless: a producer and
exporter of subject merchandise;
7 See
8 See
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• Special Pipe: a producer of subject
merchandise;
• Resources Steel: a producer and
supplier of an input to Xigang Seamless
and Special Pipe for production of
subject merchandise; and
• Xigang Group: a holding company,
and the parent of Xigang Seamless,
Special Pipe, and Resources Steel.
Because Hengyang Valin, Hengyang
MPM, Xigang Seamless, and Special
Pipe are producers of subject
merchandise, we are preliminarily
attributing subsidies received by any of
these companies to the sales of all four
(excluding sales between the
companies), in accordance with 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(ii).
During the POI, Hengyang Trading
exported subject merchandise produced
by Hengyang Valin and Hengyang MPM.
Thus, we are preliminarily cumulating
the benefit from subsidies received by
Hengyang Trading with the benefit from
subsidies provided to Hengyang Valin
and MPM, in accordance with 19 CFR
351.525(c).
Hengyang identified Resources Steel
as a producer and supplier of steel billet
to Xigang Seamless and Special Pipe.
Because steel billet is primarily
dedicated to the production of the
downstream product, we are
preliminarily attributing subsidies
received by Resources Steel to
Resources Steel, Xigang Seamless, and
Special Pipe, in accordance with 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iv).
Xigang Group was the parent of
Xigang Seamless, Special Pipe, and
Resources Steel during the POI. Thus,
we are preliminarily attributing
subsidies received by Xigang Group to
the consolidated sales of Xigang Group
and its subsidiaries, in accordance with
19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(iii).
In a supplemental questionnaire dated
January 28, 2010, we asked Hengyang to
provide responses on behalf of certain
affiliates that met the cross-ownership
standard under 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(vi)
and one or more of the attribution
standards under 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(ii)–(v). Hengyang is
scheduled to provide this response on
February 22, 2010. We intend to address
this response in a post-preliminary
determination.
At Volume 1, page 7 of the HQR,
Hengyang stated that Hengyang Trading
also exports subject merchandise
produced by an unaffiliated producer,
although Hengyang stated that
Hengyang Trading did not export this
merchandise to the United States during
the POI. At Volume 5, pages 7–8 of the
HQR, Hengyang stated that Xigang
Seamless purchased and exported
subject merchandise produced by
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16:46 Feb 26, 2010
Jkt 220001
unaffiliated companies during the POI.
Although any subsidies to the
unaffiliated producers would normally
be cumulated with subsidies provided
to these trading companies pursuant to
19 CFR 351.525(c), the Department has,
in some instances, limited the number
of producers it examines where their
merchandise was not exported to the
United States during the POI or
accounted for a very small share of
respondent’s exports to the United
States. In this investigation, we have not
sent CVD questionnaires to the
unaffiliated suppliers because their
merchandise was not exported to the
United States during the POI or
accounted for a minor share of
Hengyang’s exports to the United
States.9 See, e.g., Pasta From Italy, in
which one of the mandatory
respondents was a trading company that
exported pasta produced by multiple
pasta manufacturers, but the
Department limited its analysis to the
two major pasta manufacturers that
supplied the trading company during
the period of review. See Certain Pasta
from Italy: Final Results of the Fourth
Countervailing Duty Administrative
Review, 66 FR 64214 (December 12,
2001) (‘‘Pasta from Italy’’), and
accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum at ‘‘Attribution.’’
Benchmarks and Discount Rates
Benchmarks for Short-Term RMB
Denominated Loans
Section 771(5)(E)(ii) of the Act
explains that the benefit for loans is the
‘‘difference between the amount the
recipient of the loan pays on the loan
and the amount the recipient would pay
on a comparable commercial loan that
the recipient could actually obtain on
the market.’’ Normally, the Department
uses comparable commercial loans
reported by the company as a
benchmark.10 If the firm did not have
any comparable commercial loans
during the period, the Department’s
regulations provide that we ‘‘may use a
national average interest rate for
comparable commercial loans.’’ 11
As noted above, section 771(5)(E)(ii)
of the Act indicates that the benchmark
should be a market-based rate. For the
reasons explained in CFS from the
9 Hengyang Trading did not export subject
merchandise produced by unaffiliated producers to
the United States during the POI. See the HQR at
Volume 1, page 7. The percentage of Xigang
Seamless’s exports of subject merchandise to the
United States from unaffiliated producers is
business proprietary information. See the HQR at
Volume 5, page 8.
10 See 19 CFR 351.505(a)(3)(i).
11 See 19 CFR 351.505(a)(3)(ii).
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PRC,12 loans provided by Chinese banks
reflect significant government
intervention in the banking sector and
do not reflect rates that would be found
in a functioning market. Because of this,
any loans received by respondents from
private Chinese or foreign-owned banks
would be unsuitable for use as
benchmarks under 19 CFR
351.505(a)(2)(i). Similarly, we cannot
use a national interest rate for
commercial loans as envisaged by 19
CFR 351.505(a)(3)(ii). Therefore,
because of the special difficulties
inherent in using a Chinese benchmark
for loans, the Department is selecting an
external market-based benchmark
interest rate. The use of an external
benchmark is consistent with the
Department’s practice. For example, in
Softwood Lumber from Canada, the
Department used U.S. timber prices to
measure the benefit for governmentprovided timber in Canada.13
We are calculating the external
benchmark using the regression-based
methodology first developed in CFS
from the PRC 14 and more recently
updated in LWTP from the PRC.15 This
benchmark interest rate is based on the
inflation-adjusted interest rates of
countries with per capita gross national
incomes (‘‘GNIs’’) similar to the PRC,
and takes into account a key factor
involved in interest rate formation, that
of the quality of a country’s institutions,
that is not directly tied to the stateimposed distortions in the banking
sector discussed above.
Following the methodology
developed in CFS from the PRC, we first
determined which countries are similar
to the PRC in terms of GNI, based on the
World Bank’s classification of countries
as: low income; lower-middle income;
upper-middle income; and high income.
The PRC falls in the lower-middle
income category, a group that includes
55 countries.16 As explained in CFS
from the PRC, this pool of countries
12 See
CFS Decision Memorandum at Comment
10.
13 See Notice of Final Affirmative Countervailing
Duty Determination and Final Negative Critical
Circumstances Determination: Certain Softwood
Lumber Products From Canada, 67 FR 15545 (April
2, 2002) (‘‘Softwood Lumber from Canada’’) and
accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum at
‘‘Analysis of Programs, Provincial Stumpage
Programs Determined to Confer Subsidies, Benefit.’’
14 See CFS Decision Memorandum at Comment
10.
15 See Lightweight Thermal Paper From the
People’s Republic of China: Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination, 73 FR 57323
(October 2, 2008) (‘‘LWTP from the PRC’’) and
accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum
(‘‘LWTP Decision Memorandum’’) at 8–10.
16 See The World Bank Country Classification,
https://econ.worldbank.org/.
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captures the broad inverse relationship
between income and interest rates.
Many of these countries reported
lending and inflation rates to the
International Monetary Fund, and they
are included in that agency’s
international financial statistics (‘‘IFS’’).
With the exceptions noted below, we
have used the interest and inflation
rates reported in the IFS for the
countries identified as ‘‘low middle
income’’ by the World Bank. First, we
did not include those economies that
the Department considered to be nonmarket economies for AD purposes for
any part of the years in question, for
example: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus,
Georgia, Moldova, Turkmenistan.
Second, the pool necessarily excludes
any country that did not report both
lending and inflation rates to IFS for
those years. Third, we removed any
country that reported a rate that was not
a lending rate or that based its lending
rate on foreign-currency denominated
instruments. For example, Jordan
reported a deposit rate, not a lending
rate, and the rates reported by Ecuador
and Timor L’Este are dollardenominated rates; therefore, the rates
for these three countries have been
excluded. Finally, for each year the
Department calculated an inflationadjusted short-term benchmark rate, we
have also excluded any countries with
aberrational or negative real interest
rates for the year in question.
The resulting inflation-adjusted
benchmark lending rates are provided in
the respondents’ preliminary
calculation memoranda. See
Memorandum to File, ‘‘Preliminary
Determination Calculation
Memorandum for (TPCO),’’ (February
22, 2010) (‘‘TPCO Calculation Memo’’);
see also Memorandum to File,
‘‘Preliminary Determination Calculation
Memorandum for (Hengyang),’’
(February 22, 2010) (‘‘Hengyang
Calculation Memo’’). Because these are
inflation-adjusted benchmarks, it is
necessary to adjust the respondents’
interest payments for inflation. This was
done using the PRC inflation figure as
reported in the IFS. See TPCO
Calculation Memo and Hengyang
Calculation Memo.
Benchmarks for Long-Term Loans
The lending rates reported in the IFS
represent short- and medium-term
lending, and there are not sufficient
publicly available long-term interest rate
data upon which to base a robust
benchmark for long-term loans. To
address this problem, the Department
has developed an adjustment to the
short- and medium-term rates to convert
them to long-term rates using Bloomberg
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U.S. corporate BB-rated bond rates. See,
e.g., Light-Walled Rectangular Pipe and
Tube From People’s Republic of China:
Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Investigation Determination, 73 FR
35642 (June 24, 2008) and
accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum (‘‘LWRP Decision Memo’’)
at 8. In Citric Acid from the PRC, this
methodology was revised by switching
from a long-term mark-up based on the
ratio of the rates of BB-rated bonds to
applying a spread which is calculated as
the difference between the two-year BB
bond rate and the n-year BB bond rate,
where n equals or approximates the
number of years of the term of the loan
in question. See Citric Acid and Certain
Citrate Salts From the People’s Republic
of China: Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination, 74
FR 16836 (April 13, 2009) (‘‘Citric Acid
from the PRC’’) and accompanying
Issues and Decision Memorandum
(‘‘Citric Acid Decision Memorandum’’)
at Comment 14. Finally, because these
long-term rates are net of inflation as
noted above, we adjusted the PRC
respondents’ payments to remove
inflation.
Benchmarks for Foreign CurrencyDenominated Loans
For foreign currency-denominated
short-term loans, the Department used
as a benchmark the one-year dollar
interest rates for the London Interbank
Offering Rate (‘‘LIBOR’’), plus the
average spread between LIBOR and the
one-year corporate bond rates for
companies with a BB rating. See LWTP
Decision Memo at 10. For long-term
foreign currency-denominated loans, the
Department added the applicable shortterm LIBOR rate to a spread which is
calculated as the difference between the
one-year BB bond rate and the n-year BB
bond rate, where n equals or
approximates the number of years of the
term of the loan in question.
Discount Rates
Consistent with 19 CFR
351.524(d)(3)(i)(A), we have used, as our
discount rate, the long-term interest rate
calculated according to the methodology
described above for the year in which
the government agreed to provide the
subsidy.
Analysis of Programs
Based upon our analysis of the
petition and the responses to our
questionnaires, we preliminarily
determine the following:
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I. Programs Preliminarily Determined
To Be Countervailable
A. Policy Loans to the Seamless Pipe
Industry
The Department is examining whether
seamless pipe producers receive
preferential lending through stateowned commercial or policy banks.
According to the allegation, preferential
lending to the seamless pipe industry is
supported by the GOC through the
issuance of national and provincial fiveyear plans; industrial plans for the steel
sector; catalogues of encouraged
industries, and other government laws
and regulations. Based on our review of
the information and responses of the
GOC, we preliminarily determine that
loans received by the seamless pipe
industry from state-owned commercial
banks (‘‘SOCBs’’) were made pursuant to
government directives.
Record evidence demonstrates that
the GOC, through its directives, has
highlighted and advocated the
development of the seamless pipe
industry. At the national level, the GOC
has placed an emphasis on the
development of high-end, value-added
steel products through foreign
investment as well as through
technological research, development,
and innovation. In laying out this
strategy, the GOC has identified the
specific products it has in mind. For
example, an ‘‘objective’’ of The 10th
Five-Year Plan for the Metallurgical
Industry (‘‘Plan’’) was to develop key
steel types that were mainly imported;
high strength, anticrushing and
corrosion resistant petroleum pipe was
among the listed products. Moreover,
among the ‘‘Policy Measures’’ set out in
the Plan for achieving its objectives was
the encouragement of enterprises to
cooperate with foreign enterprises,
particularly in the production and
development of high value-added
products and high-tech products. See
Memorandum to File from Yasmin Nair,
Analyst regarding ‘‘Additional
Documents Placed on the Record’’
(February 22, 2010) (‘‘Additional
Documents Memo’’).
Similarly, in the Development Policies
for the Iron and Steel Industry (July
2005) at Article 16, the GOC states that
it will ‘‘* * * enhance the R&D, design,
and manufacture level in relation to the
key technology, equipment and facilities
for the Chinese steel industry.’’ To
accomplish this, the GOC states it will
provide support to key steel projects
relying on domestically produced and
newly developed equipment and
facilities, through tax and interest
assistance, and scientific research
expenditures. See Petition at Exhibit III–
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10. Later in 2005, the GOC implemented
the Decision of the State Council on
Promulgating the ‘‘Interim Provisions on
Promoting Industrial Structure
Adjustment’’ for Implementation (No. 40
(2005)) (‘‘Decision 40’’) in order to
achieve the objectives of the Eleventh
Five-Year Plan. See Additional
Documents Memo. Decision 40
references the Directory Catalogue on
Readjustment of Industrial Structure
(‘‘Industrial Catalogue’’), which outlines
the projects which the GOC deems
‘‘encouraged,’’ ‘‘restricted,’’ and
‘‘eliminated,’’ and describes how these
projects will be considered under
government policies. Steel tube for oil
well pipe, high-pressure boiler pipe,
and long-distance transmission pipe
was named in the Industrial Catalogue
as an ‘‘encouraged project.’’ See Petition
at Exhibit III–44. For the ‘‘encouraged’’
projects, Decision 40 outlines several
support options available to the
government, including financing.
Turning to the provincial and
municipal plans, the Department has
described the inter-relatedness of
national level plans and directives with
those at the sub-national level. See
LWTP Decision Memo at Comment 6.
Based on our review of the sub-national
plans submitted by the GOC in this
investigation, we find that they mirror
the national government’s objective of
supporting and promoting the
production of innovative and high-value
added products, including seamless
pipe. Examples from the five-year plans
of the provinces and/or municipalities
where each of the respondents is located
follow:
Outline of the 10th Five-Year Plan for the
National Economic and Social Development
of Tianjin Municipality: ‘‘For metallurgical
industry, we attach importance to the
development of high quality and efficiency
steel products and high grade metal products,
such as seamless steel tube and cold rolled
sheet, and carry out the oil steel pipe
extension and east-movement project of
steel.’’ See GQR at Exhibit GOC–12.
Outline of the 11th Five-Year Program of
Social and Economic Development of Tianjin
Municipality: ‘‘Build a pipe production base,
mainly producing seamless pipes * * *
Develop a production capacity of 2600
seamless pipes, 10 million plates, and 1
million first class metal products by 2010.’’
See GQR at Exhibit GOC–13.
10th Five-Year Plan for Industrial
Development in Tianjin: ‘‘Surrounding the
object of establishing a national
manufacturing base for seamless steel tube
and metallic products, metallurgy industries
will actively optimize structure, properly
adjust layout, and develop advantageous
products. We shall let the backward
techniques and facilities give way to latest
applicable technologies to treat pollution
properly, promote development of quality
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steel and metallic products with high added
value and huge domestic demand
represented by seamless steel tube and cold
rolled sheet * * *’’ See GQR at Exhibit GOC–
16.
Outline of the 11th Five-Year Program for
the Development of the Industrial Economy
of Tianjin: ‘‘Development objective: * * *
Production capacities of major products:
* * * production of rolled steel exceeds 30
million tons, including 2.6 million tons of
seamless steel tubes * * * One of the world
largest technical equipment leading seamless
steel tube production base and important
domestic high grade sheet and metal
products production base shall be established
here * * * Key projects and investment:
There shall be a total investment of 32.5
billion Yuan during the period of the 11th
Five-Year Program, mainly including the
project of seamless steel tube, stainless steel
tube and heavy caliber welding steel tubes
with a total investment of 3.6 billion Yuan
contributed by TPCO, Shuangjie Steel Tubes
and other companies * * *’’ See GQR at
Exhibit GOC–17.
Outline of the 10th Five-Year Plan for
National Economy and Social Development
of Tianjin Binhai New Area: ‘‘Complete the
eastward movement of Tianjin Steel Factory
relying on the current conditions of Steel
Pipe Company and No.3 Gas Factory,
establish the manufacturing base and
metallurgical casting base for steel of quality
and efficiency and its hot-processed
products.’’ See G1SR at Exhibit 1.
Notice of Tianjin Municipal People’s
Government Concerning the Printing and
Distribution of the Outline for the 11th FiveYear Program for the National Economic and
social Development in Tianjin Binhai New
Area: ‘‘4. Constructing deep processing base
of petroleum steel pipe and high quality steel
material—We shall quicken technology
innovation and structural adjustment, extend
industrial link, enhance the concentration
effort, strive the commanding point of the
industry, consolidate and develop the
leading position of deep processing of
petroleum steel pipe and high quality steel
material.’’ See G1SR at Exhibit 2.
Outlines of the 10th and 11th Five-Year
Program for Industrial Structural Adjustment
and Development in Jiangsu: ‘‘Emphasize on
the development of high-quality steel
products with high added value and high
technological content such as motor plates,
shipbuilding steel plates, * * * pinion steel,
oil well billet, special pipes and sticks, and
highly qualified high-carbon hard wires.’’ See
GQR at Exhibit GOC–14 and 15.
Outline of the 11th Five-Year Plan of
Social and Economic Development of Jiangsu
Province: ‘‘We shall lay emphasis upon the
development of competitive industries * * *
By setting up industrial bases of integrated
circuit, photoelectric display, petrochemical
industry, metallurgy, shipbuilding, and paper
making, we shall increase shares of
competitive industries in the manufacturing
industry. Focus shall be put on developing
special metallurgy, petrochemical, new
building material and other basic industries.
We shall actively speed up development of
special steel, * * *’’ See GQR at Exhibit
GOC–9.
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Outline of the 10th Five-Year Plan of
Social and Economic Development of Wuxi
Municipality: ‘‘We should insist on the
guidance of market, support the consumer
products with big market share, fill the
blanket area in domestic market, replace the
exported products, high class facility class,
upgrade and update products with
competitive and high added value, new
products with good industrialization base
and comparative relativeness and dragging
force, endeavor to construct 10 distinctive
product group of electronic devices, * * *
steel & iron and metal products and form a
batch of international renowned brand and
brands famous in China and Jiangsu.’’ See
GQR at Exhibit GOC–10.
Outline of the 11th Five-Year Plan of
Social and Economic Development of Wuxi
Municipality: ‘‘We will take such industries
as metallurgy, chemical industry and so on
as the foundation, prioritize products of
several domains such as new composition
material and high polymer material, new
ceramic material, special steel and product,
* * *’’ See GQR at Exhibit GOC–11.
Outline of the 10th Five-Year Plan of
Social and Economic Development of Hunan
Province: ‘‘We shall optimize the structure,
form the characteristics and enlarge the
production of high quality plate and strip
material, seamless tube, rigid line,
manganese and other deep processing and
special alloy products.’’ See GQR at Exhibit
GOC–4.
Outline of the 11th Five-Year Program of
Social and Economic Development of Hunan
Province: ‘‘We shall vigorously import
advanced technological equipment and
production techniques * * *; concentrate on
development of high-quality excellent steel
materials such as plates, tubes and bars etc
* * *’’ See GQR at Exhibit GOC–5.
Outline of the 10th Five-Year Plan of
Social and Economic Development of
Hengyang Municipality: ‘‘Focus shall be put
on singling out these six pillar industries for
support such as metallurgy, machinery,
* * * We shall attach great importance to ten
key enterprises and ten knock-out products.
The ten key enterprises include: * * *
Hengyang Steel Tube Group Corporation
* * *’’ See GQR at Exhibit GOC–6.
Outline of the 11th Five-Year Program of
Social and Economic Development of
Hengyang Municipality: ‘‘We shall stress the
development of such major industries such
as iron and steel smelting and tube
processing, * * * we shall introduce
international strategic investment, promote
tube processing and manufacturing * * * Up
to 2010, the smelting of steel and iron and
the output for affiliated industrial clusters of
tube processing shall reach 14 billion.’’ See
GQR at Exhibit GOC–7.
As noted in Citric Acid from the
PRC: 17
In general, the Department looks to
whether government plans or other policy
directives lay out objectives or goals for
developing the industry and call for lending
to support those objectives or goals. Where
17 See Citric Acid from the PRC, and Citric Acid
Decision Memo, at Comment 5.
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such plans or policy directives exist, then we
will find a policy lending program that is
specific to the named industry (or producers
that fall under that industry).18 Once that
finding is made, the Department relies upon
the analysis undertaken in CFS from the
PRC 19 to further conclude that national and
local government control over the SOCBs
results in the loans being a financial
contribution by the GOC.20
Therefore, on the basis of the record
information described above, we
preliminarily determine that the GOC
has a policy in place to encourage the
development of production of seamless
pipe through policy lending. The loans
to seamless pipe producers from Policy
Banks and SOCBs in the PRC constitute
a direct financial contribution from the
government, pursuant to section
771(5)(D)(i) of the Act, and they provide
a benefit equal to the difference between
what the recipients paid on their loans
and the amount they would have paid
on comparable commercial loans (see
section 771(5)(E)(2) of the Act). Finally,
we determine that the loans are de jure
specific within the meaning of section
771 of the Act because of the GOC’s
policy, as illustrated in the government
plans and directives, to encourage and
support the growth and development of
the seamless pipe industry.
To calculate the benefit under the
policy lending program, we used the
benchmarks described under ‘‘Subsidies
Valuation—Benchmarks and Discount
Rates’’ above. See also 19 CFR
351.505(c). On this basis, we
preliminarily determine that Hengyang
received a countervailable subsidy of
1.44 percent ad valorem and TPCO
received a countervailable subsidy of
0.88 percent ad valorem.
B. Export Loans From the Export-Import
Bank of China
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TPCO
On page 20 of the GQR, the GOC
reported that the Export-Import Bank of
China (‘‘EIBC’’) provided TPCO with
three loans that were outstanding during
the POI. The GOC claimed that none of
the loans related to exportation of
subject merchandise.
Based on the proprietary description
of these loans at page 21 of the GOC’s
18 See CFS Decision Memorandum, at 49; and
LWTP Decision Memorandum, at 98.
19 See CFS Decision Memorandum, at Comment
8.
20 See Certain New Pneumatic Off-The-Road Tires
from the People’s Republic of China: Final
Affirmative Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value and Partial Affirmative Determination of
Critical Circumstances, 73 FR 40485 (July 15, 2008)
(‘‘OTR Tires from the PRC’’), and the accompanying
Issues and Decision Memorandum (‘‘OTR Tires
Decision Memo’’) at 15; and LWTP Decision
Memorandum, at 11.
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response, however, we preliminarily
find that one of the loans is a
countervailable export loan from the
EIBC.21 As a loan from a government
policy bank, this loan constitutes a
direct financial contribution from the
government, pursuant to section
771(5)(D)(i) of the Act. We further
determine that the export loan is
specific under section 771(5A)(B) of the
Act because receipt of the financing is
contingent upon export. Also, we
determine that the export loan confers a
benefit within the meaning of section
771(5)(E)(ii) of the Act.
To calculate the benefit under this
program, we compared the amount of
interest paid against the export loan to
the amount of interest that would have
been paid on a comparable commercial
loan. As our benchmark, we used the
short-term interest rates discussed above
in the ‘‘Benchmarks and Discount Rates’’
section. To calculate the net
countervailable subsidy rate, we divided
the benefit by TPCO’s export sales value
for the POI. On this basis, we
preliminarily determine the net
countervailable subsidy rate to be 0.08
percent ad valorem.
Hengyang
On page 14 of the HQR, Hengyang
reported two loans made to Hengyang
Valin that are ‘‘contingent on the loans
being used for anticipated activities that
generate exports of high-tech
products.’’ 22 On page 15 of the HQR,
Hengyang stated that all of Hengyang
Valin’s exports benefit from these loans.
On page 28 of the GQR, the GOC
stated, ‘‘Hengyang Valin received
{proprietary amount of} export
contingent loans from {the EIBC}.’’
We preliminarily find that Hengyang’s
loans from the EIBC that were
outstanding during the POI are
countervailable export loans. As a loan
from a government policy bank, these
loans constitute a direct financial
contribution from the government,
pursuant to section 771(5)(D)(i) of the
Act. We further determine that the
export loans are specific under section
771(5A)(B) of the Act because receipt of
the financing is contingent upon export.
Also, we determine that the export loans
confer a benefit within the meaning of
section 771(5)(E)(ii) of the Act.
To calculate the benefit under this
program, we compared the amount of
interest paid against the export loans to
the amount of interest that would have
been paid on a comparable commercial
loan. As our benchmark, we used the
21 We have addressed the proprietary details of
this loan in the TPCO Calculation Memo.
22 See HQR at 14.
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9173
short-term interest rates discussed above
in the ‘‘Benchmarks and Discount Rates’’
section. To calculate the net
countervailable subsidy rate, we divided
the benefit by Hengyang’s export sales
value for the POI. On this basis, we
preliminarily determine the net
countervailable subsidy rate to be 1.03
percent ad valorem.
C. Provision of Steel Rounds for Less
Than Adequate Remuneration
As discussed under ‘‘Use of Facts
Otherwise Available and Adverse
Inferences,’’ above, we are preliminarily
relying on ‘‘adverse facts available’’
(‘‘AFA’’) for our analysis regarding the
GOC’s provision of steel rounds and
billets to seamless pipe producers. First,
as a result of the GOC’s failure to
provide requested ownership
information for the companies that
produced the steel rounds and billets
purchased by the mandatory
respondents in this investigation, we are
treating all unaffiliated producers of
steel rounds and billets as ‘‘authorities’’
within the meaning of section 771(5)(B)
of the Act. Therefore, we preliminarily
determine that seamless pipe producers
have received a financial contribution
from the government in the form of the
provision of a good. See section
771(5)(D)(iii) of the Act.
To determine whether this financial
contribution results in a subsidy to the
seamless pipe producers, we followed
19 CFR 351.511(a)(2) for identifying an
appropriate market-based benchmark for
measuring the adequacy of the
remuneration for the steel rounds and
billets. The potential benchmarks listed
in this regulation, in order of preference
are: (1) Market prices from actual
transactions within the country under
investigation for the governmentprovided good (e.g., actual sales, actual
imports, or competitively run
government auctions) (‘‘tier one’’
benchmarks); (2) world market prices
that would be available to purchasers in
the country under investigation (‘‘tier
two’’ benchmarks); or (3) prices
consistent with market principles based
on an assessment by the Department of
the government-set price (‘‘tier three’’
benchmarks). As we explained in
Softwood Lumber from Canada, the
preferred benchmark in the hierarchy is
an observed market price from actual
transactions within the country under
investigation because such prices
generally would be expected to reflect
most closely the prevailing market
conditions of the purchaser under
investigation. See Softwood Lumber
from Canada and accompanying Issues
and Decision Memorandum at ‘‘Analysis
of Programs, Provincial Stumpage
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Programs Determined to Confer
Subsidies, Benefit.’’
Beginning with tier one, we must
determine whether the prices from
actual sales transactions involving
Chinese buyers and sellers are
significantly distorted. As explained in
the CVD Preamble: ‘‘Where it is
reasonable to conclude that actual
transaction prices are significantly
distorted as a result of the government’s
involvement in the market, we will
resort to the next alternative {tier two}
in the hierarchy.’’ See Countervailing
Duties; Final Rule, 63 FR 65348, 65377
(November 25, 1998) (‘‘CVD Preamble’’).
The CVD Preamble further recognizes
that distortion can occur when the
government provider constitutes a
majority, or in certain circumstances, a
substantial portion of the market.
As explained under ‘‘Use of Facts
Otherwise Available and Adverse
Inferences,’’ above, we are preliminarily
relying on AFA to determine that GOC
authorities play a predominant role in
the PRC market for steel rounds and
billets. Because of the predominant role
played by GOC authorities in the
production of steel rounds and billets,
we preliminarily determine that the
prices actually paid in the PRC for steel
rounds and billets during the POI are
not appropriate tier one benchmarks
under our regulations.
Turning to tier two benchmarks, i.e.,
world market prices available to
purchasers in the PRC, we have placed
on the record the benchmark price
information that we used in the final
determination of OCTG from the PRC.
See OCTG from the PRC, and
accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum at Comment 13a; see also
Memorandum to the File dated February
22, 2010, ‘‘Steel Rounds Benchmark
Prices.’’ The benchmark price that we
used in OCTG from the PRC is a
compilation of the following prices:
Export prices from Steel Business
Briefing (‘‘SBB’’) for billet from Latin
America, Turkey, the Black Sea/Baltic
region; SBB East Asia import prices; and
two series of London Metal Exchange
prices.
The benchmark price from OCTG
from the PRC represents an average of
commercially-available world market
prices for steel rounds and billets that
would be available to purchasers in the
PRC. We note that, in addition to OCTG
from the PRC, the Department has relied
on pricing data from industry
publications such as SBB in other recent
CVD proceedings involving the PRC.
See, e.g., CWP Decision Memorandum
at 11 and LWRP Decision Memo at 9.
Also, 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(ii) states that
where there is more than one
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commercially available world market
price, the Department will average the
prices to the extent practicable.
Therefore, we have averaged the prices
to calculate an overall benchmark.
Under 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(iv), when
measuring the adequacy of
remuneration under tier one or tier two,
the Department will adjust the
benchmark price to reflect the price that
a firm actually paid or would pay if it
imported the product, including
delivery charges and import duties.
Regarding delivery charges, we have
included the freight charges that would
be incurred to deliver steel rounds to
the respondents’ plants. We have also
added import duties, as reported by the
GOC, and the value-added tax (‘‘VAT’’)
applicable to imports of steel rounds
and billet into the PRC. We have
compared these prices to the
respondents’ actual purchase prices,
including any taxes and delivery
charges incurred to deliver the product
to the respondents’ plants.
Comparing the adjusted benchmark
prices to the prices paid by the
respondents for their steel rounds and
billet, we preliminarily determine that
the GOC provided steel rounds and
billet for less than adequate
remuneration, and that a benefit exists
in the amount of the difference between
the benchmark and what the
respondents paid. See 19 CFR
351.511(a).
Finally, with respect to specificity,
the GOC at page 91 of the GQR stated,
‘‘Steel rounds (billets in round shape
that can be used to produce seamless
pipe) are {used} by the seamless pipe
industry.’’ Therefore, we preliminarily
determine that this subsidy is specific
because the recipients are limited in
number. See section 771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of
the Act.
Based on the above, we preliminarily
determine that the GOC conferred a
countervailable subsidy on TPCO and
Hengyang through the provision of steel
rounds for less than adequate
remuneration. To calculate the subsidy,
we took the difference between the
delivered world market price and what
each respondent paid for steel rounds,
including delivery charges, during the
POI. On this basis, we preliminarily
calculated a net countervailable ad
valorem subsidy rate of 4.98 percent for
TPCO and 2.82 percent for Hengyang.
D. Provision of Electricity for Less Than
Adequate Remuneration
For the reasons explained in the ‘‘Use
of Facts Otherwise Available and
Adverse Facts Available’’ section above,
we are basing our determination
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regarding the government’s provision of
electricity in part on AFA.
In a CVD case, the Department
requires information from both the
government of the country whose
merchandise is under investigation and
the foreign producers and exporters.
When the government fails to provide
requested information concerning
alleged subsidy programs, the
Department, as AFA, typically finds that
a financial contribution exists under the
alleged program and that the program is
specific. However, where possible, the
Department will normally rely on the
responsive producer’s or exporter’s
records to determine the existence and
amount of the benefit to the extent that
those records are useable and verifiable.
Consistent with this practice, the
Department finds that the GOC’s
provision of electricity confers a
financial contribution, under section
771(5)(D)(iii) of the Act, and is specific,
under section 771(5A) of the Act. To
determine the existence and amount of
any benefit from this program, we relied
on the companies’ reported information
on the amounts of electricity they
purchased and the amounts they paid
for electricity during the POI. We
compared the rates paid by TPCO and
Hengyang for their electricity to the
highest rates that they would have paid
in the PRC during the POI. Specifically,
we have selected the highest rates for
‘‘large industrial users’’ for the peak,
valley and normal ranges. The valley
and normal ranges were selected from
the GQR at Exhibit 85, Electricity Sale
Rate Schedule of Zhejiang Grid. The
peak rate is the electricity rate for
Dongguan City as reported in the GOC’s
March 12, 2009 supplemental
questionnaire response at Exhibit S2–4
in the CVD investigation of ‘‘Certain
Kitchen Appliance Shelving and Racks
from the People’s Republic of China.’’
See Memorandum to File from Yasmin
Nair, International Trade Compliance
Analyst, Office 1, ‘‘Electricity Rate Data’’
(February 22, 2010). This benchmark
reflects the adverse inference we have
drawn as a result of the GOC’s failure to
act to the best of its ability in providing
requested information about its
provision of electricity in this
investigation.
On this basis, we preliminarily
determine the countervailable subsidy
to be 1.53 percent ad valorem for TPCO
and 3.91 percent ad valorem for
Hengyang.
E. The State Key Technology Project
Fund
TPCO reported that it received funds
from the State Key Technology
Renovation Fund in 2003. In Exhibit V–
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1 of the GQR, the GOC provided the
notice for implementation of the fund.
The notice states that the purpose of the
program is to ‘‘support the technological
renovation of key industries, key
enterprises and key products * * *’’
The notice also states, ‘‘The enterprises
shall be mainly selected from largesized state-owned enterprises and largesized state holding enterprises among
the 512 key enterprises, 120 pilot
enterprise groups and the leading
enterprises of the industries.’’
The Department has previously found
this program to be countervailable. See,
e.g., Certain New Pneumatic Off-theRoad Tires From the People’s Republic
of China: Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination and
Final Negative Determination of Critical
Circumstances, 73 FR 40480 (July 15,
2008), and the accompanying Issues and
Decision Memorandum at page 23 and
Comment G.7.
We preliminarily determine that
TPCO received a countervailable
subsidy under the State Key Technology
Renovation Fund. We find that this
grant is a direct transfer of funds within
the meaning of section 771(5)(D)(i) of
the Act, providing a benefit in the
amount of the grant. See 19 CFR
351.504(a). Further, we preliminarily
determine that the grant provided under
this program is limited as a matter of
law to certain enterprises; i.e., largesized state-owned enterprises and largesized state holding enterprises among
the 512 key enterprises. Hence, we
preliminarily find that the subsidy is
specific under section 771(5A)(D)(i) of
the Act.
To calculate the countervailable
subsidy, we used our standard
methodology for non-recurring grants.
See 19 CFR 351.524(b). Because the
grant exceeded 0.5 percent of TPCO’s
sales in the year the grant was approved
(i.e., 2003), we have allocated the
benefit over the 15-year AUL using the
discount rate described under the
‘‘Benchmarks and Discount Rates’’
section above. On this basis, we
preliminarily determine the
countervailable subsidy to be 0.01
percent ad valorem for TPCO.
F. Subsidies Provided in the Tianjin
Binhai New Area and the Tianjin
Economic and Technological
Development Area
TPCO reported that it used two
programs for companies in the Tianjin
Binhai New Area (‘‘TBNA’’): the Science
and Technology Fund Program and the
Accelerated Depreciation Program.
TPCO received a grant under the
Science and Technology Fund Program
and paid reduced income taxes under
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16:46 Feb 26, 2010
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the Accelerated Depreciation Program.
TPCO also reported that it purchased
land-use rights and rented land-use
rights for different plots of land within
the TBNA during the POI and prior to
the POI.
Science and Technology Fund
The GOC’s measures for the Science
and Technology Fund, which the GOC
provided at 134 of the GQR, describe the
fund’s purpose as follows: (1) Promote
the construction of the sciencetechnology infrastructure in TBNA; (2)
enhance science-technology renovation
and service abilities; (3) improve the
business environment of renovation
entrepreneurship; and 4) construct a
new science-technology renovation
system. On page 138 of the GQR, the
GOC stated that eligibility for the
program is limited to enterprises within
the TBNA Administrative Committee’s
jurisdiction.
We preliminarily determine that
TPCO received a countervailable
subsidy during the POI under the TBNA
Science and Technology Fund Program.
We find that this grant is a direct
transfer of funds within the meaning of
section 771(5)(D)(i) of the Act, providing
a benefit in the amount of the grant. See
19 CFR 351.504(a). We further
determine preliminarily that grants
under this program are limited to
enterprises located in a designated
geographic region (i.e., the TBNA).
Hence, the grants are specific under
section 771(5A)(D)(iv) of the Act.
To calculate the countervailable
subsidy, we used our standard
methodology for non-recurring grants.
See 19 CFR 351.524(b). Because the
benefit was less than 0.5 percent of
TPCO’s consolidated sales during the
POI, we have preliminarily expensed
the entire amount to the POI. See 19
CFR 351.524(b)(2). On this basis, we
preliminarily determine the
countervailable subsidy to be 0.03
percent ad valorem for TPCO.
Accelerated Depreciation Program
Regarding the Accelerated
Depreciation program, the GOC circular
for the program (Exhibit 109 of the GQR)
stipulates that enterprises in the TBNA
may shorten the depreciation period of
certain fixed assets by a maximum of 40
percent of the present depreciation
period. On page 147 of the GQR, the
GOC stated that eligibility for the
program is limited to enterprises within
the TBNA.
We preliminarily determine that
TPCO received a countervailable
subsidy during the POI under the
Accelerated Depreciation program. The
Accelerated Depreciation program
PO 00000
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Sfmt 4703
9175
constitutes a financial contribution in
the form of revenue forgone that is
otherwise due within the meaning of
section 771(5)(D)(ii) of the Act, with the
benefit equaling the income tax savings
(see 19 CFR 351.509(a)). The program
affected TPCO’s income taxes for the
2007 tax year. Thus, under the normal
standard in 19 CFR 351.509(b), TPCO
received a benefit from this program in
2008, when it filed its 2007 annual tax
return. Further, we determine
preliminarily that the reduction
afforded by this program is limited to
enterprises located in designated
geographic regions and, hence, is
specific under section 771(5A)(D)(iv) of
the Act.
To calculate the benefit, we divided
the reduction in TPCO’s income taxes
resulting from the program by TPCO’s
consolidated sales, in accordance with
19 CFR 351.524(c)(1) and 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iii). On this basis, we
preliminarily determine the
countervailable subsidy to be 0.58
percent ad valorem for TPCO.
Land
Regarding land, TPCO and its
reporting cross-owned affiliates are all
located in the TBNA, and TPCO, TPCO
Iron, and Yuantong have purchased
‘‘granted’’ land-use rights within the
TBNA. At page 86 of the GQR, the GOC
reported that TPCO obtained its landuse rights in accordance with Article 11
of Decree 21 of the Ministry of Land and
Resources. Article 11, at Exhibit 73 of
the GQR, establishes provisions for the
‘‘agreement-based assignment of the
right to use state-owned land.’’ Article
11 states that the ‘‘agreement-based
assignment of the right to use stateowned land’’ refers to the land user’s
right to use state-owned land for a
certain period, and to the land user’s
payment of a fee to the state for the
land-use right. TPCO and TPCO Iron
purchased their land-use rights from the
Dongli District Land and Resource
Administration Bureau, and Yuantong
purchased its land-use rights from the
Tianjin Port Bonded Zone Land and
Resource Administration Bureau.
The Department determined in LWS
that the provision of land-use rights
constitutes the provision of a good
within the meaning of section
771(5)(D)(iii) of the Act.23 The
Department also found that when the
land is in an industrial park located
23 See Laminated Woven Sacks From the People’s
Republic of China: Final Affirmative Countervailing
Duty Determination and Final Affirmative
Determination, in Part, of Critical Circumstances,
73 FR 35639 (June 24, 2008) (‘‘LWS’’), and the
accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum at
Comment 8.
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within the seller’s (e.g., county’s or
municipality’s) jurisdiction, the
provision of the land-use rights is
regionally specific (see section
771(5A)(D)(iv) of the Act).24 In the
instant investigation, the TBNA is a
designated area within the jurisdictions
that provided land-use rights to TPCO
and its cross-owned affiliates since
December 11, 2001. Therefore,
consistent with LWS, we preliminarily
find that TPCO’s purchases of granted
land-use rights give rise to
countervailable subsidies to the extent
that the purchases conferred a benefit.
We will continue to evaluate for the
final determination the circumstances
under which TPCO received land for
LTAR pursuant to its location in this
zone.
To determine whether TPCO received
a benefit, we have analyzed potential
benchmarks in accordance with 19 CFR
351.511(a). First, we look to whether
there are market-determined prices
within the country. See 19 CFR
351.511(a)(2)(i). In LWS, the Department
determined that ‘‘Chinese land prices
are distorted by the significant
government role in the market’’ and,
hence, that usable tier one benchmarks
do not exist.25 The Department also
found that tier two benchmarks (world
market prices that would be available to
purchasers in the PRC) are not
appropriate.26 See 19 CFR
351.511(a)(2)(ii). Therefore, the
Department determined the adequacy of
remuneration by reference to tier 3 and
found that the sale of land-use rights in
the PRC was not consistent with market
principles because of the overwhelming
presence of the government in the landuse rights market and the widespread
and documented deviation from the
authorized methods of pricing and
allocating land.27 See 19 CFR
351.511(a)(2)(iii). There is insufficient
new information on the record of this
investigation to warrant a change from
the findings in LWS.
For these reasons, we are not able to
use Chinese or world market prices as
a benchmark. Therefore, we are
preliminarily comparing the price that
TPCO paid for its granted land-use
rights with comparable market-based
prices for land purchases in a country
at a comparable level of economic
development that is reasonably
proximate to, but outside of, the PRC.
Specifically, we are preliminarily
at Comment 9.
at Comment 10.
26 Id. at section IV.A.1, ‘‘Analysis of Programs—
Government Provision of Land for Less Than
Adequate Remuneration.’’
27 Id. at Comment 10.
comparing the price TPCO paid to sales
of certain industrial land in industrial
estates, parks, and zones in Thailand,
consistent with LWS.
To calculate the benefit, we computed
the amount that TPCO would have paid
for its granted land-use rights and
subtracted the amount TPCO actually
paid for each purchase. For purchases in
which the subsidy amount exceeded 0.5
percent of TPCO’s sales in the year of
purchase, we have used the discount
rate described under the Benchmarks
and Discount Rates section above to
allocate the benefit over the life of the
land-use rights contract. For these
purchases, we divided the amount
allocated to the POI by TPCO’s
consolidated sales during the POI. For
purchases in which the benefit was less
than 0.5 percent of TPCO’s consolidated
sales in the year of the purchase, we
have preliminarily expensed the entire
amount to the year in which TPCO
purchased the land-use rights. See 19
CFR 351.524(b)(2). On this basis, we
preliminarily determine the total
countervailable subsidy for all of
TPCO’s land-use rights purchases to be
0.11 percent ad valorem during the POI.
TPCO also reported that it rented
certain land parcels within the TBNA
from TPCO Holding during the POI.
Specifically, on pages 45–46 of the TQR,
TPCO reported that it operates on the
largest of these three parcels under a
lease agreement that it signed with
TPCO Holding in 2005. TPCO also
stated that it will compensate TPCO
Holding for the lease of two other
parcels under terms that TPCO and
TPCO Holding will memorialize in
2009. Finally, TPCO explained that it
rented office space in the TBNA from
another party during the POI.28
As we explained above in the
‘‘Attribution of Subsidies’’ section, we
preliminarily determine that TPCO
Holding was an authority within the
meaning of section 771(5)(B) of the Act
at the time of the lease agreement and
throughout the POI. Moreover, we
preliminarily determine that this
subsidy is de facto specific because it is
limited to TPCO (section
771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of the Act). Therefore,
consistent with OTR Tires from the
PRC, we preliminarily find that TPCO’s
lease of land under the 2005 lease gives
rise to a countervailable subsidy to the
extent that the lease conferred a
benefit.29
To determine whether TPCO received
a benefit, we are following the same
24 Id.
25 Id.
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16:46 Feb 26, 2010
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28 The information on this party is business
proprietary. Thus, we have addressed this
information in the TPCO Calculation Memo.
29 See OTR Tires Decision Memo at Comment
F.12.
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Fmt 4703
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steps outlined above for the purchase of
land-use rights. Specifically, we are
preliminarily comparing the rent TPCO
paid to industrial rental rates for factory
space in Thailand during the POI. We
are preliminarily attributing the subsidy
to TPCO’s consolidated sales, in
accordance with 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iii).
On this basis, we preliminarily
determine the countervailable subsidy
to be 2.55 percent ad valorem for TPCO.
G. Other Subsidies Received by TPCO
For the reasons explained in the ‘‘Use
of Facts Otherwise Available and
Adverse Facts Available’’ section above,
we are basing our determination
regarding the government’s provision of
other subsidies received by TPCO in
part on AFA.
The information submitted by TPCO
in its February 16, 2010, response
regarding these subsidies is business
proprietary. Consequently, we have
addressed these subsidies in the TPCO
Calculation Memo.
We preliminarily determine that
TPCO received countervailable
subsidies. We find that these subsidies
are a direct transfer of funds within the
meaning of section 771(5)(D)(i) of the
Act, providing a benefit in the amount
of the grant. See 19 CFR 351.504(a). We
determine, in the absence of a response
from the GOC, that the subsidies
received under this program are limited
to TPCO. Hence, we find that these
subsidies are specific under section
771(5A)(D)(i) of the Act.
To calculate the countervailable
subsidy, we used our standard
methodology for non-recurring grants.
See 19 CFR 351.524(b). Because the
benefit was less than 0.5 percent of
TPCO’s consolidated sales during the
POI, we have preliminarily expensed
the entire amount to the POI. See 19
CFR 351.524(b)(2). On this basis, we
preliminarily determine the
countervailable subsidy to be 0.03
percent ad valorem for TPCO.
H. Import Tariff and VAT Exemptions
for FIEs Using Imported Equipment in
Encouraged Industries
Enacted in 1997, the Circular of the
State Council on Adjusting Tax Policies
on Imported Equipment (GUOFA No.
37) (Circular No. 37) exempts both FIEs
and certain domestic enterprises from
the VAT and tariffs on imported
equipment used in their production so
long as the equipment does not fall into
prescribed lists of non-eligible items.
The National Development and Reform
Commission or its provincial branch
provides a certificate to enterprises that
receive the exemption. The objective of
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the program is to encourage foreign
investment and to introduce foreign
advanced technology equipment and
industry technology upgrades.
TPCO Group, through TPCO
International, received VAT and tariff
exemptions under this program. TPCO
received these exemptions due to its
status as a qualified domestic enterprise
that received a Certificate for StateEncouraged Projects, according to the
GQR at page 70. Hengyang Valin and
Hengyang MPM also reported using this
program during the POI.
We preliminarily determine that VAT
and tariff exemptions on imported
equipment confer a countervailable
subsidy. The exemptions are a financial
contribution in the form of revenue
forgone by the GOC and they provide a
benefit to the recipient in the amount of
the VAT and tariff savings. See section
771(5)(D)(ii) of the Act and 19 CFR
351.510(a)(1).
As described above, FIEs and certain
domestic enterprises are eligible to
receive VAT and tariff exemptions
under this program. In CFS from the
PRC, the Department found the
beneficiaries of this program to be
specific within the meaning of section
771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of the Act. See CFS
Decision Memorandum at Comment 16
(discussing and affirming the
preliminary determination that this
program is specific under section
771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of the Act despite the
fact that the ‘‘pool of companies eligible
for benefits is larger than FIEs’’). No
information has been provided in this
investigation to demonstrate that the
beneficiary companies are a nonspecific group. Therefore, consistent
with the determination in CFS from the
PRC, we preliminarily find that the VAT
and tariff exemptions extended under
this program are provided to a group of
industries and that the subsidy is
specific.
Normally, we treat exemptions from
indirect taxes and import charges, such
as the VAT and tariff exemptions, as
recurring benefits, consistent with 19
CFR 351.524(c)(1) and allocate the
benefits to the year in which they were
received. However, when an indirect tax
or import charge exemption is provided
for, or tied to, the capital structure or
capital assets of a firm, the Department
may treat it as a non-recurring benefit
and allocate the benefit to the firm over
the AUL. See 19 CFR 351.524(c)(2)(iii)
and 19 CFR 351.524(d)(2).
In the instant investigation, TPCO and
Hengyang have provided a list of VAT
and tariff exemptions that they received
for imported capital equipment during
the 15-year AUL period. In light of our
preliminary determination to find
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subsidies only after December 11, 2001,
we have not examined VAT and tariff
exemptions prior to this date. To
calculate the countervailable subsidy,
we used our standard methodology for
non-recurring grants. See 19 CFR
351.524(b). For certain years prior to the
POI, TPCO and Hengyang reported VAT
and tariff exemptions that were more
than 0.5% of their sales. Based on
TPCO’s and Hengyang’s information, we
preliminarily determine that the VAT
and tariff exemptions were for capital
equipment. We have allocated the
benefit over the 15-year AUL using the
discount rate described under the
‘‘Benchmarks and Discount Rates’’
section above.
For TPCO and Hengyang, the total
amount of VAT and tariff exemptions
received during the POI did not exceed
0.5% of their POI sales. Based on
TPCO’s and Hengyang’s information, we
preliminarily determine that the VAT
and tariff exemptions were for capital
equipment. Thus, we have preliminarily
expensed the entire amount to the POI.
See 19 CFR 351.524(b)(2).
To calculate the countervailable
subsidy, we used our standard
methodology for non-recurring grants.
See 19 CFR 351.524(b). Specifically, we
used the discount rate described above
in the ‘‘Benchmarks and Discount Rates’’
section to calculate the amount of the
benefit for the POI. On this basis, we
preliminarily determine that a
countervailable benefit of 0.18 percent
ad valorem exists for TPCO, and that a
countervailable benefit of 0.44 percent
ad valorem exists for Hengyang.
I. Income Tax Credits for Domestically
Owned Companies Purchasing
Domestically Produced Equipment
According to the Provisional
Measures on Enterprise Income Tax
Credit for Investment in Domestically
Produced Equipment for Technology
Renovation {Projects} (CAI SHU ZI
{1999} No. 290), a domestically
invested company may claim tax credits
on the purchase of domestic equipment
if the project is compatible with the
industrial policies of the GOC.
Specifically, a tax credit up to 40
percent of the purchase price of the
domestic equipment may apply to the
incremental increase in tax liability
from the previous year.30 The
Department has previously found this
program countervailable. See, e.g., Line
Pipe from the PRC and accompanying
Issues and Decision Memorandum at
25–26.
30 See
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Fmt 4703
Hengyang reported that Hengyang
MPM received this benefit during the
POI. See HQR at 24.
We preliminarily determine that
income tax credits for the purchase of
domestically produced equipment are
countervailable subsidies. The tax
credits are a financial contribution in
the form of revenue forgone by the
government and provide a benefit to the
recipients in the amount of the tax
savings. See section 771(5)(D)(ii) of the
Act and 19 CFR 351.509(a)(1). We
further preliminarily determine that
these tax credits are contingent upon
use of domestic over imported goods
and, hence, are specific under section
771(5A)(C) of the Act.
To calculate the benefit, we treated
the income tax savings enjoyed by
Hengyang MPM as a recurring benefit,
consistent with 19 CFR 351.524(c)(1),
and divided the company’s tax savings
by the combined total sales of Hengyang
Valin, Hengyang MPM, Xigang
Seamless, and Special Pipe, minus
inter-company sales, during the POI. On
this basis, we preliminarily determine
that a countervailable subsidy of 0.34
percent ad valorem exists for Hengyang
under this program.
J. ‘‘Two Free, Three Half’’ Program
Under Article 8 of the FIE Tax Law,
an FIE that is ‘‘productive’’ and is
scheduled to operate for more than ten
years may be exempted from income tax
in the first two years of profitability and
pay income taxes at half the standard
rate for the next three years. See GOC’s
January 25, 2010, cross-owned
companies submission at Exhibit P–1.
The Department has previously found
this program countervailable. See, e.g.,
CFS Decision Memorandum at 10–11.
Hengyang reported that Special Pipe
and Resources Steel used this program
during the POI.31
We preliminarily determine that the
exemption or reduction of the income
tax paid by productive FIEs under this
program confers a countervailable
subsidy. The exemption/reduction is a
financial contribution in the form of
revenue forgone by the GOC, and it
provides a benefit to the recipient in the
amount of the tax savings. See section
771(5)(D)(ii) of the Act and 19 CFR
351.509(a)(1). We also preliminarily
determine that the exemption/reduction
afforded by this program is limited as a
matter of law to certain enterprises, i.e.,
‘‘productive’’ FIEs, and, hence, is
specific under section 771(5A)(D)(i) of
the Act. See CFS Decision
Memorandum at Comment 14.
31 See
Sfmt 4703
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To calculate the benefit, we treated
the income tax savings enjoyed by
Special Pipe and Resources Steel as a
recurring benefit, consistent with 19
CFR 351.524(c)(1). To compute the
amount of the tax savings, we compared
the income tax rate the above companies
would have paid in the absence of the
program with the income tax rate the
company actually paid. We divided
Special Pipe’s tax savings during the
POI by the combined sales of Special
Pipe, Xigang Seamless, Hengyang Valin,
and Hengyang MPM (exclusive of intercompany sales). We divided Resources
Steel’s tax savings during the POI by the
combined sales of Resources Steel,
Special Pipe, and Xigang Seamless
(exclusive of inter-company sales). On
this basis, we preliminarily determine
that Hengyang received a
countervailable subsidy of 0.27 percent
ad valorem under this program.
K. Local Income Tax Exemption and
Reduction Programs for ‘‘Productive’’
FIEs
Under Article 9 of the FIE Tax Law,
the provincial governments have the
authority to exempt FIEs from the local
income tax of three percent. See the
GOC’s January 25, 2010, cross-owned
companies submission at Exhibit P–1.
The Department has previously found
this program to be countervailable. See,
e.g., CFS Decision Memorandum at
pages 12–13; see also Citric Acid
Decision Memorandum at page 21.
Hengyang reported that Seamless Pipe
and Resources Steel used this program
during the POI.32
We preliminarily determine that the
exemption from or reduction in the
local income tax received by
‘‘productive’’ FIEs under this program
confers a countervailable subsidy. The
exemption or reduction is a financial
contribution in the form of revenue
forgone that is otherwise due by the
government, and it provides a benefit to
the recipient in the amount of the tax
savings, per section 771(5)(D)(ii) of the
Act and 19 CFR 351.509(a)(1). We also
preliminarily determine that the
exemption or reduction afforded by this
program is limited as a matter of law to
certain enterprises, i.e., ‘‘productive’’
FIEs, and, hence, is specific under
section 771(5A)(D)(i) of the Act.
To calculate the benefit for Special
Pipe and Resources Steel, we treated the
income tax savings enjoyed by the
companies as a recurring benefit,
consistent with 19 CFR 351.524(c)(1).
To compute the amount of the tax
savings, we compared the local income
tax rate that the companies would have
32 See
HQR at Volume 5, page 39.
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paid in the absence of the program (i.e.,
three percent) with the income tax rate
the companies actually paid (i.e., zero
percent).
For Special Pipe, we divided the
company’s tax savings received during
the POI by the combined POI sales of
Special Pipe, Xigang Seamless,
Hengyang Valin, and Hengyang MPM,
minus inter-company sales. For
Resources Steel, we divided the
company’s tax savings received during
the POI by the combined sales of
Resources Steel, Special Pipe, and
Xigang Seamless. On this basis, we
preliminarily determine that Hengyang
received a countervailable subsidy of
0.07 percent ad valorem.
L. Government Debt Forgiveness
TPCO
On pages 26–27 of the TQR, TPCO
reported that in 2006 and 2008 it settled
claims related to loans that continued to
be outstanding after a debt-to-equity
transaction occurring in 2001. TPCO
settled debt held by China Orient Asset
Management Corporation and Cinda.
See TPCO Calculation Memo.
We preliminarily determine that
through this settlement the GOC forgave
debt owed by TPCO and, thus, provided
a financial contribution to TPCO in the
form of a direct transfer of funds
(section 771(5)(D)(i) of the Act). The
benefit to TPCO is the amount of the
debt forgiven (section 771(5)(D)(i) of the
Act and 19 CFR 351.508(a)).
Additionally, we preliminarily
determine that this subsidy is de facto
specific because it is limited to TPCO
(section 771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of the Act).
Forgiveness of part of the debt
occurred in 2006, and approval for
forgiveness of the remainder of the debt
occurred in 2008. To calculate the
countervailable subsidy for the debt
forgiveness approved in each year, we
used our standard methodology for nonrecurring benefits. See 19 CFR
351.524(b). Because the amount of the
2006 portion of the debt forgiveness
exceeded 0.5 percent of TPCO’s sales in
2006, we have allocated the benefit over
the 15-year AUL using the discount rate
described under the Benchmarks and
Discount Rates section above. We
attributed the subsidy amount for the
POI to TPCO’s consolidated sales. On
this basis, we preliminarily determine
the countervailable subsidy to be 0.04
percent ad valorem for TPCO.
For the debt forgiveness approved in
2008, the benefit was less than 0.5
percent of TPCO’s consolidated sales
during the POI. Thus, we have
preliminarily expensed the entire
amount to the POI. See 19 CFR
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
351.524(b)(2). On this basis, we
preliminarily determine the
countervailable subsidy to be 0.11
percent ad valorem for TPCO. The
Department may seek further
information following this preliminary
determination regarding the extent of
forgiveness.
Hengyang
In the HQR at Volume 5, pages 24–27,
Hengyang reported that Xigang Group
and Resources Steel underwent loan
restructurings since December 11, 2001,
through the POI. The information on
these loan restructurings is business
proprietary. Thus, we have addressed
the information in the Hengyang
Calculation Memo.
We preliminarily determine that
through this settlement the GOC forgave
debt owed by Xigang Group and
Resources Steel and, thus, provided a
financial contribution to Xigang Group
and Resources Steel in the form of a
direct transfer of funds (section
771(5)(D)(i) of the Act). The benefit to
Xigang Group and Resources Steel is the
amount of the debt forgiven (19 CFR
351.508(a)). Additionally, we
preliminarily determine that this
subsidy is de facto specific as it is
limited to Xigang Group and Resources
Steel (section 771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of the
Act).
Approval for forgiveness of debt
occurred in 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008.
To calculate the countervailable subsidy
for the debt forgiveness approved in
each year, we used our standard
methodology for non-recurring benefits.
See 19 CFR 351.524(b). Because the
amount of the 2005 and 2007 portions
of the debt forgiveness exceeded 0.5
percent of Xigang Group’s sales in 2005
and 2007, respectively, we have
allocated the benefit for each year over
the 15-year AUL using the discount rate
described under the Benchmarks and
Discount Rates section above. We
attributed the subsidy amount for the
POI to Xigang Group’s consolidated
sales.
For the debt forgiveness approved in
2006, the benefit was less than 0.5
percent of Xigang Group’s consolidated
sales. Thus, we have preliminarily
expensed the entire amount to 2006. See
19 CFR 351.524(b)(2).
For the debt forgiveness approved
during the POI, the benefit was less than
0.5 percent of Xigang Group’s and
Resources Steel’s consolidated sales
during the POI. Thus, we have
preliminarily expensed the entire
amount to the POI. See 19 CFR
351.524(b)(2).
On this basis, we preliminarily
determine the countervailable subsidy
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to be 2.66 percent ad valorem for
Hengyang. The Department may seek
further information following this
preliminary determination regarding the
extent of forgiveness.
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
II. Program Preliminarily Determined
Not Countervailable
A. Export Restrictions on Coke
Petitioners alleged that the GOC
imposed export restrictions on coke in
the form of export quotas, related export
licensing and export duties. Petitioners
maintain that such export restraints had
a direct and discernible effect on the
Chinese domestic prices of coke,
thereby, artificially lowering them
compared to world market prices.
Accordingly, petitioners asserted that
the GOC’s export restraints on coke
provided a countervailable subsidy to
Chinese seamless pipe producers during
the POI.
The Department has countervailed
export restraint allegations in only a
limited number of cases. In Final
Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Determination and Countervailing Duty
Order; Leather From Argentina, 55 FR
40212 (October 2, 1990), we found an
embargo on hide exports to provide a
countervailable subsidy to Argentine
leather producers based on a long-term
historical price comparison that
demonstrated a clear link between the
imposition of the embargo and the
divergence of prices. In Coated Free
Sheet Paper from Indonesia: Final
Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Determination, 72 FR 60642 (October
25, 2007), and accompanying Issues and
Decision Memorandum at Comment 24,
we found that a log embargo provided
a countervailable benefit to paper
producers, in part, based upon
independent studies that stated that the
log embargo provided a subsidy to
downstream producers.
At Exhibit 31 of their February 12,
2010, pre-preliminary determination
comments, Petitioners submitted an
economic study from the Brattle Group
on the economic effects of export
restraints on the price of coke in the
PRC. Given the relatively recent
submission date, the Department has
not had sufficient time to fully consider
the information presented in this study.
However, based on an initial analysis of
this study as well as the other record
evidence, we preliminarily find that the
record does not support a finding that
this program is countervailable. The
study provides an economic model that
explains, in theory, how export
restraints might have an impact on
quantities and prices. The economic
model and the other limited data on the
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9179
record do not demonstrate that the GOC
is entrusting or directing private entities
to provide coke to the respondents and,
therefore, the record does not support a
finding of a government financial
contribution. Moreover, the record
evidence does not sufficiently
demonstrate a link between the
particular export restraints pertaining to
coke and the historic trends in domestic
and world coke supply and prices, and
does not address other possible
contributing factors behind the trends in
those quantities and prices. In
particular, the study provides data for
the period January 2006 through May
2009 for Chinese domestic coke prices
and Chinese export coke prices.
Although the data show that domestic
Chinese prices have been lower than
export prices from the PRC, the data do
not show a connection between the
export restraints and this price
difference. Therefore, consistent with
our findings in OCTG from the PRC,33
we preliminarily continue to find the
program to be not countervailable.
Hengyang Valin received a one-time
benefit from this program. Because
Hengyang did not report this potential
subsidy until its February 16, 2010,
submission, we did not have enough
time to request further information from
the GOC regarding this program.
Further, to determine whether any
potential benefit from this program
exceeded 0.5 percent of Hengyang’s
sales in the year of approval, we
requested Hengyang’s 2003 sales
figures.34 We granted Hengyang an
extension until February 22, 2010, to
submit this information.35 Because we
lack necessary information from the
GOC and Hengyang, we intend to
address the countervailability of this
program in a post-preliminary
determination.
B. Export Incentive Payments
Characterized as ‘‘VAT Rebates’’
The Department’s regulations state
that in the case of an exemption upon
export of indirect taxes, a benefit exists
only to the extent that the Department
determines that the amount exempted
‘‘exceeds the amount levied with respect
to the production and distribution of
like products when sold for domestic
consumption.’’ See 19 CFR 351.517(a);
see also 19 CFR 351.102 (for a definition
of ‘‘indirect tax’’).
To determine whether the GOC
provided a benefit under this program,
we compared the VAT exemption upon
export to the VAT levied with respect to
the production and distribution of like
products when sold for domestic
consumption. On page 39 of the GQR,
the GOC reported that the VAT levied
on seamless pipe sales in the domestic
market (17 percent) exceeded the
amount of VAT exempted upon the
export of seamless pipe (13 percent).
There is, therefore, no excess VAT
exemption. Thus, we preliminarily
determine that the VAT exempted on
the export of seamless pipe is not
countervailable.
TPCO reported that it received a grant
under this program in 2007. On page 50
of the TQR, TPCO stated that the
program relates to TPCO’s trademark
and does not relate to any specific
merchandise.
We preliminarily determine that the
total amount of the grant was less than
0.5 percent of TPCO’s consolidated and
unconsolidated sales in 2007. Thus,
without prejudice to whether this is a
countervailable subsidy, we
preliminarily have allocated the benefit
exclusively to 2007 pursuant to 19 CFR
351.524(b)(2). As a result, we
preliminarily determine that TPCO
received no benefit from this program
during the POI.
III. Program for Which More
Information Is Required
Deed Tax Exemption for SOEs
Undergoing Mergers or Restructuring
In Hengyang’s February 16, 2010,
supplemental questionnaire response at
page 14, Hengyang reported that
33 See OCTG from the PRC, and accompanying
Issues and Decision Memorandum at Comment 32.
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
IV. Programs Preliminarily Determined
To Be Not Used by Respondents or To
Not Provide Benefits During the POI
A. Sub-central Government Programs To
Promote Famous Export Brands and
China World Top Brands
B. Exemptions for SOEs From
Distributing Dividends to the State
In the HQR at Vol. 5, page 23,
Hengyang reported a potential
exemption under this program. All of
the details of this potential exemption,
including the Hengyang company that
received the benefit, are business
proprietary. Thus, we have addressed
the information in the Hengyang
Calculation Memo.
We preliminarily determine that the
benefit from this potential exemption
was less than 0.5 percent of the
appropriate sales denominator in the
year of approval, which was prior to the
34 See the Department’s February 16, 2010, letter
to Hengyang, ‘‘Third Supplemental Questionnaire.’’
35 See the Department’s February 17, 2010, letter
to Hengyang, ‘‘Request for Extension of Time to File
a Response to the Department’s Supplemental
Questionnaire.’’
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POI. Thus, without prejudice to whether
this is a countervailable subsidy, we
preliminarily have allocated any benefit
exclusively to the year of approval
pursuant to 19 CFR 351.524(b)(2). As a
result, we preliminarily determine that
Hengyang received no benefit from this
program during the POI.
C. Other Programs
Based upon responses by the GOC,
TPCO, and Hengyang, we preliminarily
determine that TPCO and Hengyang did
not apply for or receive benefits during
the POI under the programs listed
below.
1. Preferential Loan Programs
a. Treasury Bond Loans to Northeast
b. Preferential Loans for State-Owned
Enterprises
c. Preferential Loans for Key Projects
and Technologies
d. Preferential Lending to Seamless
Pipe Producers and Exporters
Classified as ‘‘Honorable
Enterprises’’
e. Loans and Interest Subsidies
Provided Pursuant to the Northeast
Revitalization Program
2. Equity Programs
a. Debt-to-Equity Swap for TPCO
b. Equity Infusion in TPCO
c. Exemptions for SOEs From
Distributing Dividends to the State
d. Loan and Interest Forgiveness for
SOEs 36
3. Tax Benefit Programs
a. Preferential Income Tax Policy for
Enterprises in the Northeast Region
b. Forgiveness of Tax Arrears For
Enterprises in the Old Industrial
Bases of Northeast China
c. Reduction in or Exemption from
Fixed Assets Investment
Orientation Regulatory Tax
d. Preferential Tax Programs for
Foreign-Invested Enterprises
Recognized as High or New
Technology Enterprises
e. Income Tax Reductions for ExportOriented Foreign-Invested
Enterprises
4. Tariff and Indirect Tax Programs
a. Stamp Exemption on Share
Transfers Under Non-Tradable
Share Reform
b. Export Incentive Payments
Characterized as ‘‘VAT Rebates’’
5. Land Grants and Discounts
a. Provision of Land to SOEs for Less
Than Adequate Remuneration
6. Provision of Inputs for Less than
Adequate Remuneration
a. Provision of Electricity and Water at
Less than Adequate Remuneration
to Seamless Pipe Producers Located
in Jiangsu Province
b. Provision of Coking Coal for Less
than Adequate Remuneration
7. Grant Programs
a. Foreign Trade Development Fund
(Northeast Revitalization Program)
b. Export Assistance Grants in
Zhejiang Province
c. Program to Rebate Antidumping
Fees in Zhejiang Province Subsidies
for Development of Famous Export
Brands and China World Top
Brands
d. Grants to Loss-Making SOEs
e. Export Interest Subsidies in
Liaoning Province
8. Other Regional Programs
a. High-Tech Industrial Development
Zones
Verification
In accordance with section 782(i)(1) of
the Act, we will verify the information
submitted by the respondents prior to
making our final determination.
Suspension of Liquidation
In accordance with section
703(d)(1)(A)(i) of the Act, we have
calculated a rate for each individually
investigated producer/exporter of the
subject merchandise. Section
705(c)(5)(A)(i) of the Act states that for
companies not investigated, we will
determine an ‘‘all others’’ rate equal to
the weighted average countervailable
subsidy rates established for exporters
and producers individually
investigated, excluding any zero and de
minimis countervailable subsidy rates,
and any rates determined entirely under
section 776 of the Act.
Notwithstanding the language of
section 705(c)(1)(B)(i)(I) of the Act, we
have not calculated the ‘‘all others’’ rate
by weight averaging the rates of TPCO
and Hengyang, because doing so risks
disclosure of proprietary information.
Therefore, we have calculated a simple
average of the two responding firms’
rates. Since both TPCO and Hengyang
received countervailable export
subsidies and the ‘‘all others’’ rate is a
simple average based on the
individually investigated exporters and
producers, the ‘‘all others’’ rate includes
export subsidies.
We preliminarily determine the total
estimated net countervailable subsidy
rates to be:
Net subsidy
rate
Exporter/manufacturer
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
Tianjin Pipe (Group) Co., Tianjin Pipe Iron Manufacturing Co., Ltd., Tianguan Yuantong Pipe Product Co., Ltd., Tianjin Pipe International Economic and Trading Co., Ltd., and TPCO Charging Development Co., Ltd. ..................................................................
Hengyang Steel Tube Group Int’l Trading, Inc., Hengyang Valin Steel Tube Co., Ltd., Hengyang Valin MPM Tube Co., Ltd.,
Xigang Seamless Steel Tube Co., Ltd., Wuxi Seamless Special Pipe Co., Ltd., Wuxi Resources Steel Making Co., Ltd., and
Jiangsu Xigang Group Co., Ltd. ........................................................................................................................................................
All Others ...............................................................................................................................................................................................
In accordance with sections
703(d)(1)(B) and (d)(2) of the Act, we are
directing U.S. Customs and Border
Protection (‘‘CBP’’) to suspend
liquidation of all entries of seamless
pipe from the PRC that are entered, or
withdrawn from warehouse, for
consumption on or after the date of the
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register, and to require a cash deposit
or bond for such entries of merchandise
in the amounts indicated above.
Moreover, in accordance with section
703(e)(2)(A) of the Act, for Hengyang
and ‘‘all other’’ Chinese exporters of
seamless pipe, we are directing CBP to
apply the suspension of liquidation to
any unliquidated entries entered, or
withdrawn from warehouse for
consumption, on or after the date 90
days prior to the date of publication of
this notice in the Federal Register.
36 We have found company-specific debt
forgiveness for TPCO and Hengyang under the
Government Debt Forgiveness program, as described
above.
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16:46 Feb 26, 2010
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Sfmt 4703
11.06
12.97
12.02
ITC Notification
In accordance with section 703(f) of
the Act, we will notify the ITC of our
determination. In addition, we are
making available to the ITC all nonprivileged and non-proprietary
information relating to this
investigation. We will allow the ITC
access to all privileged and business
proprietary information in our files,
provided the ITC confirms that it will
not disclose such information, either
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mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
publicly or under an administrative
protective order, without the written
consent of the Assistant Secretary for
Import Administration.
In accordance with section 705(b)(2)
of the Act, if our final determination is
affirmative, the ITC will make its final
determination within 45 days after the
Department makes its final
determination.
Disclosure and Public Comment
In accordance with 19 CFR
351.224(b), we will disclose to the
parties the calculations for this
preliminary determination within five
days of its announcement. Due to the
anticipated timing of verification and
issuance of verification reports, case
briefs for this investigation must be
submitted no later than one week after
the issuance of the last verification
report. See 19 CFR 351.309(c)(i) (for a
further discussion of case briefs).
Rebuttal briefs must be filed within five
days after the deadline for submission of
case briefs, pursuant to 19 CFR
351.309(d)(1). A list of authorities relied
upon, a table of contents, and an
executive summary of issues should
accompany any briefs submitted to the
Department. Executive summaries
should be limited to five pages total,
including footnotes. See 19 CFR
351.309(c)(2) and (d)(2).
Section 774 of the Act provides that
the Department will hold a public
hearing to afford interested parties an
opportunity to comment on arguments
raised in case or rebuttal briefs,
provided that such a hearing is
requested by an interested party. If a
request for a hearing is made in this
investigation, the hearing will be held
two days after the deadline for
submission of the rebuttal briefs,
pursuant to 19 CFR 351.310(d), at the
U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th
Street and Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20230. Parties should
confirm by telephone the time, date, and
place of the hearing 48 hours before the
scheduled time.
Interested parties who wish to request
a hearing, or to participate if one is
requested, must submit a written
request to the Acting Assistant Secretary
for Import Administration, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Room 1870,
14th Street and Constitution Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20230, within 30
days of the publication of this notice,
pursuant to 19 CFR 351.310(c). Requests
should contain: (1) The party’s name,
address, and telephone; (2) the number
of participants; and (3) a list of the
issues to be discussed. Oral
presentations will be limited to issues
raised in the briefs. See id.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:46 Feb 26, 2010
Jkt 220001
This determination is published
pursuant to sections 703(f) and 777(i) of
the Act.
Dated: February 22, 2010.
Ronald K. Lorentzen,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration.
9181
1360, Fax: 202–482–4054, E-mail:
CleanEnergyMission@doc.gov.
Sean Timmins,
Global Trade Programs, Commercial Service
Trade Missions Program.
[FR Doc. 2010–4104 Filed 2–26–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
[FR Doc. 2010–4192 Filed 2–26–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
International Trade Administration
Secretarial Indonesia Clean Energy
Business Development Mission:
Application Deadline Extended
Secretarial China Clean Energy
Business Development Mission;
Application Deadline Extended
AGENCY: International Trade
Administration, Department of
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice.
Timeframe for Recruitment and
Applications
AGENCY: International Trade
Administration, Department of
Commerce.
ACTION:
Notice.
Timeframe for Recruitment and
Applications
Mission recruitment will be
conducted in an open and public
manner, including publication in the
Federal Register, posting on the
Commerce Department trade mission
calendar (https://www.ita.doc.gov/
doctm/tmcal.html) and other Internet
Web sites, press releases to general and
trade media, direct mail, broadcast fax,
notices by industry trade associations
and other multiplier groups, and
publicity at industry meetings,
symposia, conferences, and trade shows.
The Commerce Department’s Office of
Business Liaison and the International
Trade Administration will explore and
welcome outreach assistance from other
interested organizations, including other
U.S. Government agencies.
Recruitment for this mission will
begin immediately upon approval.
Applications can be completed on-line
at the Clean Energy Business
Development Missions’ Web site at
https://www.trade.gov/
CleanEnergyMission or can be obtained
by contacting the U.S. Department of
Commerce Office of Business Liaison
(202–482–1360 or
CleanEnergyMission@doc.gov). The
application deadline has been extended
to Friday, March 12, 2010. Completed
applications should be submitted to the
Office of Business Liaison. Applications
received after Friday, March 12, 2010
will be considered only if space and
scheduling constraints permit.
Mission recruitment will be
conducted in an open and public
manner, including publication in the
Federal Register, posting on the
Commerce Department trade mission
calendar (https://www.ita.doc.gov/
doctm/tmcal.html) and other Internet
web sites, press releases to general and
trade media, direct mail, broadcast fax,
notices by industry trade associations
and other multiplier groups, and
publicity at industry meetings,
symposia, conferences, and trade shows.
The Commerce Department’s Office of
Business Liaison and the International
Trade Administration will explore and
welcome outreach assistance from other
interested organizations, including other
U.S. Government agencies.
Recruitment for this mission will
begin immediately upon approval.
Applications can be completed on-line
at the Clean Energy Business
Development Missions’ Web site at
https://www.trade.gov/
CleanEnergyMission or can be obtained
by contacting the U.S. Department of
Commerce Office of Business Liaison
(202–482–1360 or
CleanEnergyMission@doc.gov). The
application deadline has been extended
to Friday, March 12, 2010. Completed
applications should be submitted to the
Office of Business Liaison. Applications
received after Friday, March 12, 2010
will be considered only if space and
scheduling constraints permit.
Contacts
Contacts
The Office of Business Liaison, 1401
Constitution Avenue, NW., Room 5062,
Washington, DC 20230, Tel: 202–482–
The Office of Business Liaison, 1401
Constitution Avenue, NW., Room 5062,
Washington, DC 20230, Tel: 202–482–
PO 00000
Frm 00033
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 39 (Monday, March 1, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 9163-9181]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-4192]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[C-570-957]
Certain Seamless Carbon and Alloy Steel Standard, Line, and
Pressure Pipe From the People's Republic of China: Preliminary
Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, Preliminary Affirmative
Critical Circumstances Determination
AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce preliminarily determines that
countervailable subsidies are being provided to producers and exporters
of certain seamless carbon and alloy steel standard, line, and pressure
pipe from the People's Republic of China. For information on the
estimated subsidy rates, see the ``Suspension of Liquidation'' section
of this notice. The Department of Commerce further preliminarily
determines that critical circumstances exist with respect to imports of
the subject merchandise.
DATES: Effective Date: March 1, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Shane Subler, Yasmin Nair, Joseph
Shuler, or Matthew Jordan, AD/CVD Operations, Office 1, Import
Administration, International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC
20230; telephone: (202) 482-0189, (202) 482-3813, (202) 482-4162, (202)
482-1293, and (202) 482-1540, respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Case History
The following events have occurred since the publication of the
Department of Commerce's (``Department'') notice of initiation in the
Federal Register. See Certain Seamless Carbon and Alloy Steel Standard,
Line, and Pressure Pipe from the People's Republic of China: Initiation
of Countervailing Duty Investigation, 74 FR 52945 (October 15, 2009)
(``Initiation Notice''), and the accompanying Initiation Checklist.
On November 4, 2009, the Department selected two Chinese producers/
exporters of certain seamless carbon and alloy steel standard, line,
and pressure pipe (``seamless pipe'') as mandatory respondents: (1)
Hengyang Steel Tube Group Int'l Trading Inc., Hengyang Valin Steel Tube
Co., Ltd., Hengyang Valin MPM Tube Co., Ltd., and their affiliate,
Xigang Seamless Steel Tube Co., Ltd. (collectively, ``Hengyang''); and
(2) Tianjin Pipe (Group) Corporation (``TPCO''). See Memorandum to
Edward Yang, Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for Antidumping and
Countervailing Duty Operations, ``Respondent Selection Memo'' (November
4, 2009). This memorandum is on file in the Department's Central
Records Unit (``CRU'') in Room 1117 of the main Department building.
On November 6, 2009, the U.S. International Trade Commission
(``ITC'') published its affirmative preliminary determination that
there is a reasonable indication that an industry in the United States
is threatened with material injury by reason of allegedly subsidized
imports of seamless pipe from the People's Republic of China (``PRC'').
See Certain Seamless Carbon and Alloy Steel Standard, Line, and
Pressure Pipe From China, 74 FR 57521 (November 6, 2009).
On November 9, 2009, we issued a questionnaire to the Government of
the People's Republic of China (``GOC''), Hengyang, and TPCO. On
December 3, 2009, the Department published a postponement of the
deadline for the preliminary determination in this investigation until
February 16, 2010. See Certain Seamless Carbon and Alloy Steel
Standard, Line, and Pressure Pipe from the People's Republic of China:
Postponement of Preliminary Determination in the Countervailing Duty
Investigation, 74 FR 63391 (December 3, 2009).
In December 2009 and January 2010, we received responses to our
questionnaire from the GOC, Hengyang, and TPCO. See the GOC's Original
Questionnaire Response (January 7, 2010) (``GQR''), Hengyang's Original
Questionnaire Response (January 5, 2010) (``HQR''), and TPCO's Original
Questionnaire Response (December 31, 2009) (``TQR''). We sent
supplemental questionnaires to TPCO on January 27, 2010, and February
4, 2010. We received responses to these
[[Page 9164]]
supplemental questionnaires on February 3, 2010, and February 12, 2010.
We sent supplemental questionnaires to Hengyang on January 28, 2010,
and February 4, 2010. We received responses to these supplemental
questionnaires on February 4, 2010, and February 12, 2010. We sent a
supplemental questionnaire to the GOC on January 28, 2010, and received
a response to this questionnaire on February 4, 2010 (``G1SR'').
On January 7, 2010, United States Steel Corporation (``U.S.
Steel''), V&M Star L.P., TMK IPSCO, and United Steel, Paper and
Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied Industrial and Service
Workers International Union (collectively, ``Petitioners'') filed an
allegation of critical circumstances with regard to seamless pipe from
the PRC. On January 22, 2010, we requested that Hengyang and TPCO
submit shipment data related to this allegation. TPCO and Hengyang
submitted these data on February 2, 2010.
On January 7 and January 13, 2010, Petitioners submitted new
subsidy allegations requesting the Department to expand its
countervailing duty (``CVD'') investigation to include additional
subsidy programs.\1\ On February 17, 2010, the Department issued a
memorandum initiating certain of these new subsidy allegations. See
Memorandum from Yasmin Nair, International Trade Compliance Analyst,
Office 1 to Susan H. Kuhbach, Director, Office 1, ``New Subsidy
Allegations'' (February 17, 2010).
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\1\ See Petitioners' new subsidy allegations dated January 7,
2010, and January 13, 2010.
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On January 11, 2010, we issued a letter requesting that the GOC
update its original questionnaire response for the cross-owned
affiliates for which the respondent companies filed questionnaire
responses. The GOC filed its response on January 25, 2010.
On January 14, 2010, we issued a letter notifying the GOC that it
did not provide responses to certain questions in the original
questionnaire. In response to this letter, on January 25, 2010, the GOC
filed a submission with information pertaining to the provision of
steel rounds.
On February 12, 2010, Petitioners submitted comments for the
preliminary determination.
The Department originally extended the deadline for this
preliminary determination until February 16, 2010. As explained in the
memorandum from the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration, the Department has exercised its discretion to toll
deadlines for the duration of the closure of the Federal Government
from February 5, through February 12, 2010. Thus, all deadlines in this
segment of the proceeding have been extended by seven days. The revised
deadline for the preliminary determination of this investigation is now
February 22, 2010. See Memorandum to the Record from Ronald Lorentzen,
DAS for Import Administration, regarding ``Tolling of Administrative
Deadlines As a Result of the Government Closure During the Recent
Snowstorm,'' dated February 12, 2010.
Scope Comments
In accordance with the preamble to the Department's regulations, we
set aside a period of time in our Initiation Notice for parties to
raise issues regarding product coverage, and encouraged all parties to
submit comments within 20 calendar days of publication of that notice.
See Antidumping Duties; Countervailing Duties, 62 FR 27296, 27323 (May
19, 1997), and Initiation Notice, 74 FR at 52945. We did not receive
comments concerning the scope of the antidumping duty (``AD'') and CVD
investigations of seamless pipe from the PRC.
Scope of the Investigation
The scope of this investigation consists of certain seamless carbon
and alloy steel (other than stainless steel) pipes and redraw hollows,
less than or equal to 16 inches (406.4 mm) in outside diameter,
regardless of wall-thickness, manufacturing process (e.g., hot-finished
or cold-drawn), end finish (e.g., plain end, beveled end, upset end,
threaded, or threaded and coupled), or surface finish (e.g., bare,
lacquered or coated). Redraw hollows are any unfinished carbon or alloy
steel (other than stainless steel) pipe or ``hollow profiles'' suitable
for cold finishing operations, such as cold drawing, to meet the
American Society for Testing and Materials (``ASTM'') or American
Petroleum Institute (``API'') specifications referenced below, or
comparable specifications. Specifically included within the scope are
seamless carbon and alloy steel (other than stainless steel) standard,
line, and pressure pipes produced to the ASTM A-53, ASTM A-106, ASTM A-
333, ASTM A-334, ASTM A-335, ASTM A-589, ASTM A-795, ASTM A-1024, and
the API 5L specifications, or comparable specifications, and meeting
the physical parameters described above, regardless of application,
with the exception of the exclusion discussed below.
Specifically excluded from the scope of the investigation are
unattached couplings.
The merchandise covered by the investigation is currently
classified in the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States
(``HTSUS'') under item numbers: 7304.19.1020, 7304.19.1030,
7304.19.1045, 7304.19.1060, 7304.19.5020, 7304.19.5050, 7304.31.6050,
7304.39.0016, 7304.39.0020, 7304.39.0024, 7304.39.0028, 7304.39.0032,
7304.39.0036, 7304.39.0040, 7304.39.0044, 7304.39.0048, 7304.39.0052,
7304.39.0056, 7304.39.0062, 7304.39.0068, 7304.39.0072, 7304.51.5005,
7304.51.5060, 7304.59.6000, 7304.59.8010, 7304.59.8015, 7304.59.8020,
7304.59.8025, 7304.59.8030, 7304.59.8035, 7304.59.8040, 7304.59.8045,
7304.59.8050, 7304.59.8055, 7304.59.8060, 7304.59.8065, and
7304.59.8070.
Although the HTSUS subheadings are provided for convenience and
customs purposes, our written description of the merchandise subject to
this scope is dispositive.
Period of Investigation
The period for which we are measuring subsidies, i.e., the period
of investigation (``POI''), is January 1, 2008, through December 31,
2008.
Critical Circumstances
In their January 7, 2010, submission, Petitioners alleged that
critical circumstances exist with respect to imports of seamless pipe
from the PRC. Section 703(e)(1) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended
(``the Act'') states that if the petitioner alleges critical
circumstances, the Department will determine, on the basis of
information available to it at the time, if there is a reason to
believe or suspect that: (A) The alleged countervailable subsidy is
inconsistent with the World Trade Organization (``WTO'') Agreement on
Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (``SCM Agreement''), and (B)
there have been massive imports of the subject merchandise over a
relatively short period.
In accordance with 19 CFR 351.206(c)(2)(i), because Petitioners
submitted a critical circumstances allegation more than 20 days before
the scheduled date of the preliminary determination, the Department
must issue a preliminary critical circumstances determination not later
than the date of the preliminary determination. See, e.g., Change in
Policy Regarding Timing of Issuance of
[[Page 9165]]
Critical Circumstances Determinations, 63 FR 55364 (October 15, 1998).
As discussed in the ``Analysis of Programs'' section below, the
Department has preliminarily determined that TPCO and Hengyang received
countervailable export subsidies during the POI. For ``all other''
exporters, we are basing our finding on the experience of TPCO and
Hengyang and, therefore, we find that ``all others'' benefitted from
export subsidies. Export subsidies are inconsistent with the SCM
Agreement. Therefore, the criterion of section 703(e)(1)(A) of the Act
has been satisfied. See Notice of Preliminary Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination, Preliminary Affirmative Critical
Circumstances Determination, and Alignment of Final Countervailing Duty
Determination With Final Antidumping Duty Determination: Certain
Softwood Lumber Products From Canada, 66 FR 43186, 43189-90 (August 17,
2001); unchanged in Notice of Amended Final Affirmative Countervailing
Duty Determination and Notice of Countervailing Duty Order: Certain
Softwood Lumber Products From Canada, 67 FR 36070 (May 22, 2002).
In determining whether there are ``massive imports'' over a
``relatively short period'' pursuant to section 703(e)(1)(B) of the
Act, the Department normally compares shipments of the subject
merchandise for three months immediately preceding the filing of the
petition (i.e., the ``base period'') with the three months following
the filing of the petition (i.e., the ``comparison period''). In
addition, 19 CFR 351.206(h)(2) provides that an increase in imports of
15 percent during the ``relatively short period'' of time may be
considered ``massive.'' Finally, 19 CFR 351.206(i) defines ``relatively
short period'' as normally being the period beginning on the date the
proceeding begins (i.e., the date the petition is filed) and ending at
least three months later.
In accordance with 19 CFR 351.206(i), we are using the three months
preceding the filing of the petition (i.e., July to September 2009) as
the base period and the three months following the filing of the
petition (i.e., October to December 2009) as the comparison period.
Because Petitioners filed their petition on September 16, 2009, which
is the second half of the month, September is included in the base
period.
Based upon the monthly shipment data submitted by TPCO, we
preliminarily find that TPCO's shipments did not reach the minimum
threshold necessary for finding that imports have been massive over a
relatively short period. Therefore, we preliminarily determine that
critical circumstances do not exist with respect to imports of seamless
pipe from TPCO. For further discussion, see the Memorandum to the File,
``Critical Circumstances Analysis'' (February 22, 2010) (``Critical
Circumstances Analysis Memo''), on file in the Department's CRU.
Based upon the monthly shipment data submitted by Hengyang, we
preliminarily find that Hengyang's seamless pipe imports increased more
than 15 percent during the ``relatively short period,'' as required by
19 CFR 351.206(h)(2). See Critical Circumstances Analysis Memo.
Further, as explained above, we find that Hengyang received an export
subsidy, i.e., a subsidy inconsistent with the SCM Agreement.
Therefore, we preliminarily determine that the requirements of section
703(e)(1)(B) of the Act have been satisfied, and that critical
circumstances exist for Hengyang.
For ``all other'' exporters, we are basing our finding on data from
USITC Dataweb.\2\ We preliminarily determine that there were massive
imports over a relatively short period for ``all other'' producers/
exporters of seamless pipe from the PRC. For further discussion, see
Critical Circumstances Analysis Memo. Further, as explained above, we
find that ``all other'' producers and exporters received a subsidy
inconsistent with the SCM Agreement. Therefore, we preliminarily
determine that the requirements of section 703(e)(1)(B) of the Act have
been satisfied, and that critical circumstances exist for ``all
others.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ https://dataweb.usitc.gov/
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Application of the Countervailing Duty Law to Imports From the PRC
On October 25, 2007, the Department published Coated Free Sheet
Paper from the People's Republic of China: Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination, 72 FR 60645 (October 25, 2007)
(``CFS from the PRC''), and the accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum (``CFS Decision Memorandum''). In CFS from the PRC, the
Department found that
given the substantial difference between the Soviet-style economies
and China's economy in recent years, the Department's previous
decision not to apply the CVD law to these Soviet-style economies
does not act as (a) bar to proceeding with a CVD investigation
involving products from China.
See CFS Decision Memorandum, at Comment 6. The Department has affirmed
its decision to apply the CVD law to the PRC in subsequent final
determinations. See, e.g., Circular Welded Carbon Quality Steel Pipe
from the People's Republic of China: Final Affirmative Countervailing
Duty Determination and Final Affirmative Determination of Critical
Circumstances, 73 FR 31966 (June 5, 2008), and accompanying Issues and
Decision Memorandum (``CWP Decision Memorandum''), at Comment 1.
Additionally, for the reasons stated in the CWP Decision
Memorandum, we are using the date of December 11, 2001, the date on
which the PRC became a member of the WTO, as the date from which the
Department will identify and measure subsidies in the PRC. See CWP
Decision Memorandum, at Comment 2.
Use of Facts Otherwise Available and Adverse Inferences
Sections 776(a)(1) and (2) of the Act provide that the Department
shall apply ``facts otherwise available'' if necessary information is
not on the record or an interested party or any other person: (A)
Withholds information that has been requested; (B) fails to provide
information within the deadlines established, or in the form and manner
requested by the Department, subject to subsections (c)(1) and (e) of
section 782 of the Act; (C) significantly impedes a proceeding; or (D)
provides information that cannot be verified as provided by section
782(i) of the Act.
Section 776(b) of the Act further provides that the Department may
use an adverse inference in applying the facts otherwise available when
a party has failed to cooperate by not acting to the best of its
ability to comply with a request for information.
GOC--Steel Rounds
The Department is investigating the alleged provision of steel
rounds for less than adequate remuneration by the GOC. We requested
information from the GOC about the PRC's steel rounds industry in
general and the specific companies that produced the steel rounds
purchased by the mandatory respondents. In both respects, the GOC has
failed to provide the requested information within the established
deadlines.
At pages 87-89 of the GQR, the GOC responded, ``No such information
is available,'' to the following questions on the steel rounds industry
in the PRC. The GOC provided no further explanation on the following
requested information:
The number of producers of steel rounds (e.g., billets,
blooms);
the total volume and value of domestic production of steel
rounds that is accounted for by companies in which
[[Page 9166]]
the GOC maintains an ownership or management interest either directly
or through other government entities; \3\
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\3\ Includes governments at all levels, including townships and
villages, ministries, or agencies of those governments including
state asset management bureaus, state-owned enterprises and labor
unions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
the total volume and value of domestic consumption of
steel rounds and the total volume and value of domestic production of
steel rounds;
the percentage of domestic consumption accounted for by
domestic production; and
the names and addresses of the top ten steel rounds
companies--in terms of sales and quantity produced--in which the GOC
maintains and ownership or management interest, and identification of
whether any of these companies have affiliated trading companies that
sell imported or domestically produced steel rounds.
On page 91 of the GQR, the GOC responded that it was still
gathering information in response to the following question:
Are there trade publications which specify the prices of the
good/service within your country and on the world market? Provide a
list of these publications, along with sample pages from these
publications listing the prices of the good/service within your
country and in world markets during the period of investigation.
With respect to the specific companies that produced the steel
rounds purchased by the mandatory respondents, we asked the GOC to
provide particular ownership information for these producers so that we
could determine whether the producers are ``authorities'' within the
meaning of section 771(5)(B) of the Act. Specifically, we stated in our
questionnaire that the Department normally treats producers that are
majority owned by the government or a government entity as
``authorities.'' Thus, for any steel rounds producers that were
majority government-owned, the GOC needed to provide the following
ownership information if it wished to argue that those producers were
not authorities:
Translations of the most recent capital verification
report predating the POI and, if applicable, any capital verification
reports completed during the POI. Translation of the most recent
articles of association, including amendments thereto.
The names of the ten largest shareholders and the total
number of shareholders, a statement of whether any of these
shareholders have any government ownership (including the percentage of
ownership), and an explanation of any other affiliation between these
shareholders and the government.
The total level (percentage) of state ownership, either
direct or indirect, of the company's shares; the names of all
government entities that own shares in the company; and the amount of
shares held by each.
Any relevant evidence to demonstrate that the company is
not controlled by the government, e.g., that the private, minority
shareholder(s) controls of the company.
For any suppliers that the GOC claimed were directly, 100-percent
owned by individual persons during the POI, we requested the following:
Translated copies of source documents that demonstrate the
supplier's ownership during the POI, such as capital verification
reports, articles of association, share transfer agreements, or
financial statements.
Identification of the owners, members of the board of
directors, or managers of the suppliers who were also government or
Chinese Communist Party (``CCP'') officials during the POI.
A discussion of whether and how operational or strategic
decisions that are made by the management or board of directors are
subject to government review or approval.
For input suppliers with some direct corporate ownership or less-
than-majority state ownership during the POI, we explained that it was
necessary to trace back the ownership to the ultimate individual or
state owners. For these suppliers, we requested the following:
The total level (percentage) of state ownership of the
company's shares; the names of all government entities that own shares,
either directly or indirectly, in the company; whether any of the
owners are considered ``state-owned enterprises'' by the government;
and the amount of shares held by each government owner.
For each level of ownership, a translated copy of the
section(s) of the articles of association showing the rights and
responsibilities of the shareholders and, where appropriate, the board
of directors, including all decision making (voting) rules for the
operation of the company.
For each level of ownership, identification of the owners,
members of the board of directors, or managers of the suppliers who
were also government or CCP officials during the POI.
A discussion of whether and how operational or strategic
decisions that are made by the management or board of directors are
subject to government review or approval.
A statement of whether any of the shares held by
government entities have any special rights, priorities, or privileges,
e.g., with regard to voting rights or other management or decision-
making for the company; a statement of whether there are any
restrictions on conducting, or acting through, extraordinary meetings
of shareholders; whether there are any restrictions on the shares held
by private shareholders; and the nature of the private shareholders'
interest in the company, e.g., operational, strategic, or investment-
related, etc.
On page 92 of the GQR, the GOC stated that it had not obtained
complete ownership information for the suppliers to the mandatory
respondents. The GOC further stated that it expected to provide such
information when the Department determined which cross-owned affiliates
of the mandatory respondents would be required to file responses.
On January 11, 2010, we issued a letter requesting that the GOC
update its initial questionnaire response to include the cross-owned
affiliates for which the respondent companies filed questionnaire
responses. After the GOC requested an extension to the deadline for
filing this response, we set a final deadline of January 25, 2010.
On January 14, 2010, we issued a separate letter noting that the
GOC had failed to provide the information requested in the original
questionnaire regarding the ownership of the firms that produce the
steel rounds/billets used by the mandatory respondents. We pointed out
that the GOC had not requested, and the Department had not granted, an
extension of the deadline for submitting this information. We stated
that the requested information must be submitted by January 25, 2010.
On January 25, 2010, the GOC submitted a list of producers of the
steel rounds that respondents purchased during the POI. The GOC
identified the producers as state-owned enterprises (``SOEs''),
foreign-invested enterprises (``FIEs''), privately-held, or ``to be
updated.'' The GOC also submitted certain documentation on the
ownership of many of the producers designated as FIEs or privately-
held. However, for producers that the GOC claimed to be privately-
owned, the GOC did not answer the question on whether owners, members
of the board of directors, or managers of the suppliers were also
government or CCP officials during the POI. The GOC also did not
discuss whether and how operational or strategic decisions that are
made by the management or board of directors are subject to government
review or approval. For producers with some
[[Page 9167]]
direct corporate ownership or less-than-majority state ownership during
the POI, the GOC did not respond to our requests for the following
information:
The total level (percentage) of state ownership of the
company's shares; the names of all government entities that own shares,
either directly or indirectly, in the company; whether any of the
owners are considered ``state-owned enterprises'' by the government;
and the amount of shares held by each government owner.
For each level of ownership, identification of the owners,
members of the board of directors, or managers of the suppliers who
were also government or CCP officials during the POI.
A discussion of whether and how operational or strategic
decisions that are made by the management or board of directors are
subject to government review or approval.
A statement of whether any of the shares held by
government entities have any special rights, priorities, or privileges,
e.g., with regard to voting rights or other management or decision-
making for the company; a statement of whether there are any
restrictions on conducting, or acting through, extraordinary meetings
of shareholders; whether there are any restrictions on the shares held
by private shareholders; and the nature of the private shareholders'
interest in the company, e.g., operational, strategic, or investment-
related, etc.
Based on the above, we preliminarily determine that the GOC has
withheld necessary information that was requested of it and, thus, that
the Department must rely on ``facts available'' in making our
preliminary determination. See sections 776(a)(1) and (a)(2)(A) of the
Act. Moreover, we preliminarily determine that the GOC has failed to
cooperate by not acting to the best of its ability to comply with our
request for information. Consequently, an adverse inference is
warranted in the application of facts available. See section 776(b) of
the Act.
With respect to the GOC's failure to provide requested information
about the production and consumption of steel rounds or billets
generally, we are assuming adversely that the GOC's dominance of the
market in the PRC for this input results in significant distortion of
the prices and, hence, that use of an external benchmark is warranted.
With respect to the GOC's failure to provide certain requested
ownership information about the producers of the steel rounds purchased
by the respondents, we are assuming adversely that all of the
respondents' non-cross-owned suppliers of steel rounds are
``authorities.''
The Department's practice when selecting an adverse rate from among
the possible sources of information is to ensure that the result is
sufficiently adverse ``as to effectuate the statutory purposes of the
adverse facts available rule to induce respondents to provide the
Department with complete and accurate information in a timely manner.''
See Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less than Fair Value:
Static Random Access Memory Semiconductors From Taiwan, 63 FR 8909,
8932 (February 23, 1998). The Department's practice also ensures ``that
the party does not obtain a more favorable result by failing to
cooperate than if it had cooperated fully.'' See Statement of
Administrative Action (``SAA'') accompanying the Uruguay Round
Agreements Act, H.R. Doc. No. 103-316, vol. 1 at 870 (1994).
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 or review, it shall, to the extent
practicable, corroborate that information from independent sources that
are reasonably at its disposal. Secondary information is ``information
derived from the petition that gave rise to the investigation or
review, the final determination concerning the subject merchandise, or
any previous review under section 751 concerning the subject
merchandise.'' See, e.g., SAA, at 870. The Department considers
information to be corroborated if it has probative value. See id. To
corroborate secondary information, the Department will, to the extent
practicable, examine the reliability and relevance of the information
to be used. The SAA emphasizes, however, that the Department need not
prove that the selected facts available are the best alternative
information. See SAA, at 869.
To corroborate the Department's treatment of the companies that
produced the steel rounds and billets purchased by the mandatory
respondents as authorities and our finding that the GOC dominates the
domestic market for this input, we are relying on Circular Welded
Carbon Quality Steel Line Pipe from the People's Republic of China:
Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, 73 FR 70961
(November 24, 2008) (``Line Pipe from the PRC''). In that case, the
Department determined that the GOC owned or controlled the entire hot-
rolled steel industry in the PRC. See Line Pipe from the PRC and
accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum at Comment 1. Evidence on
the record of this investigation shows that many steel producers in the
PRC are integrated, producing both long products (rounds and billets)
and flat products (hot-rolled steel). See Memorandum to the File,
``Additional Information on Steel Rounds,'' dated February 22, 2010.
Consequently, government ownership in the hot-rolled steel industry is
a reasonable proxy for government ownership in the steel rounds and
billets industry.
For details on the calculation of the subsidy rate for the
respondents, see below at section I.C., ``Provision of Steel Rounds for
Less Than Adequate Remuneration.''
GOC--Electricity
The GOC also did not provide a complete response to the
Department's November 9, 2009 questionnaire regarding its alleged
provision of electricity for less than adequate remuneration.
Specifically, the Department requested that the GOC explain how
electricity cost increases are reflected in retail price increases. The
GOC responded that it was gathering this information, but it did not
request an extension from the Department for submitting this
information after the original questionnaire deadline date. On January
14, 2010, the Department reiterated its request for this information
and notified the GOC that this information would be accepted if the GOC
submitted it by January 25, 2010. However, the GOC's subsequent
supplemental questionnaire responses did not address the missing
information. Consequently, we preliminarily determine that the GOC has
withheld necessary information that was requested of it and, thus, that
the Department must rely on ``facts available'' in making our
preliminary determination. See section 776(a)(1), section 776(a)(2)(A),
and section 776(a)(2)(B) of the Act. Moreover, we preliminarily
determine that the GOC has failed to cooperate by not acting to the
best of its ability to comply with our request for information as it
did not respond by the deadline dates, nor did it explain why it was
unable to provide the requested information, with the result that an
adverse inference is warranted in the application of facts available.
See section 776(b) of the Act. In drawing an adverse inverse inference,
we find that the GOC's provision of electricity constitutes a financial
contribution within the meaning of section 771(5)(D) of the Act and is
specific within the meaning of section 771(5A) of the Act. We have also
relied on an adverse inference in selecting the
[[Page 9168]]
benchmark for determining the existence and amount of the benefit. See
section 776(b)(2) of the Act and section 776(b)(4) of the Act. The
benchmark rates we have selected are derived from information submitted
by the GOC in the countervailing duty investigation of ``Certain
Kitchen Appliance Shelving and Racks from the People's Republic of
China'' and information from the record of the instant review. See
Memorandum to File from Yasmin Nair, International Trade Compliance
Analyst, Office 1, ``Electricity Rate Data'' (February 22, 2010).
For details on the calculation of the subsidy rate for the
respondents, see below at section I.D., ``Provision of Electricity for
Less Than Adequate Remuneration.''
GOC--TPCO's Other Subsidies
At pages 143-144 of TPCO Group's 2008 Audit Report in Exhibit 6 of
the TQR and at page 14 of its February 16, 2010 supplemental
questionnaire response, TPCO reported receipt of countervailable
grants. In our January 26, 2010, supplemental questionnaire to TPCO, we
instructed TPCO to provide information regarding other subsidies
identified in its 2008 financial statements and to provide the GOC with
the names of the programs under which these subsidies were given.
The Department requested that the GOC provide information about
these grants in the initial questionnaire and the January 27, 2010
supplemental questionnaire. In the GOC's February 4, 2010, supplemental
response, at page 10, the GOC did not provide the requested
information, asserting that it needed additional time to gather the
data. Although the GOC responded that it was gathering this
information, it did not request an extension from the Department for
submitting this information after the supplemental questionnaire
deadline date.
Because the GOC did not provide the requested information
concerning these grants, we preliminarily determine that necessary
information is not on the record and that the GOC did not provide
requested information by the submission deadline. Accordingly, the use
of facts otherwise available is appropriate. See sections 776(a)(1) and
(2)(B) of the Act. Also, we preliminarily determine that the GOC has
failed to cooperate by not acting to the best of its ability to comply
with our request for information as it did not respond by the deadline
dates, nor did it explain why it is unable to provide the requested
information, with the result that an adverse inference is warranted in
the application of facts available. See section 776(b) of the Act.
For details on the calculation of the subsidy rate for TPCO, see
below at section I.G., ``Other Subsidies Received by TPCO.''
Subsidies Valuation Information
Allocation Period
The average useful life (``AUL'') period in this proceeding, as
described in 19 CFR 351.524(d)(2), is 15 years according to the U.S.
Internal Revenue Service's 1977 Class Life Asset Depreciation Range
System. See U.S. Internal Revenue Service Publication 946 (2008), How
to Depreciate Property, at Table B-2: Table of Class Lives and Recovery
Periods. No party in this proceeding has disputed this allocation
period.
Attribution of Subsidies
The Department's regulations at 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(i) state that
the Department will normally attribute a subsidy to the products
produced by the corporation that received the subsidy. However, 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(ii)-(iv) direct the Department to attribute subsidies
received by certain other companies to the combined sales of those
companies if (1) cross-ownership exists between the companies, and (2)
the cross-owned companies produce the subject merchandise, are a
holding or parent company of the subject company, or produce an input
that is primarily dedicated to the production of the downstream
product. In the case of a transfer of a subsidy between cross-owned
companies, 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(v) directs the Department to attribute
the subsidy to the sales of the company that receives the transferred
subsidy.
According to 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(vi), cross-ownership exists
between two or more corporations where one corporation can use or
direct the individual assets of the other corporation(s) in essentially
the same ways it can use its own assets. This regulation states that
this standard will normally be met where there is a majority voting
interest between two corporations or through common ownership of two
(or more) corporations. The Court of International Trade (``CIT'') has
upheld the Department's authority to attribute subsidies based on
whether a company could use or direct the subsidy benefits of another
company in essentially the same way it could use its own subsidy
benefits. See Fabrique de Fer de Charleroi v. United States, 166 F.
Supp. 2d 593, 600-604 (CIT 2001).
TPCO
TPCO responded to the Department's original and supplemental
questionnaires on behalf of itself, Tianjin Pipe Iron Manufacturing
Co., Ltd. (``TPCO Iron''); Tianguan Yuantong Pipe Product Co., Ltd.
(``Yuantong''); Tianjin Pipe International Economic and Trading Co.,
Ltd. (``TPCO International''); and TPCO Charging Development Co., Ltd.
(``Charging''). These companies are cross-owned within the meaning 19
CFR 351.525(b)(6)(vi) because of TPCO's substantial ownership position
in each of them. See the TQR at page 2 and Exhibits 1-3.
TPCO stated that TPCO Iron provides ``pig iron and direct reduced
iron'' to TPCO and that Yuantong provides ``threading and other
finishing processes to {TPCO's{time} seamless pipe production.'' \4\
Because TPCO Iron produced an input that is primarily dedicated to the
production of the downstream product, we are preliminarily attributing
subsidies received by TPCO Iron to TPCO, in accordance with 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iv). Yuantong had direct involvement in the production of
subject merchandise during the POI. Thus, we are preliminarily
attributing subsidies received by Yuantong to TPCO, in accordance with
19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(ii).\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See TQR at 5.
\5\ See Certain Oil Country Tubular Goods From the People's
Republic of China: Preliminary Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Determination, Preliminary Negative Critical Circumstances
Determination, 74 FR 47210, 47215 (September 15, 2009) (unchanged in
Certain Oil Country Tubular Goods From the People's Republic of
China: Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, Final
Negative Critical Circumstances Determination, 74 FR 64045 (December
7, 2009) (``OCTG from the PRC '')).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regarding TPCO International, TPCO stated, ``{TPCO
International{time} is the trading company through which {TPCO{time}
exports all subject merchandise.'' Because TPCO International exported
subject merchandise during the POI, we are preliminarily cumulating the
benefit from subsidies received by TPCO International with subsidies
provided to TPCO, in accordance with 19 CFR 351.525(c). We are
preliminarily using TPCO's consolidated sales as the denominator for
subsidies to TPCO International. On page 12 of the TQR, TPCO stated
that TPCO consolidates directly-owned subsidiaries in which it holds an
equity share of more than 50 percent. On page 9 of the TQR, TPCO stated
that the consolidated sales totals in its financial statements are net
of
[[Page 9169]]
inter-company sales. Thus, TPCO's consolidated sales already include
TPCO International's sales (net of inter-company sales). By using
TPCO's consolidated sales as the denominator for subsidies to TPCO
International, we do not double-count TPCO International's sales in the
calculation of the subsidy rate.
With regard to Charging, TPCO stated on pages 4-5 of the TQR that
Charging acts as a trading company that purchased and provided steel
rounds to TPCO during the POI. If the GOC provided steel rounds to
Charging for less than adequate remuneration during the POI, the
supplier relationship between Charging and TPCO may fall under 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iv) (subsidies to cross-owned input suppliers) or 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(v) (transfer of subsidies). As we stated in the previous
paragraph, however, TPCO consolidates the sales of directly-owned
subsidiaries in which it holds an equity share of more than 50 percent
(net of inter-company sales). Because TPCO consolidates Charging's
sales into its own sales, the attribution of the subsidy for TPCO's
purchases through Charging is identical under 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(iv)
or 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(v). Under both sections of the regulations, the
attribution of the subsidy is to TPCO's consolidated sales. Thus, we
are preliminarily attributing any subsidies under the provision of
steel rounds to Charging for less than adequate remuneration to TPCO's
consolidated sales, which includes Charging's sales.
On page 3 of our January 26, 2010, supplemental questionnaire to
TPCO, we asked TPCO to explain why it did not provide a response on
behalf of Tianjin TEDA Investment Holding Co., Ltd. (``TEDA''), Tianjin
Pipe Investment Holding Co., Ltd. (``TPCO Holding''), and China Cinda
Asset Management Corporation (``Cinda''), which have held majority
interests in TPCO since December 11, 2001. Under 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iii), we would normally attribute to TPCO any subsidies
that these owners received while each was cross-owned with TPCO. In its
response dated February 16, 2010, TPCO responded that TEDA, a
government agency, is primarily involved in the operation and
management of assets and public infrastructure, and TPCO Holding was
originally established by the Tianjin SASAC (``State-owned Assets
Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council'') for
the sole purpose of holding the assets of TPCO. In TPCO's explanation
of why it did not file a response for Cinda, it refers to the
Department's finding in OCTG from the PRC, in which the Department
found that TEDA and TPCO Holding were government agencies.\6\ TPCO
states ``for the same reasons,'' TPCO did not file a response for
Cinda, which was specifically established to restructure debt and non-
performing assets. Based on TPCO's response, we preliminarily determine
that these entities were government agencies since December 11, 2001.
Thus, we are preliminarily countervailing subsidies that these entities
provided to TPCO, rather than any subsidies that these entities may
have received. Moreover, as agencies of the government, we
preliminarily determine these entities to be ``government
authorities.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See OCTG from the PRC, and accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum at 9 and Comment 40.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the January 26, 2010, supplemental questionnaire, we also asked
TPCO questions about certain affiliates that may have met the cross-
ownership standard under 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(vi) and one or more of
the attribution standards under 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(ii)-(v). TPCO
provided responses to these questions in its February 12, 2010,
response at pages 5-6. Based on TPCO's responses, we preliminarily
determine that none of these affiliates met both the cross-ownership
standard of 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(vi) and one or more of the attribution
standards under 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(ii)-(v). Thus, we have not
included any subsidies to these companies in the subsidy calculation.
For other affiliated companies that TPCO identified in Exhibits 1
and 2 of the TQR, TPCO either held a small ownership share during the
POI or identified the companies as having no involvement with subject
merchandise. Thus, we have not included any subsidies to these
companies in the subsidy calculation.
Regarding the sales denominator for calculating TPCO's subsidy
rate, we note that the Department will attribute subsidies bestowed on
a parent or holding company to the consolidated sales of the parent or
holding company and its subsidiaries under 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(iii).
TPCO was a parent company to other companies during the POI. On page 12
of the TQR, TPCO stated, ``{TPCO{time} consolidated those directly
owned subsidiaries in which it holds more than 50% equity shares, as
well as those indirectly owned subsidiaries in which its wholly-owned
subsidiaries hold more than 50% equity shares.'' In accordance with 19
CFR 351.525(b)(6)(iii), we are preliminarily attributing subsidies to
TPCO to the consolidated sales of TPCO and its subsidiaries.
Therefore, based on information currently on the record, we
preliminarily determine that cross-ownership within the meaning of 19
CFR 351.525(b)(6)(vi) exists between TPCO, TPCO Iron, Yuantong, TPCO
International, and Charging. Moreover, pursuant to 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iii), we are preliminarily attributing subsidies received
by TPCO to the consolidated sales of TPCO and its subsidiaries (net of
inter-company sales). TPCO Iron, Yuantong, and Charging are
consolidated into TPCO's sales; thus, we are preliminarily attributing
subsidies received by TPCO Iron, Yuantong, and Charging to TPCO's
consolidated sales (net of inter-company sales). For TPCO
International, we preliminarily have cumulated TPCO International's
subsidy benefits with TPCO's subsidy benefits. See 19 CFR 351.525(c).
We have preliminarily used TPCO's consolidated sales net of inter-
company sales as the denominator for subsidies to TPCO International.
Hengyang
As of this preliminary determination, Hengyang has responded to the
Department's original and supplemental questionnaires on behalf of
Hengyang Steel Tube Group International Trading, Inc. (``Hengyang
Trading''), Hengyang Valin Steel Tube Co., Ltd. (``Hengyang Valin''),
and Hengyang Valin MPM Tube Co., Ltd. (``Hengyang MPM''), and their
affiliated parties Xigang Seamless Steel Tube Co., Ltd. (``Xigang
Seamless''), Wuxi Seamless Special Pipe Co., Ltd. (``Special Pipe''),
Wuxi Resources Steel Making Co., Ltd. (``Resources Steel''), and
Jiangsu Xigang Group Co., Ltd. (``Xigang Group''). These companies are
cross-owned within the meaning of 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(vi) by virtue of
common ownership.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See HQR at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hengyang reports the following roles for each of the seven
companies: \8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See HQR at 2 and HQR at Vol. 5 p. 1-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hengyang Valin: a parent company to Hengyang MPM and
Hengyang Trading, and a producer of subject merchandise;
Hengyang MPM: a producer of subject merchandise, as well
as a producer and supplier of an input to Hengyang Valin for production
of subject merchandise;
Hengyang Trading: an exporter of subject merchandise on
behalf of Hengyang Valin and Hengyang MPM;
Xigang Seamless: a producer and exporter of subject
merchandise;
[[Page 9170]]
Special Pipe: a producer of subject merchandise;
Resources Steel: a producer and supplier of an input to
Xigang Seamless and Special Pipe for production of subject merchandise;
and
Xigang Group: a holding company, and the parent of Xigang
Seamless, Special Pipe, and Resources Steel.
Because Hengyang Valin, Hengyang MPM, Xigang Seamless, and Special
Pipe are producers of subject merchandise, we are preliminarily
attributing subsidies received by any of these companies to the sales
of all four (excluding sales between the companies), in accordance with
19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(ii).
During the POI, Hengyang Trading exported subject merchandise
produced by Hengyang Valin and Hengyang MPM. Thus, we are preliminarily
cumulating the benefit from subsidies received by Hengyang Trading with
the benefit from subsidies provided to Hengyang Valin and MPM, in
accordance with 19 CFR 351.525(c).
Hengyang identified Resources Steel as a producer and supplier of
steel billet to Xigang Seamless and Special Pipe. Because steel billet
is primarily dedicated to the production of the downstream product, we
are preliminarily attributing subsidies received by Resources Steel to
Resources Steel, Xigang Seamless, and Special Pipe, in accordance with
19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(iv).
Xigang Group was the parent of Xigang Seamless, Special Pipe, and
Resources Steel during the POI. Thus, we are preliminarily attributing
subsidies received by Xigang Group to the consolidated sales of Xigang
Group and its subsidiaries, in accordance with 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iii).
In a supplemental questionnaire dated January 28, 2010, we asked
Hengyang to provide responses on behalf of certain affiliates that met
the cross-ownership standard under 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(vi) and one or
more of the attribution standards under 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(ii)-(v).
Hengyang is scheduled to provide this response on February 22, 2010. We
intend to address this response in a post-preliminary determination.
At Volume 1, page 7 of the HQR, Hengyang stated that Hengyang
Trading also exports subject merchandise produced by an unaffiliated
producer, although Hengyang stated that Hengyang Trading did not export
this merchandise to the United States during the POI. At Volume 5,
pages 7-8 of the HQR, Hengyang stated that Xigang Seamless purchased
and exported subject merchandise produced by unaffiliated companies
during the POI. Although any subsidies to the unaffiliated producers
would normally be cumulated with subsidies provided to these trading
companies pursuant to 19 CFR 351.525(c), the Department has, in some
instances, limited the number of producers it examines where their
merchandise was not exported to the United States during the POI or
accounted for a very small share of respondent's exports to the United
States. In this investigation, we have not sent CVD questionnaires to
the unaffiliated suppliers because their merchandise was not exported
to the United States during the POI or accounted for a minor share of
Hengyang's exports to the United States.\9\ See, e.g., Pasta From
Italy, in which one of the mandatory respondents was a trading company
that exported pasta produced by multiple pasta manufacturers, but the
Department limited its analysis to the two major pasta manufacturers
that supplied the trading company during the period of review. See
Certain Pasta from Italy: Final Results of the Fourth Countervailing
Duty Administrative Review, 66 FR 64214 (December 12, 2001) (``Pasta
from Italy''), and accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum at
``Attribution.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Hengyang Trading did not export subject merchandise produced
by unaffiliated producers to the United States during the POI. See
the HQR at Volume 1, page 7. The percentage of Xigang Seamless's
exports of subject merchandise to the United States from
unaffiliated producers is business proprietary information. See the
HQR at Volume 5, page 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benchmarks and Discount Rates
Benchmarks for Short-Term RMB Denominated Loans
Section 771(5)(E)(ii) of the Act explains that the benefit for
loans is the ``difference between the amount the recipient of the loan
pays on the loan and the amount the recipient would pay on a comparable
commercial loan that the recipient could actually obtain on the
market.'' Normally, the Department uses comparable commercial loans
reported by the company as a benchmark.\10\ If the firm did not have
any comparable commercial loans during the period, the Department's
regulations provide that we ``may use a national average interest rate
for comparable commercial loans.'' \11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ See 19 CFR 351.505(a)(3)(i).
\11\ See 19 CFR 351.505(a)(3)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted above, section 771(5)(E)(ii) of the Act indicates that the
benchmark should be a market-based rate. For the reasons explained in
CFS from the PRC,\12\ loans provided by Chinese banks reflect
significant government intervention in the banking sector and do not
reflect rates that would be found in a functioning market. Because of
this, any loans received by respondents from private Chinese or
foreign-owned banks would be unsuitable for use as benchmarks under 19
CFR 351.505(a)(2)(i). Similarly, we cannot use a national interest rate
for commercial loans as envisaged by 19 CFR 351.505(a)(3)(ii).
Therefore, because of the special difficulties inherent in using a
Chinese benchmark for loans, the Department is selecting an external
market-based benchmark interest rate. The use of an external benchmark
is consistent with the Department's practice. For example, in Softwood
Lumber from Canada, the Department used U.S. timber prices to measure
the benefit for government-provided timber in Canada.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See CFS Decision Memorandum at Comment 10.
\13\ See Notice of Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Determination and Final Negative Critical Circumstances
Determination: Certain Softwood Lumber Products From Canada, 67 FR
15545 (April 2, 2002) (``Softwood Lumber from Canada'') and
accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum at ``Analysis of
Programs, Provincial Stumpage Programs Determined to Confer
Subsidies, Benefit.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are calculating the external benchmark using the regression-
based methodology first developed in CFS from the PRC \14\ and more
recently updated in LWTP from the PRC.\15\ This benchmark interest rate
is based on the inflation-adjusted interest rates of countries with per
capita gross national incomes (``GNIs'') similar to the PRC, and takes
into account a key factor involved in interest rate formation, that of
the quality of a country's institutions, that is not directly tied to
the state-imposed distortions in the banking sector discussed above.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See CFS Decision Memorandum at Comment 10.
\15\ See Lightweight Thermal Paper From the People's Republic of
China: Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, 73 FR
57323 (October 2, 2008) (``LWTP from the PRC'') and accompanying
Issues and Decision Memorandum (``LWTP Decision Memorandum'') at 8-
10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Following the methodology developed in CFS from the PRC, we first
determined which countries are similar to the PRC in terms of GNI,
based on the World Bank's classification of countries as: low income;
lower-middle income; upper-middle income; and high income. The PRC
falls in the lower-middle income category, a group that includes 55
countries.\16\ As explained in CFS from the PRC, this pool of countries
[[Page 9171]]
captures the broad inverse relationship between income and interest
rates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ See The World Bank Country Classification, https://econ.worldbank.org/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Many of these countries reported lending and inflation rates to the
International Monetary Fund, and they are included in that agency's
international financial statistics (``IFS''). With the exceptions noted
below, we have used the interest and inflation rates reported in the
IFS for the countries identified as ``low middle income'' by the World
Bank. First, we did not include those economies that the Department
considered to be non-market economies for AD purposes for any part of
the years in question, for example: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus,
Georgia, Moldova, Turkmenistan. Second, the pool necessarily excludes
any country that did not report both lending and inflation rates to IFS
for those years. Third, we removed any country that reported a rate
that was not a lending rate or that based its lending rate on foreign-
currency denominated instruments. For example, Jordan reported a
deposit rate, not a lending rate, and the rates reported by Ecuador and
Timor L'Este are dollar-denominated rates; therefore, the rates for
these three countries have been excluded. Finally, for each year the
Department calculated an inflation-adjusted short-term benchmark rate,
we have also excluded any countries with aberrational or negative real
interest rates for the year in question.
The resulting inflation-adjusted benchmark lending rates are
provided in the respondents' preliminary calculation memoranda. See
Memorandum to File, ``Preliminary Determination Calculation Memorandum
for (TPCO),'' (February 22, 2010) (``TPCO Calculation Memo''); see also
Memorandum to File, ``Preliminary Determination Calculation Memorandum
for (Hengyang),'' (February 22, 2010) (``Hengyang Calculation Memo'').
Because these are inflation-adjusted benchmarks, it is necessary to
adjust the respondents' interest payments for inflation. This was done
using the PRC inflation figure as reported in the IFS. See TPCO
Calculation Memo and Hengyang Calculation Memo.
Benchmarks for Long-Term Loans
The lending rates reported in the IFS represent short- and medium-
term lending, and there are not sufficient publicly available long-term
interest rate data upon which to base a robust benchmark for long-term
loans. To address this problem, the Department has developed an
adjustment to the short- and medium-term rates to convert them to long-
term rates using Bloomberg U.S. corporate BB-rated bond rates. See,
e.g., Light-Walled Rectangular Pipe and Tube From People's Republic of
China: Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty Investigation
Determination, 73 FR 35642 (June 24, 2008) and accompanying Issues and
Decision Memorandum (``LWRP Decision Memo'') at 8. In Citric Acid from
the PRC, this methodology was revised by switching from a long-term
mark-up based on the ratio of the rates of BB-rated bonds to applying a
spread which is calculated as the difference between the two-year BB
bond rate and the n-year BB bond rate, where n equals or approximates
the number of years of the term of the loan in question. See Citric
Acid and Certain Citrate Salts From the People's Republic of China:
Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, 74 FR 16836 (April
13, 2009) (``Citric Acid from the PRC'') and accompanying Issues and
Decision Memorandum (``Citric Acid Decision Memorandum'') at Comment
14. Finally, because these long-term rates are net of inflation as
noted above, we adjusted the PRC respondents' payments to remove
inflation.
Benchmarks for Foreign Currency-Denominated Loans
For foreign currency-denominated short-term loans, the Department
used as a benchmark the one-year dollar interest rates for the London
Interbank Offering Rate (``LIBOR''), plus the average spread between
LIBOR and the one-year corporate bond rates for companies with a BB
rating. See LWTP Decision Memo at 10. For long-term foreign currency-
denominated loans, the Department added the applicable short-term LIBOR
rate to a spread which is calculated as the difference between the one-
year BB bond rate and the n-year BB bond rate, where n equals or
approximates the number of years of the term of the loan in question.
Discount Rates
Consistent with 19 CFR 351.524(d)(3)(i)(A), we have used, as our
discount rate, the long-term interest rate calculated according to the
methodology described above for the year in which the government agreed
to provide the subsidy.
Analysis of Programs
Based upon our analysis of the petition and the responses to our
questionnaires, we preliminarily determine the following:
I. Programs Preliminarily Determined To Be Countervailable
A. Policy Loans to the Seamless Pipe Industry
The Department is examining whether seamless pipe producers receive
preferential lending through state-owned commercial or policy banks.
According to the allegation, preferential lending to the seamless pipe
industry is supported by the GOC through the issuance of national and
provincial five-year plans; industrial plans for the steel sector;
catalogues of encouraged industries, and other government laws and
regulations. Based on our review of the information and responses of
the GOC, we preliminarily determine that loans received by the seamless
pipe industry from state-owned commercial banks (``SOCBs'') were made
pursuant to government directives.
Record evidence demonstrates that the GOC, through its directives,
has highlighted and advocated the development of the seamless pipe
industry. At the national level, the GOC has placed an emphasis on the
development of high-end, value-added steel products through foreign
investment as well as through technological research, development, and
innovation. In laying out this strategy, the GOC has identified the
specific products it has in mind. For example, an ``objective'' of The
10th Five-Year Plan for the Metallurgical Industry (``Plan'') was to
develop key steel types that were mainly imported; high strength,
anticrushing and corrosion resistant petroleum pipe was among the
listed products. Moreover, among the ``Policy Measures'' set out in the
Plan for achieving its objectives was the encouragement of enterprises
to cooperate with foreign enterprises, particularly in the production
and development of high value-added products and high-tech products.
See Memorandum to File from Yasmin Nair, Analyst regarding ``Additional
Documents Placed on the Record'' (February 22, 2010) (``Additional
Documents Memo'').
Similarly, in the Development Policies for the Iron and Steel
Industry (July 2005) at Article 16, the GOC states that it will ``* * *
enhance the R&D, design, and manufacture level in relation to the key
technology, equipment and facilities for the Chinese steel industry.''
To accomplish this, the GOC states it will provide support to key steel
project