Circular Welded Carbon-Quality Steel Pipe From the Sultanate of Oman: Preliminary Negative Countervailing Duty Determination and Alignment of Final Countervailing Duty Determination With Final Antidumping Duty Determination, 19635-19641 [2012-7839]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 63 / Monday, April 2, 2012 / Notices
responsibility concerning the return or
destruction of proprietary information
disclosed under APO in accordance
with 19 CFR 351.305, which continues
to govern business proprietary
information in this segment of the
proceeding. Timely written notification
of the return/destruction of APO
materials or conversion to judicial
protective order is hereby requested.
Failure to comply with the regulations
and terms of an APO is a violation
which is subject to sanction.
This notice is issued and published in
accordance with sections 751(a)(1) and
777(i)(1) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
amended, and 19 CFR 351.213(d)(4).
Dated: March 27, 2012.
Christian Marsh,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Antidumping
and Countervailing Duty Operations.
[FR Doc. 2012–7871 Filed 3–30–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[C–523–802]
Circular Welded Carbon-Quality Steel
Pipe From the Sultanate of Oman:
Preliminary Negative Countervailing
Duty Determination and Alignment of
Final Countervailing Duty
Determination With Final Antidumping
Duty Determination
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce
preliminarily determines that
countervailable subsidies are not being
provided to producers and exporters of
circular welded carbon-quality steel
pipe (‘‘circular welded pipe’’) from the
Sultanate of Oman (‘‘Oman’’).
DATES: Effective Date: April 2, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sergio Balbontin or Susan Kuhbach,
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) 482–6478 and (202)
482–0112, respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
AGENCY:
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
Circular Welded Carbon-Quality Steel
Pipe from India, the Sultanate of Oman,
the United Arab Emirates, and the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:42 Mar 30, 2012
Jkt 226001
Socialist Republic of Vietnam: Initiation
of Countervailing Duty Investigations,
76 FR 72173 (November 22, 2011)
(‘‘Initiation Notice’’), and the
accompanying Initiation Checklist.
On November 22, 2011, the
Department released the U.S. Customs
and Border Protection (‘‘CBP’’) data on
imports of subject merchandise during
the period of investigation (‘‘POI’’),
under administrative protective order
(‘‘APO’’) to all parties with APO access.
See Memorandum to the File from
Joshua Morris, ‘‘Release of Customs and
Border Protection (‘‘CBP’’) Data,’’ dated
November 22, 2011. We received no
comments. The CBP data showed two
exporters of subject merchandise: Al
Jazeera Tube Mills Company SAOG (‘‘Al
Jazeera’’) and a second company with
inconsequential exports because the
quantity of exports was extremely small.
On December 16, 2011, 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 materially injured by
reason of allegedly subsidized imports
of circular welded pipe from India,
Oman, the United Arab Emirates, and
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. See
Circular Welded Carbon-Quality Steel
Pipe from India, Oman, the United Arab
Emirates, and Vietnam, 76 FR 78313
(December 16, 2011).
On December 19, 2011, the
Department postponed the deadline for
the preliminary determination in this
investigation until March 26, 2012. See
Circular Welded Carbon-Quality Steel
Pipe from India, the Sultanate of Oman,
the United Arab Emirates, and the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam:
Postponement of Preliminary
Determinations in the Countervailing
Duty Investigations, 76 FR 78615
(December 19, 2011). In conjunction
with this postponement, the Department
also postponed the deadline for the
submission of new subsidy allegations
until February 15, 2012. See
Memorandum to the File from Joshua S.
Morris, ‘‘New Subsidy Allegation
Deadline: Circular Welded CarbonQuality Steel Pipe from India, the
Sultanate of Oman, the United Arab
Emirates, and the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam,’’ dated December 15, 2011.
This memorandum and others
referenced in this determination are on
file electronically in Import
Administration’s Antidumping and
Countervailing Duty Centralized
Electronic Service System (‘‘IA
ACCESS’’), with access to IA ACCESS
available in the Department’s Central
Records Unit (‘‘CRU’’), room 7046 of the
main Department building.
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
19635
On December 22, 2011, we issued a
countervailing duty questionnaire to the
Government of the Sultanate of Oman
(‘‘GSO’’) and to Al Jazeera. We received
responses from the GSO and Al Jazeera
on February 17, 2012. See February 17,
2012 Questionnaire Response of Al
Jazeera Steel Products Co. SAOG (‘‘AJ
QR’’) and February 17, 2012
Questionnaire Response of the
Government of the Sultanate of Oman
(‘‘GSO QR’’). Supplemental
questionnaires were sent to the GSO on
February 27 and March 1, 2012, and to
Al Jazeera on February 27, 2012, and we
received responses from Al Jazeera on
March 7, 2012, and from the GSO on
March 16, 2012. See March 7, 2012
Supplemental Questionnaire Response
of Al Jazeera Steel Products Co. SAOG
(‘‘AJ SQR’’) and March 16, 2012
Response of the Government of the
Sultanate of Oman to Supplemental
Questionnaire and New Subsidies
Allegation Questionnaire (‘‘GSO SQR’’).
One of the petitioning parties,
Wheatland Tube, requested two
extensions of the deadline for filing new
subsidy allegations. As a result, this
deadline was extended from February
15 to February 24, and then to February
28, 2012. See Memorandum to the File
from Susan Kuhbach, ‘‘New Subsidy
Allegation Deadline: Circular Welded
Carbon-Quality Steel Pipe from India,
the Sultanate of Oman, the United Arab
Emirates, and the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam,’’ dated February 6, 2012 and
Letter to Interested Parties, dated
February 24, 2012.
A new subsidy allegation was
received from Wheatland Tube on
February 28, 2012. See Letter from
Petitioner Wheatland Tube re New
Subsidies Allegation and Additional
Factual Information, dated February 28,
2012. On March 5, 2012, the Department
included the newly alleged subsidy in
the investigation. See Memorandum:
‘‘New Subsidy Allegations,’’ dated
March 5, 2012. On March 6, 2012, the
Department sent new subsidy allegation
questionnaires to Al Jazeera and the
GSO and their responses were received
on March 13, and 16, respectively. See
‘‘Circular Welded Carbon-Quality Steel
Pipe from the Sultanate of Oman: Al
Jazeera New Subsidies Questionnaire
Response,’’ dated March 15, 2012 (‘‘AJ
NSQR’’), and GSO SQR.
We received pre-preliminary
comments from Wheatland Tube on
March 14, 2012.
Period of Investigation
The period for which we are
measuring subsidies, i.e., the POI, is
January 1, 2010, through December 31,
2010.
E:\FR\FM\02APN1.SGM
02APN1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
19636
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 63 / Monday, April 2, 2012 / Notices
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, 76 FR
72173. On December 5, 2011, SeAH
Steel VINA Corp. (‘‘SeAH VINA’’), a
mandatory respondent in the concurrent
countervailing duty (‘‘CVD’’) circular
welded pipe from Vietnam
investigation, filed comments arguing
that the treatment of double and triple
stenciled pipe in the scope of these
investigations differs from previous
treatment of these products under other
orders on circular welded pipe.
Specifically, SeAH VINA claims that the
Brazilian, Korean, and Mexican orders
on these products exclude ‘‘Standard
pipe that is dual or triple certified/
stenciled that enters the U.S. as line
pipe of a kind used for oil and gas
pipelines *–*–* .’’ See, e.g., Certain
Circular Welded Non-Alloy Steel Pipe
from Brazil, the Republic of Korea, and
Taiwan; and Certain Circular Welded
Carbon Steel Pipes and Tubes From
Taiwan: Final Results of the Expedited
Third Sunset Reviews of the
Antidumping Duty Order, 76 FR 66899,
66900 (Oct. 28, 2011). According to
SeAH VINA: (i) If the term ‘‘class or
kind of merchandise’’ has meaning, it
cannot have a different meaning when
applied to the same products in two
different cases; and (ii) the distinction
between standard and line pipe
reflected in the Brazil, Korean and
Mexican orders derives from customs
classifications administered by CBP
and, thus, is more administrable.
On December 14, 2011, Allied Tube
and Conduit, JMC Steel Group, and
Wheatland Tube (collectively, ‘‘certain
Petitioners’’) responded to SeAH VINA’s
comments stating that the scope as it
appeared in the Initiation Notice
reflected Petitioners’’ intended
coverage. Certain Petitioners contend
that pipe that is multi-stenciled to both
line pipe and standard pipe
specifications and meets the physical
characteristics listed in the scope (i.e., is
32 feet in length or less; is less than 2.0
inches (50mm) in outside diameter; has
a galvanized and/or painted (e.g.,
polyester coated) surface finish; or has
a threaded and/or coupled end finish) is
ordinarily used in standard pipe
applications. In recent years, certain
Petitioners state, the Department has
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:42 Mar 30, 2012
Jkt 226001
rejected end-use scope classifications,
preferring instead to rely on physical
characteristics to define coverage, and
the scope of these investigations has
been written accordingly. Therefore,
certain Petitioners ask the Department
to reject SeAH VINA’s proposed scope
modification.
We agree with certain Petitioners that
the Department seeks to define the
scopes of its proceedings based on the
physical characteristics of the
merchandise. See Notice of Final
Determination of Sales at Less Than
Fair Value and Affirmative Final
Determination of Critical
Circumstances: Circular Welded Carbon
Quality Steel Pipe from the People’s
Republic of China, 73 FR 31970 (June 5,
2008) and accompanying Issues and
Decision Memorandum at Comment 1.
Moreover, we disagree with SeAH
VINA’s contention that once a ‘‘class or
kind of merchandise’’ has been
established that the same scope
description must apply across all
proceedings involving the product. For
example, as the Department has gained
experience in administering
antidumping duty (‘‘AD’’) and CVD
orders, it has shifted away from end use
classifications to scopes defined by the
physical characteristics. Id. Thus,
proceedings initiated on a given product
many years ago may have end use
classifications while more recent
proceedings on the product would not.
Compare Countervailing Duty Order: Oil
Country Tubular Goods from Canada,
51 FR 21783 (June 16, 1986) (describing
subject merchandise as being ‘‘intended
for use in drilling for oil and gas’’) with
Certain Oil Country Tubular Goods
From the People’s Republic of China:
Amended Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination and
Countervailing Duty Order, 75 FR 3203
(January 20, 2010) (describing the
subject merchandise in terms of
physical characteristics without regard
to use or intended use). Finally, certain
Petitioners have indicated the domestic
industry’s intent to include multistenciled products that otherwise meet
the physical characteristics set out in
the scope. Therefore, the Department is
not adopting SeAH VINA’s proposed
modification of the scope.
Scope of the Investigation
This investigation covers welded
carbon-quality steel pipes and tube, of
circular cross-section, with an outside
diameter (‘‘O.D.’’) not more than 16
inches (406.4 mm), regardless of wall
thickness, surface finish (e.g., black,
galvanized, or painted), end finish
(plain end, beveled end, grooved,
threaded, or threaded and coupled), or
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
industry specification (e.g., American
Society for Testing and Materials
International (‘‘ASTM’’), proprietary, or
other) generally known as standard
pipe, fence pipe and tube, sprinkler
pipe, and structural pipe (although
subject product may also be referred to
as mechanical tubing). Specifically, the
term ‘‘carbon quality’’ includes products
in which: (a) Iron predominates, by
weight, over each of the other contained
elements; (b) the carbon content is 2
percent or less, by weight; and (c) none
of the elements listed below exceeds the
quantity, by weight, as indicated:
(i) 1.80 percent of manganese;
(ii) 2.25 percent of silicon;
(iii) 1.00 percent of copper;
(iv) 0.50 percent of aluminum;
(v) 1.25 percent of chromium;
(vi) 0.30 percent of cobalt;
(vii) 0.40 percent of lead;
(viii) 1.25 percent of nickel;
(ix) 0.30 percent of tungsten;
(x) 0.15 percent of molybdenum;
(xi) 0.10 percent of niobium;
(xii) 0.41 percent of titanium;
(xiii) 0.15 percent of vanadium;
(xiv) 0.15 percent of zirconium.
Subject pipe is ordinarily made to
ASTM specifications A53, A135, and
A795, but can also be made to other
specifications. Structural pipe is made
primarily to ASTM specifications A252
and A500. Standard and structural pipe
may also be produced to proprietary
specifications rather than to industry
specifications. Fence tubing is included
in the scope regardless of certification to
a specification listed in the exclusions
below, and can also be made to the
ASTM A513 specification. Sprinkler
pipe is designed for sprinkler fire
suppression systems and may be made
to industry specifications such as ASTM
A53 or to proprietary specifications.
These products are generally made to
standard O.D. and wall thickness
combinations. Pipe multi-stenciled to a
standard and/or structural specification
and to other specifications, such as
American Petroleum Institute (‘‘API’’)
API–5L specification, is also covered by
the scope of this investigation when it
meets the physical description set forth
above, and also has one or more of the
following characteristics: is 32 feet in
length or less; is less than 2.0 inches
(50mm) in outside diameter; has a
galvanized and/or painted (e.g.,
polyester coated) surface finish; or has
a threaded and/or coupled end finish.
The scope of this investigation does
not include: (a) Pipe suitable for use in
boilers, superheaters, heat exchangers,
refining furnaces and feedwater heaters,
whether or not cold drawn; (b) finished
electrical conduit; (c) finished
E:\FR\FM\02APN1.SGM
02APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 63 / Monday, April 2, 2012 / Notices
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
scaffolding; 1 (d) tube and pipe hollows
for redrawing; (e) oil country tubular
goods produced to API specifications; (f)
line pipe produced to only API
specifications; and (g) mechanical
tubing, whether or not cold-drawn.
However, products certified to ASTM
mechanical tubing specifications are not
excluded as mechanical tubing if they
otherwise meet the standard sizes (e.g.,
outside diameter and wall thickness) of
standard, structural, fence and sprinkler
pipe. Also, products made to the
following outside diameter and wall
thickness combinations, which are
recognized by the industry as typical for
fence tubing, would not be excluded
from the scope based solely on their
being certified to ASTM mechanical
tubing specifications:
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.035 inch wall
thickness (gage 20)
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.047 inch wall
thickness (gage 18)
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.055 inch wall
thickness (gage 17)
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.065 inch wall
thickness (gage 16)
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.072 inch wall
thickness (gage 15)
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.083 inch wall
thickness (gage 14)
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.095 inch wall
thickness (gage 13)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.047 inch wall
thickness (gage 18)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.055 inch wall
thickness (gage 17)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.065 inch wall
thickness (gage 16)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.072 inch wall
thickness (gage 15)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.083 inch wall
thickness (gage 14)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.095 inch wall
thickness (gage 13)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.109 inch wall
thickness (gage 12)
1.900 inch O.D. and 0.047 inch wall
thickness (gage 18)
1.900 inch O.D. and 0.055 inch wall
thickness (gage 17)
1.900 inch O.D. and 0.065 inch wall
thickness (gage 16)
1.900 inch O.D. and 0.072 inch wall
thickness (gage 15)
1.900 inch O.D. and 0.095 inch wall
thickness (gage 13)
1.900 inch O.D. and 0.109 inch wall
thickness (gage 12)
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.047 inch wall
thickness (gage 18)
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.055 inch wall
thickness (gage 17)
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.065 inch wall
thickness (gage 16)
The pipe subject to this investigation
is currently classifiable in Harmonized
Tariff Schedule of the United States
(‘‘HTSUS’’) statistical reporting numbers
7306.19.1010, 7306.19.1050,
7306.19.5110, 7306.19.5150,
7306.30.1000, 7306.30.5025,
7306.30.5032, 7306.30.5040,
7306.30.5055, 7306.30.5085,
7306.30.5090, 7306.50.1000,
7306.50.5050, and 7306.50.5070.
Although the HTSUS subheadings are
provided for convenience and customs
purposes, the written description of the
merchandise under the investigation is
dispositive.
1 Finished scaffolding is defined as component
parts of a final, finished scaffolding that enters the
United States unassembled as a ‘‘kit.’’ A ‘‘kit’’ is
understood to mean a packaged combination of
component parts that contain, at the time of
importation, all the necessary component parts to
fully assemble a final, finished scaffolding.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:42 Mar 30, 2012
Jkt 226001
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.072 inch wall
thickness (gage 15)
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.095 inch wall
thickness (gage 13)
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.109 inch wall
thickness (gage 12)
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.120 inch wall
thickness (gage 11)
2.875 inch O.D. and 0.109 inch wall
thickness (gage 12)
2.875 inch O.D. and 0.134 inch wall
thickness (gage 10)
2.875 inch O.D. and 0.165 inch wall
thickness (gage 8)
3.500 inch O.D. and 0.109 inch wall
thickness (gage 12)
3.500 inch O.D. and 0.148 inch wall
thickness (gage 9)
3.500 inch O.D. and 0.165 inch wall
thickness (gage 8)
4.000 inch O.D. and 0.148 inch wall
thickness (gage 9)
4.000 inch O.D. and 0.165 inch wall
thickness (gage 8)
4.500 inch O.D. and 0.203 inch wall
thickness (gage 7)
Alignment of Final Determination
On November 22, 2011, the
Department initiated an AD
investigation concurrent with this CVD
investigation of circular welded pipe
from Oman. See Circular Welded
Carbon-Quality Steel Pipe from India,
the Sultanate of Oman, the United Arab
Emirates, and the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam: Initiation of Antidumping
Duty Investigations, 76 FR 72164
(November 22, 2011). The scope of the
merchandise being covered is the same
for both the AD and CVD investigations.
On March 23, 2012, Petitioners
submitted a letter, in accordance with
section 705(a)(1) of the Tariff Act of
1930, as amended (‘‘Act’’), requesting
alignment of the final CVD
determination with the final
determination in the companion AD
investigation. Therefore, in accordance
with section 705(a)(1) of the Act and 19
CFR 351.210(b)(4), the final CVD
determination will be issued on the
same date as the final AD
determination, which is currently
scheduled to be issued on August 6,
2012.
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
19637
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)
through (v) directs that the Department
will 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,
produce an input that is primarily
dedicated to the production of the
downstream product, or transfer a
subsidy to a cross-owned company.
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, SA v. United States, 166 F.
Supp. 2d 593, 600–604 (CIT 2001).
Al Jazeera reported no affiliates in
Oman and, consequently, has responded
on behalf of itself. (AJ QR at 2–3.) Thus,
the subsidies received by Al Jazeera
have been attributed to its total sales, its
sales of subject merchandise, or its
export sales, in accordance with 19 CFR
351.525(b)(1)-(5).
E:\FR\FM\02APN1.SGM
02APN1
19638
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 63 / Monday, April 2, 2012 / Notices
Benchmarks and Discount Rates
Section 771(5)(E)(ii) of the Act states
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.’’ In addition, 19 CFR
351.505(a)(3)(i) stipulates that when
selecting a comparable commercial loan
that the recipient ‘‘could actually obtain
on the market’’ the Department will
normally rely on actual loans obtained
by the firm. However, when there are no
comparable commercial loans, the
Department ‘‘may use a national average
interest rate for comparable commercial
loans,’’ pursuant to 19 CFR
351.505(a)(3)(ii). According to 19 CFR
351.505(a)(2)(i), a ‘‘comparable’’ loan is
similar in structure (fixed versus
variable interest rate), maturity and
currency denomination.
In allocating benefits over time, the
Department normally uses as the
discount rate the company’s cost of
long-term fixed rate debt at the time the
government approves the subsidy. If
such rates are not available, the
Department will use the average cost of
long-term fixed rate loans in the country
in question. See 19 CFR 351.524(d)(3).
Al Jazeera had government-provided
loans outstanding during the POI for
which benchmarks are needed.
However, none of Al Jazeera’s nongovernment loans provides a suitable
rate because none was taken out in the
years the government loans were
approved. Therefore, we are relying on
the national average cost of long-term
fixed-rate loans as reported by the
World Bank and submitted by the GSO.
(GSO QR at Appendices B.1.I–1 and
B.1.I–2.) We have included in the
average cost of fixed-rate long-term
loans, the additional fees that would be
incurred in obtaining loans from
commercial banks, as reported by the
GSO. (GSO QR at 25.)
Analysis of Programs
Based upon our analysis of the
petition and the responses to our
questionnaires, we preliminarily
determine the following:
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
I. Programs Preliminarily Determined
To Be Countervailable
A. Soft Loans for Industrial Projects
Under Royal Decree 17/97
Royal Decree (‘‘RD’’) 17/97 made soft
loans available to the private sector with
the goals of diversifying the economy of
Oman and developing industry,
agriculture, fisheries, tourism,
education, health services, and
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:42 Mar 30, 2012
Jkt 226001
traditional crafts in Oman. Under this
program, applicants approved by the
Ministry of Commerce and Industry
received loans at three percent interest
from commercial banks in Oman, with
the difference between the three percent
rate and the commercial interest rate
covered by the GSO. (GSO QR at 15.)
The soft loan program under RD 17/97
originated in 1997 and terminated in
2006. (GSO SQR at 12 and Appendix
SQ–20.) Beginning in 2007, soft loans
were made by the Oman Development
Bank. (GSO QR at 16.) The GSO
reported that Al Jazeera had soft loans
under the earlier RD 17/97 program
outstanding during the POI, but has not
received any loans from the Oman
Development Bank. (GSO QR at 15.) The
two loans outstanding were granted in
1998 and 2004, respectively. (GSO QR at
24.) According to the GSO, both loans
have now been repaid in full. (GSO SQR
at 12.)
According to the GSO, firms operating
the agriculture, fisheries, industry,
tourism, education, health and
traditional crafts sectors could apply for
loans to set up, support or expand a
project. (GSO QR at 17.) After review by
the relevant ministries, a ministerial
committee would approve or disapprove
of the loan. (GSO QR at 18.) According
to Article 12 of RD 17/97, the maximum
amounts that could be approved varied
by region (150 percent of paid up capital
if the applicant was located in the
Governorate of Muscat and 250 percent
of paid up capital elsewhere) and by
corporate form (a maximum of 500,000
Omani Rial (‘‘OR’’) or up to 5,000,000
OR if the applicant was a public jointstock company which covered at least
40 percent of its capital by public
subscription). (GSO QR at 20.)
In response to the Department’s
request to provide information about the
amounts of assistance provided under
the program to the different recipients,
the GSO provided the aggregate amount
of loans approved during the pendency
of the program broken out between
industry, tourism, education, health,
and agriculture/fishing. (GSO QR at
Appendix B.1.G–3.) In response to the
Department’s request for a breakdown of
the information among different sectors
under the ‘‘industry’’ heading, by year,
the GSO responded that it does not
maintain the information in that
manner. Moreover, because there were
no sectoral criteria that affect eligibility,
the GSO stated there was no
requirement to include that information
in the applications. (GSO SQR at 15.)
The GSO did provide the amounts of
individual loans disbursed to recipients
in the industrial category. (GSO SQR at
Appendix SQ–24.)
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
We preliminarily determine that the
soft loans received by Al Jazeera under
RD 17/97 confer a countervailable
subsidy. The loans are a financial
contribution in the form of a direct
transfer of funds and they confer a
benefit in the amount of the difference
between the interest Al Jazeera paid on
the loans and the amount the company
would have paid on a comparable
commercial loan. See sections
771(5)(d)(i) and (e)(ii) of the Act.
Additionally, we preliminarily
determine that the subsidy was specific,
under section 771(5A)(D)(iii)(II) of the
Act, because Al Jazeera was a
predominant user of the program.
To calculate the benefit, we computed
the difference between the amounts Al
Jazeera would have paid under the
benchmark interest rates described
above and the amounts it actually paid
during the POI. Because the loans were
given to finance Al Jazeera’s pipe mills,
we divided the subsidy during the POI
by Al Jazeera’s sales of circular welded
pipe during the POI.
On this basis, we preliminarily
determine that Al Jazeera received a
countervailable subsidy of 0.12 percent
ad valorem under this program. See
Memorandum to the File from Sergio
Balbontin, ‘‘Preliminary Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination:
Calculation Memorandum for Al Jazeera
Steel Products Co. SAOG,’’ dated March
26, 2012.
II. Programs Preliminarily Determined
To Be Not Countervailable
A. Tariff Exemptions on Imported
Equipment, Machinery, Raw Materials,
and Packaging Materials
Under RD 61/2008, industrial
enterprises in Oman are able to import
machinery, equipment, parts, raw
materials, semi-manufactured materials
and packing material duty free.
According to the GSO, the purpose of
RD 61/2008 is to encourage and develop
all industrial projects, to raise the
contribution of the industrial sector in
the gross domestic product, and to
expand the bases of economic linkage in
the Arab States of the Gulf. RD 61/2008
supersedes similar earlier schemes
under the Organization and Promotion
of Industry Law (RD 1/79) and the
Foreign Business Investment Law (102/
94). (GSO QR at 4 and Appendix A.1.D–
1.)
RD 1/79 entered into force on January
4, 1979. According to the GSO, the
purpose of this law was to encourage
diversification of the Omani economy
and to stimulate industrial
development. (GSO SQR at 1.) Under
Article 19 of RD 1/79, licensed or
E:\FR\FM\02APN1.SGM
02APN1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 63 / Monday, April 2, 2012 / Notices
registered industrial enterprises were
exempted from customs duties on
equipment, tools, spare parts, raw
materials, and semi-manufactured
goods. (GSO SQR at Appendix SQ–3.)
Both RD 61/2008 and RD 1/79 provide
similar definitions of the ‘‘industrial
enterprises’’ that are eligible to receive
the tariff exemptions: establishments
whose basic objective is to convert raw
materials or semi-manufactured goods
into manufactured goods. (GSO QR at
Appendices A.1.D–1 and GSO SQR at
Appendix SQ–3.) Also, both decrees
outline the process for receiving an
industrial license. Under RD 61/2008,
the procedure for obtaining an
industrial license is ‘‘automatic,’’
according to the GSO, upon submission
of the required documentation
(commercial registration, business plan
and approval from the Ministry of
Environment). Further, the GSO states
that there is no discretion in the
procedure, as the application process
has been fully automated through a
‘‘one stop shop’’ IT system. (GSO QR at
8.)
Al Jazeera’s industrial license was
obtained under RD 1/79, as well as its
initial tariff exemption. According to
Article 5 of RD 1/79, industrial
enterprises could not be established or
change their capacity, size, purpose or
site without obtaining an industrial
license from the Ministry of Commerce
and Industry. To obtain an industrial
license, companies would submit an
application to the Ministry. This
application requested a wide range of
information including: a list of
shareholders, estimated investment, a
description of the products to be
produced, annual output, a description
of the manufacturing process, the
numbers and types of labor required,
market and marketing information
(imports of the product, domestic
production of the product, exports, and
proposed distribution channels), details
of plant and machinery, raw materials
requirements, and utilities
requirements. (GSO QR at Appendix
A.1.G–6.) The decision of whether to
grant the industrial license rested with
the Directorate General of Industry
(Ministry of Commerce and Industry).
(GSO SQR at Appendix SQ–3.)
According to the GSO, the Ministry
relied upon non-binding guidelines for
granting these licenses. (GSO SQR at 2.)
To obtain the tariff exemption under
RD 1/79, the industrial enterprise would
submit to the Ministry of Commerce and
Industry its industrial license along
with a list of the materials and
equipment it intended to import and the
annual amounts. (GSO SQR at 2 and
Appendix SQ–4.) The procedure under
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:42 Mar 30, 2012
Jkt 226001
RD 61/2008 is similar except that final
approval of the Ministry of Finance is
also required in order to ensure that the
application conforms with the uniform
customs law of the Arab Gulf
Cooperation Council. (GSO SQR at 3
and Appendix SQ–6.) RD 61/2008 also
provides at Article 16 that priority in
granting the tariff exemptions will be
given, inter alia, to enterprises
producing goods for exports. (GSO QR
at Appendix A.1.D–1.)
As noted above, Al Jazeera received
its industrial license and initial tariff
exemption under RD 1/79. According to
the GSO, if a company needs to import
raw materials in excess of the amount
for which the exemption was granted, it
must file a new request with the
Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
(GSO QR at 6.) Al Jazeera received a
new approval under RD 61/2008. (GSO
QR at 11.)
The GSO states that processes for
granting industrial licenses in Oman are
‘‘automatic.’’ Regarding the former,
companies apply though an online
system administered by the Ministry of
Commerce and Industry. According to
the Ministry of Commerce and Industry,
no firm that met the legal and regulatory
requirements for an industrial license
has been denied a license. (GSO QR at
Appendix A.1.G–4 and GSO SQR at 6.)
Specifically, rejections of license
applications occur only when the
applicant does not constitute an
‘‘industrial enterprise,’’ or when the
applicant cancels its plans and does not
complete the steps for registration. (GSO
QR at 8.)
In its pre-preliminary comments,
Wheatland Tube points to Al Jazeera’s
application for its industrial license
and, in particular, the section of the
application that requests information
about exports. Citing 19 CFR 351.514
and prior findings by the Department,2
Wheatland Tube argues that the
application by its terms renders the
tariff exemptions an export subsidy. We
preliminarily disagree. The application
cited by Wheatland Tube is the
application for an industrial license
which, while necessary for the tariff
exemption, is not in itself a subsidy
program. Instead, as explained above, an
industrial license is required to start,
expand, or relocate any enterprise that
converts raw materials or semimanufactured goods into manufactured
2 See, e.g., Aluminum Extrusions From the
People’s Republic of China: Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination, 76 FR 18521,
18524 (April 4, 2011), and Drill Pipe From the
People’s Republic of China: Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination, Final
Affirmative Critical Circumstances Determination,
76 FR 1971 (January 11, 2011).
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
19639
goods. Thus, while we acknowledge our
regulation, which looks to whether
exportation or anticipated exportation is
a condition for receipt of benefits under
a program, and our past determinations
in which we have found export
contingency when an application for a
subsidy required information on the
firm’s exports, we do not agree that such
questions on an application for
something as fundamental as an
industrial license necessarily means that
a separate subsidy program is specific as
an export subsidy. Therefore, we have
focused our analysis on the procedures
for obtaining the tariff exemptions.
As explained above, applications for
tariff exemptions are filed with the
Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
According to the GSO, the approval
process for duty exemptions is
automatic and does not take into
account the export performance or
potential of the applicant, the use of
domestic over imported goods, the
industry or sector in which the
applicant operated, or the location of
the applicant. (GSO QR at 9–10 and
GSO SQR at 4–5.) More recently, the
tariff exemptions application has also
been referred to the Ministry of Finance,
which carries out a formal check of
whether the applicant corresponds to
the company named in the industrial
license, whether the capital goods
pertain to the activity of the company,
and whether the quantity the applicant
seeks to import is consistent with its
output. (GSO QR at 6.) The GSO states
that there is no discretion in deciding
whether to grant the duty exemption
when the regulations are met (GSO QR
at 6–7) and that no qualifying
companies have been denied tariff
exemptions. (GSO QR at Appendix
A.F.1–2 and GSO SQR at 6.) The
submitted data shows that hundreds of
approvals are made per year. (GSO SQR
at Appendix SQ–5.) The GSO further
explains that the ‘‘priority’’ described in
Article 16 of RD 61/2008 for granting
tariff exemptions to certain enumerated
sectors means that if two or more
applications were filed
contemporaneously, the enterprise in
the designated sector would receive the
tariff exemption prior to the other
applicants. (GSO QR at 7–8.)
In response to the Department’s
request to provide information about the
amounts of assistance provided under
the program to the different industries
in Oman, the GSO explained that it does
not maintain this data. Specifically,
recipients of the import duty
exemptions are not classified by the
International Standard Industrial
Classification. (GSO SQR at 6.) Nor does
the GSO maintain information on the
E:\FR\FM\02APN1.SGM
02APN1
19640
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 63 / Monday, April 2, 2012 / Notices
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
duties it would have collected but for
the exemption. (GSO SQR at 7.)
In summary, based on information
submitted by the GSO, the tariff
exemptions are granted automatically
and without regard to the firm’s export
performance or potential, use of
domestic over imported goods, industry
sector or location. Moreover, hundreds
of applications are approved in a year
and no applications have been rejected.
The GSO has explained that it is not
able to provide information regarding
the distribution of duty exemptions
because of the nature of the benefit
(exemptions) and the manner in which
the recipients submit their data.
On this basis, we preliminarily
determine that the GSO’s program
providing tariff exemptions on imported
raw materials and equipment does not
confer a countervailable subsidy
because it is not specific within the
meaning of section 771(5A) of the Act.
At verification, we intend to examine
the applications and the approval
process to confirm that the tariff
exemptions are, in fact, used by
industries producing a wide variety of
products. Also, we invite the parties to
comment on the distinction we have
made in this preliminary determination
to focus on the application process for
benefits under the tariff exemption
program rather than on the application
for the company’s industrial license.
Provision of Electricity for Less Than
Adequate Remuneration (‘‘LTAR’’)
The provision of electricity to
consumers in Oman is heavily
regulated. (GSO QR at Appendix C.1–5
at 15.) In particular, in accordance with
Article 10 of RD78/2004, the rates that
are charged for electricity are approved
by the Council of Ministers. (GSO QR at
Appendix C.1–1.) During the POI, all
industrial users in all regions of Oman
paid uniform rates. (GSO QR at 37.) To
be eligible for the industrial user rate, a
company must have a letter of
recommendation from the Ministry of
Commerce and Industry and meet a
stipulated power factor. (GSO QR at
Appendix C.1–3 at 37.) According to the
GSO, letters of recommendation are
given to all companies with an
industrial license. (GSO QR at 39.)
During the POI, there were over 1.5
million industrial users of electricity in
Oman. (GSO QR at Appendix C.1–3 at
10.)
The electricity bills submitted by Al
Jazeera show that it paid the established
rates. (AJ QR at Exhibit 13.)
Because all industrial users pay the
same rates for electricity, we
preliminarily determine that any
potential subsidy related to the GSO’s
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:42 Mar 30, 2012
Jkt 226001
provision of electricity is not specific
within the meaning of section 771(5A)
of the Act.
C. Provision of Water for LTAR
Ministerial Decision 11/2000
establishes a uniform water tariff for all
commercial users in Oman. (GSO QR at
Appendix C.2–1.) The water bills
submitted by Al Jazeera show that it
paid the established rates. (AJ QR at
Exhibit 14.)
Because all commercial users pay the
same tariff for water, we preliminarily
determine that any potential subsidy
related to the GSO’s provision of water
is not specific within the meaning of
section 771(5A) of the Act.
D. Provision of Natural Gas for LTAR
According to the GSO, the Ministry of
Oil and Gas is the central buyer and
seller of gas in the Sultanate. The
Ministry buys gas from producers and
resells it to power plants, industrial
estates, and LNG producers. Further,
according to the GSO, the natural gas
network delivers gas for industrial
purposes only and companies using gas
for industrial purposes must be located
in or close to an industrial estate. (GSO
QR at 43.)
The GSO states that virtually all
industries in Oman are located in
industrial estates or free trade zones.
(GSO QR at 33.) This is due in part to
infrastructural constraints, such as the
fact that natural gas is not readily
available outside of these areas.
Additionally, according to the GSO, the
zoning in the Sultanate is very strict: an
industry seeking to locate outside an
industrial estate or free trade zone
would have to apply to have the land
reclassified as industrial land. Id.
Finally, industrial estates serve as ‘‘onestop-shops’’ where all the applications
for an industrial installation can be
made, rather than having to apply to
many different agencies. Id.
Regarding natural gas, all industrial
companies located in all of industrial
estates pay the same rate. (GSO QR at
42.) Al Jazeera is located in the Sohar
Industrial Estate and the natural gas
bills it submitted show that it paid the
standard rate charged to all industries
located in Sohar Industrial Estate and
all other industrial estates. (AJ QR at
Exhibit 15.) Companies located nearby,
but outside of industrial estates
normally purchase gas from the
Ministry of Oil and Gas, but are
supplied by the industrial estates.
According to the GSO, these companies
would normally pay the same for
natural gas as companies within the
industrial estates, but might pay more if
the cost of providing the gas was higher
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
due, for example, to having constructed
a pipeline. (GSO SQR at 13.)
Because all industrial users proximate
to the gas pipeline pay the same price
for natural gas, we preliminarily
determine that any potential subsidy
related to the GSO’s provision of natural
gas is not specific within the meaning
of section 771(5A) of the Act.
E. Provision of Land and/or Buildings
for LTAR
As explained above under ‘‘Provision
of Natural Gas for LTAR,’’ the GSO
states that virtually all industries in
Oman are located in industrial estates or
free trade zones. These estates and
zones have been established on
government-owned land and are
managed by the Public Establishment
for Industrial Estates. (GSO QR at 33.) A
small number of very large industrial
companies, established by the GSO, are
located outside the industrial estates on
government-owned land, but the GSO
does not provide land under lease
outside of the industrial estates. (GSO
SQR at 13.)
Privately owned ‘‘industrial land’’
outside of the estates differs from land
in the estates, according to the GSO.
(GSO SQR at 14.) The plots cannot
exceed 85 square meters and rental
periods are shorter than those in the
estates (which range about 25 years).
(GSO SQR at 14.) Companies located
outside the estates are small workshops
such as carwashes and welders which
cannot rent land in the industrial estates
because they are not industrial
establishments per RD 61/2008. Id. The
lease rates for these plots are set by the
market and, according to the GSO,
possibly range around .50 OR per square
meter/month. Also according to the
GSO, no land in the vicinity of the
Sohar industrial estate (where Al Jazeera
is located) is provided under lease to
industrial establishments by private
parties. Id.
Regarding lease rates in the industrial
estates, the GSO reports that they are set
taking into account the location of the
industrial estate and lease rates in
neighboring countries. Id. Lease rates in
the Sohar and Rusayl Industrial Estates
are uniform at 0.5 OR per square meter
per year, while the lease rates in effect
for the five other industrial estates
maintained by the GSO are 0.25 OR per
square meter per year for the first five
years and 0.5 OR per square meter per
year thereafter. (GSO SQR at Appendix
SQ–23.) Lease rates in the free trade
zones are typically higher, ranging from
1.5 to 2.5 OR per square meter per year.
(GSO SQR at 15.)
According to the GSO, these higher
prices reflect additional services and
E:\FR\FM\02APN1.SGM
02APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 63 / Monday, April 2, 2012 / Notices
benefits available in the free trade
zones: one stop shop for industrial
license and work permits, and various
regulatory and policy exemptions. If the
land in the free trade zone is not
developed, the lease rates may be lower.
Id.
In summary, the GSO provides
industrial land under leases in
industrial estates and free trade zones.
Companies locating in free trade zones
receive benefits or services that are not
received in the industrial estates and the
lease rates in free trade zones are,
therefore, higher. Within the industrial
estates, the rates are uniform except for
the existence of ‘‘introductory’’ rates in
certain zones. Because Al Jazeera has
been located in Sohar Industrial Estate
beyond any ‘‘introductory’’ period in
the other industrial estates, it would
face the uniform rate of 0.50 OR.
Because all recipients of industrial
leases in the industrial estates that have
been located there beyond five years pay
the same lease rates, we preliminarily
determine that any potential subsidy
related to the GSO’s provision of
industrial leases is not specific within
the meaning of section 771(5A) of the
Act.
III. Programs Preliminarily Determined
To Be Not Used By Respondents or To
Not Provide Benefits During the POI
A. Exemption from Corporate Income
Tax
Based on information included in Al
Jazeera’s questionnaire response,
Wheatland Tube alleged that Al Jazeera
benefitted from a countervailable
exemption from income tax during the
POI. Al Jazeera’s response indicates that
the company has a tax loss for 2009
(relating to the tax return filed during
the POI) (AJ SQR at 5) and did not
belatedly pay corporate income taxes in
2009 for prior years. (AJ NSQR at 2.)
Therefore, we preliminarily determine
that any income tax exemption was not
used during the POI.
B. Pre-Shipment Export Credit
Guarantees
IV. Programs For Which More
Information Is Required
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
A. Export Credit Discounting Subsidy
(identified as ‘‘Post-Shipment Financing
Loans’’ in the Initiation Notice)
The Export Credit Guarantee Agency
of Oman (‘‘ECGA’’) is the national
export credit agency of the Sultanate.
Exporters whose sales are insured by
ECGA can discount their export bills
with commercial banks and ECGA
provides a one percent subsidy on the
export sales it has insured. (GSO QR at
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:42 Mar 30, 2012
Jkt 226001
26.) Al Jazeera received an interest
subsidy for a loan outstanding during
the POI. (AJ QR at 13–14.) However, the
interest subsidy for this loan was
received after the POI. (AJ SQR at 4.)
Consequently, the interest subsidy does
not give rise to a benefit during the POI.
We intend to seek further information
from Al Jazeera regarding possible
interest subsidies received during the
POI arising from loans outstanding prior
to the POI.
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.
Preliminary Negative Determination
In accordance with section
703(d)(1)(A)(i) of the Act, we have
calculated an estimated countervailable
subsidy rate for Al Jazeera. Further,
because Al Jazeera is the only company
for which a rate has been calculated, we
are also assigning that rate to all other
producers and exporters of circular
welded pipe from Oman.
Net subsidy
rate
Exporter/manufacturer
Al Jazeera Tube Mills Company SAOG.
All Others ..............................
0.12 percent
0.12 percent
Because all of the rates are de
minimis, we preliminarily determine
that no countervailable subsidies are
being provided to the production or
exportation of circular welded pipe
from Oman. As such, we will not direct
CBP to suspend liquidation of entries of
the subject merchandise.
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
publicly or under an administrative
protective order, without the written
consent of the Assistant Secretary for
Import Administration.
In accordance with section 705(b)(3)
of the Act, if our final determination is
affirmative, the ITC will make its final
determination within 75 days after the
Department makes its final affirmative
determination.
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
19641
Disclosure and Public Comment
In accordance with 19 CFR
351.224(b), we intend to 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, we intend to hold the
hearing 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, N.W.,
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 electronically submit a
written request to the Assistant
Secretary for Import Administration
using IA ACCESS, 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.
This determination is published
pursuant to sections 703(f) and 777(i) of
the Act.
Dated: March 26, 2012.
Paul Piquado,
Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration.
[FR Doc. 2012–7839 Filed 3–30–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
E:\FR\FM\02APN1.SGM
02APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 63 (Monday, April 2, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 19635-19641]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-7839]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[C-523-802]
Circular Welded Carbon-Quality Steel Pipe From the Sultanate of
Oman: Preliminary Negative Countervailing Duty Determination and
Alignment of Final Countervailing Duty Determination With Final
Antidumping Duty Determination
AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce preliminarily determines that
countervailable subsidies are not being provided to producers and
exporters of circular welded carbon-quality steel pipe (``circular
welded pipe'') from the Sultanate of Oman (``Oman'').
DATES: Effective Date: April 2, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sergio Balbontin or Susan Kuhbach, 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-
6478 and (202) 482-0112, 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 Circular Welded Carbon-Quality Steel Pipe from
India, the Sultanate of Oman, the United Arab Emirates, and the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam: Initiation of Countervailing Duty
Investigations, 76 FR 72173 (November 22, 2011) (``Initiation
Notice''), and the accompanying Initiation Checklist.
On November 22, 2011, the Department released the U.S. Customs and
Border Protection (``CBP'') data on imports of subject merchandise
during the period of investigation (``POI''), under administrative
protective order (``APO'') to all parties with APO access. See
Memorandum to the File from Joshua Morris, ``Release of Customs and
Border Protection (``CBP'') Data,'' dated November 22, 2011. We
received no comments. The CBP data showed two exporters of subject
merchandise: Al Jazeera Tube Mills Company SAOG (``Al Jazeera'') and a
second company with inconsequential exports because the quantity of
exports was extremely small.
On December 16, 2011, 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 materially injured by reason of allegedly subsidized imports of
circular welded pipe from India, Oman, the United Arab Emirates, and
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. See Circular Welded Carbon-Quality
Steel Pipe from India, Oman, the United Arab Emirates, and Vietnam, 76
FR 78313 (December 16, 2011).
On December 19, 2011, the Department postponed the deadline for the
preliminary determination in this investigation until March 26, 2012.
See Circular Welded Carbon-Quality Steel Pipe from India, the Sultanate
of Oman, the United Arab Emirates, and the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam: Postponement of Preliminary Determinations in the
Countervailing Duty Investigations, 76 FR 78615 (December 19, 2011). In
conjunction with this postponement, the Department also postponed the
deadline for the submission of new subsidy allegations until February
15, 2012. See Memorandum to the File from Joshua S. Morris, ``New
Subsidy Allegation Deadline: Circular Welded Carbon-Quality Steel Pipe
from India, the Sultanate of Oman, the United Arab Emirates, and the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam,'' dated December 15, 2011. This
memorandum and others referenced in this determination are on file
electronically in Import Administration's Antidumping and
Countervailing Duty Centralized Electronic Service System (``IA
ACCESS''), with access to IA ACCESS available in the Department's
Central Records Unit (``CRU''), room 7046 of the main Department
building.
On December 22, 2011, we issued a countervailing duty questionnaire
to the Government of the Sultanate of Oman (``GSO'') and to Al Jazeera.
We received responses from the GSO and Al Jazeera on February 17, 2012.
See February 17, 2012 Questionnaire Response of Al Jazeera Steel
Products Co. SAOG (``AJ QR'') and February 17, 2012 Questionnaire
Response of the Government of the Sultanate of Oman (``GSO QR'').
Supplemental questionnaires were sent to the GSO on February 27 and
March 1, 2012, and to Al Jazeera on February 27, 2012, and we received
responses from Al Jazeera on March 7, 2012, and from the GSO on March
16, 2012. See March 7, 2012 Supplemental Questionnaire Response of Al
Jazeera Steel Products Co. SAOG (``AJ SQR'') and March 16, 2012
Response of the Government of the Sultanate of Oman to Supplemental
Questionnaire and New Subsidies Allegation Questionnaire (``GSO SQR'').
One of the petitioning parties, Wheatland Tube, requested two
extensions of the deadline for filing new subsidy allegations. As a
result, this deadline was extended from February 15 to February 24, and
then to February 28, 2012. See Memorandum to the File from Susan
Kuhbach, ``New Subsidy Allegation Deadline: Circular Welded Carbon-
Quality Steel Pipe from India, the Sultanate of Oman, the United Arab
Emirates, and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam,'' dated February 6,
2012 and Letter to Interested Parties, dated February 24, 2012.
A new subsidy allegation was received from Wheatland Tube on
February 28, 2012. See Letter from Petitioner Wheatland Tube re New
Subsidies Allegation and Additional Factual Information, dated February
28, 2012. On March 5, 2012, the Department included the newly alleged
subsidy in the investigation. See Memorandum: ``New Subsidy
Allegations,'' dated March 5, 2012. On March 6, 2012, the Department
sent new subsidy allegation questionnaires to Al Jazeera and the GSO
and their responses were received on March 13, and 16, respectively.
See ``Circular Welded Carbon-Quality Steel Pipe from the Sultanate of
Oman: Al Jazeera New Subsidies Questionnaire Response,'' dated March
15, 2012 (``AJ NSQR''), and GSO SQR.
We received pre-preliminary comments from Wheatland Tube on March
14, 2012.
Period of Investigation
The period for which we are measuring subsidies, i.e., the POI, is
January 1, 2010, through December 31, 2010.
[[Page 19636]]
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, 76 FR 72173. On December 5, 2011,
SeAH Steel VINA Corp. (``SeAH VINA''), a mandatory respondent in the
concurrent countervailing duty (``CVD'') circular welded pipe from
Vietnam investigation, filed comments arguing that the treatment of
double and triple stenciled pipe in the scope of these investigations
differs from previous treatment of these products under other orders on
circular welded pipe. Specifically, SeAH VINA claims that the
Brazilian, Korean, and Mexican orders on these products exclude
``Standard pipe that is dual or triple certified/stenciled that enters
the U.S. as line pipe of a kind used for oil and gas pipelines *-*-*
.'' See, e.g., Certain Circular Welded Non-Alloy Steel Pipe from
Brazil, the Republic of Korea, and Taiwan; and Certain Circular Welded
Carbon Steel Pipes and Tubes From Taiwan: Final Results of the
Expedited Third Sunset Reviews of the Antidumping Duty Order, 76 FR
66899, 66900 (Oct. 28, 2011). According to SeAH VINA: (i) If the term
``class or kind of merchandise'' has meaning, it cannot have a
different meaning when applied to the same products in two different
cases; and (ii) the distinction between standard and line pipe
reflected in the Brazil, Korean and Mexican orders derives from customs
classifications administered by CBP and, thus, is more administrable.
On December 14, 2011, Allied Tube and Conduit, JMC Steel Group, and
Wheatland Tube (collectively, ``certain Petitioners'') responded to
SeAH VINA's comments stating that the scope as it appeared in the
Initiation Notice reflected Petitioners'' intended coverage. Certain
Petitioners contend that pipe that is multi-stenciled to both line pipe
and standard pipe specifications and meets the physical characteristics
listed in the scope (i.e., is 32 feet in length or less; is less than
2.0 inches (50mm) in outside diameter; has a galvanized and/or painted
(e.g., polyester coated) surface finish; or has a threaded and/or
coupled end finish) is ordinarily used in standard pipe applications.
In recent years, certain Petitioners state, the Department has rejected
end-use scope classifications, preferring instead to rely on physical
characteristics to define coverage, and the scope of these
investigations has been written accordingly. Therefore, certain
Petitioners ask the Department to reject SeAH VINA's proposed scope
modification.
We agree with certain Petitioners that the Department seeks to
define the scopes of its proceedings based on the physical
characteristics of the merchandise. See Notice of Final Determination
of Sales at Less Than Fair Value and Affirmative Final Determination of
Critical Circumstances: Circular Welded Carbon Quality Steel Pipe from
the People's Republic of China, 73 FR 31970 (June 5, 2008) and
accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum at Comment 1. Moreover, we
disagree with SeAH VINA's contention that once a ``class or kind of
merchandise'' has been established that the same scope description must
apply across all proceedings involving the product. For example, as the
Department has gained experience in administering antidumping duty
(``AD'') and CVD orders, it has shifted away from end use
classifications to scopes defined by the physical characteristics. Id.
Thus, proceedings initiated on a given product many years ago may have
end use classifications while more recent proceedings on the product
would not. Compare Countervailing Duty Order: Oil Country Tubular Goods
from Canada, 51 FR 21783 (June 16, 1986) (describing subject
merchandise as being ``intended for use in drilling for oil and gas'')
with Certain Oil Country Tubular Goods From the People's Republic of
China: Amended Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination and
Countervailing Duty Order, 75 FR 3203 (January 20, 2010) (describing
the subject merchandise in terms of physical characteristics without
regard to use or intended use). Finally, certain Petitioners have
indicated the domestic industry's intent to include multi-stenciled
products that otherwise meet the physical characteristics set out in
the scope. Therefore, the Department is not adopting SeAH VINA's
proposed modification of the scope.
Scope of the Investigation
This investigation covers welded carbon-quality steel pipes and
tube, of circular cross-section, with an outside diameter (``O.D.'')
not more than 16 inches (406.4 mm), regardless of wall thickness,
surface finish (e.g., black, galvanized, or painted), end finish (plain
end, beveled end, grooved, threaded, or threaded and coupled), or
industry specification (e.g., American Society for Testing and
Materials International (``ASTM''), proprietary, or other) generally
known as standard pipe, fence pipe and tube, sprinkler pipe, and
structural pipe (although subject product may also be referred to as
mechanical tubing). Specifically, the term ``carbon quality'' includes
products in which: (a) Iron predominates, by weight, over each of the
other contained elements; (b) the carbon content is 2 percent or less,
by weight; and (c) none of the elements listed below exceeds the
quantity, by weight, as indicated:
(i) 1.80 percent of manganese;
(ii) 2.25 percent of silicon;
(iii) 1.00 percent of copper;
(iv) 0.50 percent of aluminum;
(v) 1.25 percent of chromium;
(vi) 0.30 percent of cobalt;
(vii) 0.40 percent of lead;
(viii) 1.25 percent of nickel;
(ix) 0.30 percent of tungsten;
(x) 0.15 percent of molybdenum;
(xi) 0.10 percent of niobium;
(xii) 0.41 percent of titanium;
(xiii) 0.15 percent of vanadium;
(xiv) 0.15 percent of zirconium.
Subject pipe is ordinarily made to ASTM specifications A53, A135,
and A795, but can also be made to other specifications. Structural pipe
is made primarily to ASTM specifications A252 and A500. Standard and
structural pipe may also be produced to proprietary specifications
rather than to industry specifications. Fence tubing is included in the
scope regardless of certification to a specification listed in the
exclusions below, and can also be made to the ASTM A513 specification.
Sprinkler pipe is designed for sprinkler fire suppression systems and
may be made to industry specifications such as ASTM A53 or to
proprietary specifications. These products are generally made to
standard O.D. and wall thickness combinations. Pipe multi-stenciled to
a standard and/or structural specification and to other specifications,
such as American Petroleum Institute (``API'') API-5L specification, is
also covered by the scope of this investigation when it meets the
physical description set forth above, and also has one or more of the
following characteristics: is 32 feet in length or less; is less than
2.0 inches (50mm) in outside diameter; has a galvanized and/or painted
(e.g., polyester coated) surface finish; or has a threaded and/or
coupled end finish.
The scope of this investigation does not include: (a) Pipe suitable
for use in boilers, superheaters, heat exchangers, refining furnaces
and feedwater heaters, whether or not cold drawn; (b) finished
electrical conduit; (c) finished
[[Page 19637]]
scaffolding; \1\ (d) tube and pipe hollows for redrawing; (e) oil
country tubular goods produced to API specifications; (f) line pipe
produced to only API specifications; and (g) mechanical tubing, whether
or not cold-drawn. However, products certified to ASTM mechanical
tubing specifications are not excluded as mechanical tubing if they
otherwise meet the standard sizes (e.g., outside diameter and wall
thickness) of standard, structural, fence and sprinkler pipe. Also,
products made to the following outside diameter and wall thickness
combinations, which are recognized by the industry as typical for fence
tubing, would not be excluded from the scope based solely on their
being certified to ASTM mechanical tubing specifications:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Finished scaffolding is defined as component parts of a
final, finished scaffolding that enters the United States
unassembled as a ``kit.'' A ``kit'' is understood to mean a packaged
combination of component parts that contain, at the time of
importation, all the necessary component parts to fully assemble a
final, finished scaffolding.
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.035 inch wall thickness (gage 20)
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.047 inch wall thickness (gage 18)
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.055 inch wall thickness (gage 17)
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.065 inch wall thickness (gage 16)
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.072 inch wall thickness (gage 15)
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.083 inch wall thickness (gage 14)
1.315 inch O.D. and 0.095 inch wall thickness (gage 13)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.047 inch wall thickness (gage 18)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.055 inch wall thickness (gage 17)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.065 inch wall thickness (gage 16)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.072 inch wall thickness (gage 15)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.083 inch wall thickness (gage 14)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.095 inch wall thickness (gage 13)
1.660 inch O.D. and 0.109 inch wall thickness (gage 12)
1.900 inch O.D. and 0.047 inch wall thickness (gage 18)
1.900 inch O.D. and 0.055 inch wall thickness (gage 17)
1.900 inch O.D. and 0.065 inch wall thickness (gage 16)
1.900 inch O.D. and 0.072 inch wall thickness (gage 15)
1.900 inch O.D. and 0.095 inch wall thickness (gage 13)
1.900 inch O.D. and 0.109 inch wall thickness (gage 12)
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.047 inch wall thickness (gage 18)
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.055 inch wall thickness (gage 17)
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.065 inch wall thickness (gage 16)
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.072 inch wall thickness (gage 15)
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.095 inch wall thickness (gage 13)
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.109 inch wall thickness (gage 12)
2.375 inch O.D. and 0.120 inch wall thickness (gage 11)
2.875 inch O.D. and 0.109 inch wall thickness (gage 12)
2.875 inch O.D. and 0.134 inch wall thickness (gage 10)
2.875 inch O.D. and 0.165 inch wall thickness (gage 8)
3.500 inch O.D. and 0.109 inch wall thickness (gage 12)
3.500 inch O.D. and 0.148 inch wall thickness (gage 9)
3.500 inch O.D. and 0.165 inch wall thickness (gage 8)
4.000 inch O.D. and 0.148 inch wall thickness (gage 9)
4.000 inch O.D. and 0.165 inch wall thickness (gage 8)
4.500 inch O.D. and 0.203 inch wall thickness (gage 7)
The pipe subject to this investigation is currently classifiable in
Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (``HTSUS'') statistical
reporting numbers 7306.19.1010, 7306.19.1050, 7306.19.5110,
7306.19.5150, 7306.30.1000, 7306.30.5025, 7306.30.5032, 7306.30.5040,
7306.30.5055, 7306.30.5085, 7306.30.5090, 7306.50.1000, 7306.50.5050,
and 7306.50.5070. Although the HTSUS subheadings are provided for
convenience and customs purposes, the written description of the
merchandise under the investigation is dispositive.
Alignment of Final Determination
On November 22, 2011, the Department initiated an AD investigation
concurrent with this CVD investigation of circular welded pipe from
Oman. See Circular Welded Carbon-Quality Steel Pipe from India, the
Sultanate of Oman, the United Arab Emirates, and the Socialist Republic
of Vietnam: Initiation of Antidumping Duty Investigations, 76 FR 72164
(November 22, 2011). The scope of the merchandise being covered is the
same for both the AD and CVD investigations. On March 23, 2012,
Petitioners submitted a letter, in accordance with section 705(a)(1) of
the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (``Act''), requesting alignment of
the final CVD determination with the final determination in the
companion AD investigation. Therefore, in accordance with section
705(a)(1) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.210(b)(4), the final CVD
determination will be issued on the same date as the final AD
determination, which is currently scheduled to be issued on August 6,
2012.
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) through (v) directs that the Department will
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,
produce an input that is primarily dedicated to the production of the
downstream product, or transfer a subsidy to a cross-owned company.
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, SA v. United States, 166 F.
Supp. 2d 593, 600-604 (CIT 2001).
Al Jazeera reported no affiliates in Oman and, consequently, has
responded on behalf of itself. (AJ QR at 2-3.) Thus, the subsidies
received by Al Jazeera have been attributed to its total sales, its
sales of subject merchandise, or its export sales, in accordance with
19 CFR 351.525(b)(1)-(5).
[[Page 19638]]
Benchmarks and Discount Rates
Section 771(5)(E)(ii) of the Act states 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.'' In addition, 19 CFR 351.505(a)(3)(i) stipulates that when
selecting a comparable commercial loan that the recipient ``could
actually obtain on the market'' the Department will normally rely on
actual loans obtained by the firm. However, when there are no
comparable commercial loans, the Department ``may use a national
average interest rate for comparable commercial loans,'' pursuant to 19
CFR 351.505(a)(3)(ii). According to 19 CFR 351.505(a)(2)(i), a
``comparable'' loan is similar in structure (fixed versus variable
interest rate), maturity and currency denomination.
In allocating benefits over time, the Department normally uses as
the discount rate the company's cost of long-term fixed rate debt at
the time the government approves the subsidy. If such rates are not
available, the Department will use the average cost of long-term fixed
rate loans in the country in question. See 19 CFR 351.524(d)(3).
Al Jazeera had government-provided loans outstanding during the POI
for which benchmarks are needed. However, none of Al Jazeera's non-
government loans provides a suitable rate because none was taken out in
the years the government loans were approved. Therefore, we are relying
on the national average cost of long-term fixed-rate loans as reported
by the World Bank and submitted by the GSO. (GSO QR at Appendices
B.1.I-1 and B.1.I-2.) We have included in the average cost of fixed-
rate long-term loans, the additional fees that would be incurred in
obtaining loans from commercial banks, as reported by the GSO. (GSO QR
at 25.)
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. Soft Loans for Industrial Projects Under Royal Decree 17/97
Royal Decree (``RD'') 17/97 made soft loans available to the
private sector with the goals of diversifying the economy of Oman and
developing industry, agriculture, fisheries, tourism, education, health
services, and traditional crafts in Oman. Under this program,
applicants approved by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry received
loans at three percent interest from commercial banks in Oman, with the
difference between the three percent rate and the commercial interest
rate covered by the GSO. (GSO QR at 15.) The soft loan program under RD
17/97 originated in 1997 and terminated in 2006. (GSO SQR at 12 and
Appendix SQ-20.) Beginning in 2007, soft loans were made by the Oman
Development Bank. (GSO QR at 16.) The GSO reported that Al Jazeera had
soft loans under the earlier RD 17/97 program outstanding during the
POI, but has not received any loans from the Oman Development Bank.
(GSO QR at 15.) The two loans outstanding were granted in 1998 and
2004, respectively. (GSO QR at 24.) According to the GSO, both loans
have now been repaid in full. (GSO SQR at 12.)
According to the GSO, firms operating the agriculture, fisheries,
industry, tourism, education, health and traditional crafts sectors
could apply for loans to set up, support or expand a project. (GSO QR
at 17.) After review by the relevant ministries, a ministerial
committee would approve or disapprove of the loan. (GSO QR at 18.)
According to Article 12 of RD 17/97, the maximum amounts that could be
approved varied by region (150 percent of paid up capital if the
applicant was located in the Governorate of Muscat and 250 percent of
paid up capital elsewhere) and by corporate form (a maximum of 500,000
Omani Rial (``OR'') or up to 5,000,000 OR if the applicant was a public
joint-stock company which covered at least 40 percent of its capital by
public subscription). (GSO QR at 20.)
In response to the Department's request to provide information
about the amounts of assistance provided under the program to the
different recipients, the GSO provided the aggregate amount of loans
approved during the pendency of the program broken out between
industry, tourism, education, health, and agriculture/fishing. (GSO QR
at Appendix B.1.G-3.) In response to the Department's request for a
breakdown of the information among different sectors under the
``industry'' heading, by year, the GSO responded that it does not
maintain the information in that manner. Moreover, because there were
no sectoral criteria that affect eligibility, the GSO stated there was
no requirement to include that information in the applications. (GSO
SQR at 15.) The GSO did provide the amounts of individual loans
disbursed to recipients in the industrial category. (GSO SQR at
Appendix SQ-24.)
We preliminarily determine that the soft loans received by Al
Jazeera under RD 17/97 confer a countervailable subsidy. The loans are
a financial contribution in the form of a direct transfer of funds and
they confer a benefit in the amount of the difference between the
interest Al Jazeera paid on the loans and the amount the company would
have paid on a comparable commercial loan. See sections 771(5)(d)(i)
and (e)(ii) of the Act. Additionally, we preliminarily determine that
the subsidy was specific, under section 771(5A)(D)(iii)(II) of the Act,
because Al Jazeera was a predominant user of the program.
To calculate the benefit, we computed the difference between the
amounts Al Jazeera would have paid under the benchmark interest rates
described above and the amounts it actually paid during the POI.
Because the loans were given to finance Al Jazeera's pipe mills, we
divided the subsidy during the POI by Al Jazeera's sales of circular
welded pipe during the POI.
On this basis, we preliminarily determine that Al Jazeera received
a countervailable subsidy of 0.12 percent ad valorem under this
program. See Memorandum to the File from Sergio Balbontin,
``Preliminary Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination:
Calculation Memorandum for Al Jazeera Steel Products Co. SAOG,'' dated
March 26, 2012.
II. Programs Preliminarily Determined To Be Not Countervailable
A. Tariff Exemptions on Imported Equipment, Machinery, Raw Materials,
and Packaging Materials
Under RD 61/2008, industrial enterprises in Oman are able to import
machinery, equipment, parts, raw materials, semi-manufactured materials
and packing material duty free. According to the GSO, the purpose of RD
61/2008 is to encourage and develop all industrial projects, to raise
the contribution of the industrial sector in the gross domestic
product, and to expand the bases of economic linkage in the Arab States
of the Gulf. RD 61/2008 supersedes similar earlier schemes under the
Organization and Promotion of Industry Law (RD 1/79) and the Foreign
Business Investment Law (102/94). (GSO QR at 4 and Appendix A.1.D-1.)
RD 1/79 entered into force on January 4, 1979. According to the
GSO, the purpose of this law was to encourage diversification of the
Omani economy and to stimulate industrial development. (GSO SQR at 1.)
Under Article 19 of RD 1/79, licensed or
[[Page 19639]]
registered industrial enterprises were exempted from customs duties on
equipment, tools, spare parts, raw materials, and semi-manufactured
goods. (GSO SQR at Appendix SQ-3.)
Both RD 61/2008 and RD 1/79 provide similar definitions of the
``industrial enterprises'' that are eligible to receive the tariff
exemptions: establishments whose basic objective is to convert raw
materials or semi-manufactured goods into manufactured goods. (GSO QR
at Appendices A.1.D-1 and GSO SQR at Appendix SQ-3.) Also, both decrees
outline the process for receiving an industrial license. Under RD 61/
2008, the procedure for obtaining an industrial license is
``automatic,'' according to the GSO, upon submission of the required
documentation (commercial registration, business plan and approval from
the Ministry of Environment). Further, the GSO states that there is no
discretion in the procedure, as the application process has been fully
automated through a ``one stop shop'' IT system. (GSO QR at 8.)
Al Jazeera's industrial license was obtained under RD 1/79, as well
as its initial tariff exemption. According to Article 5 of RD 1/79,
industrial enterprises could not be established or change their
capacity, size, purpose or site without obtaining an industrial license
from the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. To obtain an industrial
license, companies would submit an application to the Ministry. This
application requested a wide range of information including: a list of
shareholders, estimated investment, a description of the products to be
produced, annual output, a description of the manufacturing process,
the numbers and types of labor required, market and marketing
information (imports of the product, domestic production of the
product, exports, and proposed distribution channels), details of plant
and machinery, raw materials requirements, and utilities requirements.
(GSO QR at Appendix A.1.G-6.) The decision of whether to grant the
industrial license rested with the Directorate General of Industry
(Ministry of Commerce and Industry). (GSO SQR at Appendix SQ-3.)
According to the GSO, the Ministry relied upon non-binding guidelines
for granting these licenses. (GSO SQR at 2.)
To obtain the tariff exemption under RD 1/79, the industrial
enterprise would submit to the Ministry of Commerce and Industry its
industrial license along with a list of the materials and equipment it
intended to import and the annual amounts. (GSO SQR at 2 and Appendix
SQ-4.) The procedure under RD 61/2008 is similar except that final
approval of the Ministry of Finance is also required in order to ensure
that the application conforms with the uniform customs law of the Arab
Gulf Cooperation Council. (GSO SQR at 3 and Appendix SQ-6.) RD 61/2008
also provides at Article 16 that priority in granting the tariff
exemptions will be given, inter alia, to enterprises producing goods
for exports. (GSO QR at Appendix A.1.D-1.)
As noted above, Al Jazeera received its industrial license and
initial tariff exemption under RD 1/79. According to the GSO, if a
company needs to import raw materials in excess of the amount for which
the exemption was granted, it must file a new request with the Ministry
of Commerce and Industry. (GSO QR at 6.) Al Jazeera received a new
approval under RD 61/2008. (GSO QR at 11.)
The GSO states that processes for granting industrial licenses in
Oman are ``automatic.'' Regarding the former, companies apply though an
online system administered by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
According to the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, no firm that met
the legal and regulatory requirements for an industrial license has
been denied a license. (GSO QR at Appendix A.1.G-4 and GSO SQR at 6.)
Specifically, rejections of license applications occur only when the
applicant does not constitute an ``industrial enterprise,'' or when the
applicant cancels its plans and does not complete the steps for
registration. (GSO QR at 8.)
In its pre-preliminary comments, Wheatland Tube points to Al
Jazeera's application for its industrial license and, in particular,
the section of the application that requests information about exports.
Citing 19 CFR 351.514 and prior findings by the Department,\2\
Wheatland Tube argues that the application by its terms renders the
tariff exemptions an export subsidy. We preliminarily disagree. The
application cited by Wheatland Tube is the application for an
industrial license which, while necessary for the tariff exemption, is
not in itself a subsidy program. Instead, as explained above, an
industrial license is required to start, expand, or relocate any
enterprise that converts raw materials or semi-manufactured goods into
manufactured goods. Thus, while we acknowledge our regulation, which
looks to whether exportation or anticipated exportation is a condition
for receipt of benefits under a program, and our past determinations in
which we have found export contingency when an application for a
subsidy required information on the firm's exports, we do not agree
that such questions on an application for something as fundamental as
an industrial license necessarily means that a separate subsidy program
is specific as an export subsidy. Therefore, we have focused our
analysis on the procedures for obtaining the tariff exemptions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See, e.g., Aluminum Extrusions From the People's Republic of
China: Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, 76 FR
18521, 18524 (April 4, 2011), and Drill Pipe From the People's
Republic of China: Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Determination, Final Affirmative Critical Circumstances
Determination, 76 FR 1971 (January 11, 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As explained above, applications for tariff exemptions are filed
with the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. According to the GSO, the
approval process for duty exemptions is automatic and does not take
into account the export performance or potential of the applicant, the
use of domestic over imported goods, the industry or sector in which
the applicant operated, or the location of the applicant. (GSO QR at 9-
10 and GSO SQR at 4-5.) More recently, the tariff exemptions
application has also been referred to the Ministry of Finance, which
carries out a formal check of whether the applicant corresponds to the
company named in the industrial license, whether the capital goods
pertain to the activity of the company, and whether the quantity the
applicant seeks to import is consistent with its output. (GSO QR at 6.)
The GSO states that there is no discretion in deciding whether to grant
the duty exemption when the regulations are met (GSO QR at 6-7) and
that no qualifying companies have been denied tariff exemptions. (GSO
QR at Appendix A.F.1-2 and GSO SQR at 6.) The submitted data shows that
hundreds of approvals are made per year. (GSO SQR at Appendix SQ-5.)
The GSO further explains that the ``priority'' described in Article 16
of RD 61/2008 for granting tariff exemptions to certain enumerated
sectors means that if two or more applications were filed
contemporaneously, the enterprise in the designated sector would
receive the tariff exemption prior to the other applicants. (GSO QR at
7-8.)
In response to the Department's request to provide information
about the amounts of assistance provided under the program to the
different industries in Oman, the GSO explained that it does not
maintain this data. Specifically, recipients of the import duty
exemptions are not classified by the International Standard Industrial
Classification. (GSO SQR at 6.) Nor does the GSO maintain information
on the
[[Page 19640]]
duties it would have collected but for the exemption. (GSO SQR at 7.)
In summary, based on information submitted by the GSO, the tariff
exemptions are granted automatically and without regard to the firm's
export performance or potential, use of domestic over imported goods,
industry sector or location. Moreover, hundreds of applications are
approved in a year and no applications have been rejected. The GSO has
explained that it is not able to provide information regarding the
distribution of duty exemptions because of the nature of the benefit
(exemptions) and the manner in which the recipients submit their data.
On this basis, we preliminarily determine that the GSO's program
providing tariff exemptions on imported raw materials and equipment
does not confer a countervailable subsidy because it is not specific
within the meaning of section 771(5A) of the Act. At verification, we
intend to examine the applications and the approval process to confirm
that the tariff exemptions are, in fact, used by industries producing a
wide variety of products. Also, we invite the parties to comment on the
distinction we have made in this preliminary determination to focus on
the application process for benefits under the tariff exemption program
rather than on the application for the company's industrial license.
Provision of Electricity for Less Than Adequate Remuneration (``LTAR'')
The provision of electricity to consumers in Oman is heavily
regulated. (GSO QR at Appendix C.1-5 at 15.) In particular, in
accordance with Article 10 of RD78/2004, the rates that are charged for
electricity are approved by the Council of Ministers. (GSO QR at
Appendix C.1-1.) During the POI, all industrial users in all regions of
Oman paid uniform rates. (GSO QR at 37.) To be eligible for the
industrial user rate, a company must have a letter of recommendation
from the Ministry of Commerce and Industry and meet a stipulated power
factor. (GSO QR at Appendix C.1-3 at 37.) According to the GSO, letters
of recommendation are given to all companies with an industrial
license. (GSO QR at 39.) During the POI, there were over 1.5 million
industrial users of electricity in Oman. (GSO QR at Appendix C.1-3 at
10.)
The electricity bills submitted by Al Jazeera show that it paid the
established rates. (AJ QR at Exhibit 13.)
Because all industrial users pay the same rates for electricity, we
preliminarily determine that any potential subsidy related to the GSO's
provision of electricity is not specific within the meaning of section
771(5A) of the Act.
C. Provision of Water for LTAR
Ministerial Decision 11/2000 establishes a uniform water tariff for
all commercial users in Oman. (GSO QR at Appendix C.2-1.) The water
bills submitted by Al Jazeera show that it paid the established rates.
(AJ QR at Exhibit 14.)
Because all commercial users pay the same tariff for water, we
preliminarily determine that any potential subsidy related to the GSO's
provision of water is not specific within the meaning of section
771(5A) of the Act.
D. Provision of Natural Gas for LTAR
According to the GSO, the Ministry of Oil and Gas is the central
buyer and seller of gas in the Sultanate. The Ministry buys gas from
producers and resells it to power plants, industrial estates, and LNG
producers. Further, according to the GSO, the natural gas network
delivers gas for industrial purposes only and companies using gas for
industrial purposes must be located in or close to an industrial
estate. (GSO QR at 43.)
The GSO states that virtually all industries in Oman are located in
industrial estates or free trade zones. (GSO QR at 33.) This is due in
part to infrastructural constraints, such as the fact that natural gas
is not readily available outside of these areas. Additionally,
according to the GSO, the zoning in the Sultanate is very strict: an
industry seeking to locate outside an industrial estate or free trade
zone would have to apply to have the land reclassified as industrial
land. Id. Finally, industrial estates serve as ``one-stop-shops'' where
all the applications for an industrial installation can be made, rather
than having to apply to many different agencies. Id.
Regarding natural gas, all industrial companies located in all of
industrial estates pay the same rate. (GSO QR at 42.) Al Jazeera is
located in the Sohar Industrial Estate and the natural gas bills it
submitted show that it paid the standard rate charged to all industries
located in Sohar Industrial Estate and all other industrial estates.
(AJ QR at Exhibit 15.) Companies located nearby, but outside of
industrial estates normally purchase gas from the Ministry of Oil and
Gas, but are supplied by the industrial estates. According to the GSO,
these companies would normally pay the same for natural gas as
companies within the industrial estates, but might pay more if the cost
of providing the gas was higher due, for example, to having constructed
a pipeline. (GSO SQR at 13.)
Because all industrial users proximate to the gas pipeline pay the
same price for natural gas, we preliminarily determine that any
potential subsidy related to the GSO's provision of natural gas is not
specific within the meaning of section 771(5A) of the Act.
E. Provision of Land and/or Buildings for LTAR
As explained above under ``Provision of Natural Gas for LTAR,'' the
GSO states that virtually all industries in Oman are located in
industrial estates or free trade zones. These estates and zones have
been established on government-owned land and are managed by the Public
Establishment for Industrial Estates. (GSO QR at 33.) A small number of
very large industrial companies, established by the GSO, are located
outside the industrial estates on government-owned land, but the GSO
does not provide land under lease outside of the industrial estates.
(GSO SQR at 13.)
Privately owned ``industrial land'' outside of the estates differs
from land in the estates, according to the GSO. (GSO SQR at 14.) The
plots cannot exceed 85 square meters and rental periods are shorter
than those in the estates (which range about 25 years). (GSO SQR at
14.) Companies located outside the estates are small workshops such as
carwashes and welders which cannot rent land in the industrial estates
because they are not industrial establishments per RD 61/2008. Id. The
lease rates for these plots are set by the market and, according to the
GSO, possibly range around .50 OR per square meter/month. Also
according to the GSO, no land in the vicinity of the Sohar industrial
estate (where Al Jazeera is located) is provided under lease to
industrial establishments by private parties. Id.
Regarding lease rates in the industrial estates, the GSO reports
that they are set taking into account the location of the industrial
estate and lease rates in neighboring countries. Id. Lease rates in the
Sohar and Rusayl Industrial Estates are uniform at 0.5 OR per square
meter per year, while the lease rates in effect for the five other
industrial estates maintained by the GSO are 0.25 OR per square meter
per year for the first five years and 0.5 OR per square meter per year
thereafter. (GSO SQR at Appendix SQ-23.) Lease rates in the free trade
zones are typically higher, ranging from 1.5 to 2.5 OR per square meter
per year. (GSO SQR at 15.)
According to the GSO, these higher prices reflect additional
services and
[[Page 19641]]
benefits available in the free trade zones: one stop shop for
industrial license and work permits, and various regulatory and policy
exemptions. If the land in the free trade zone is not developed, the
lease rates may be lower. Id.
In summary, the GSO provides industrial land under leases in
industrial estates and free trade zones. Companies locating in free
trade zones receive benefits or services that are not received in the
industrial estates and the lease rates in free trade zones are,
therefore, higher. Within the industrial estates, the rates are uniform
except for the existence of ``introductory'' rates in certain zones.
Because Al Jazeera has been located in Sohar Industrial Estate beyond
any ``introductory'' period in the other industrial estates, it would
face the uniform rate of 0.50 OR.
Because all recipients of industrial leases in the industrial
estates that have been located there beyond five years pay the same
lease rates, we preliminarily determine that any potential subsidy
related to the GSO's provision of industrial leases is not specific
within the meaning of section 771(5A) of the Act.
III. Programs Preliminarily Determined To Be Not Used By Respondents or
To Not Provide Benefits During the POI
A. Exemption from Corporate Income Tax
Based on information included in Al Jazeera's questionnaire
response, Wheatland Tube alleged that Al Jazeera benefitted from a
countervailable exemption from income tax during the POI. Al Jazeera's
response indicates that the company has a tax loss for 2009 (relating
to the tax return filed during the POI) (AJ SQR at 5) and did not
belatedly pay corporate income taxes in 2009 for prior years. (AJ NSQR
at 2.) Therefore, we preliminarily determine that any income tax
exemption was not used during the POI.
B. Pre-Shipment Export Credit Guarantees
IV. Programs For Which More Information Is Required
A. Export Credit Discounting Subsidy (identified as ``Post-Shipment
Financing Loans'' in the Initiation Notice)
The Export Credit Guarantee Agency of Oman (``ECGA'') is the
national export credit agency of the Sultanate. Exporters whose sales
are insured by ECGA can discount their export bills with commercial
banks and ECGA provides a one percent subsidy on the export sales it
has insured. (GSO QR at 26.) Al Jazeera received an interest subsidy
for a loan outstanding during the POI. (AJ QR at 13-14.) However, the
interest subsidy for this loan was received after the POI. (AJ SQR at
4.) Consequently, the interest subsidy does not give rise to a benefit
during the POI.
We intend to seek further information from Al Jazeera regarding
possible interest subsidies received during the POI arising from loans
outstanding prior to the POI.
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.
Preliminary Negative Determination
In accordance with section 703(d)(1)(A)(i) of the Act, we have
calculated an estimated countervailable subsidy rate for Al Jazeera.
Further, because Al Jazeera is the only company for which a rate has
been calculated, we are also assigning that rate to all other producers
and exporters of circular welded pipe from Oman.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Exporter/manufacturer Net subsidy rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Al Jazeera Tube Mills Company SAOG........ 0.12 percent
All Others................................ 0.12 percent
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because all of the rates are de minimis, we preliminarily determine
that no countervailable subsidies are being provided to the production
or exportation of circular welded pipe from Oman. As such, we will not
direct CBP to suspend liquidation of entries of the subject
merchandise.
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 non-privileged 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 publicly or
under an administrative protective order, without the written consent
of the Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
In accordance with section 705(b)(3) of the Act, if our final
determination is affirmative, the ITC will make its final determination
within 75 days after the Department makes its final affirmative
determination.
Disclosure and Public Comment
In accordance with 19 CFR 351.224(b), we intend to 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, we intend to hold the hearing 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, N.W., 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 electronically submit a written request to
the Assistant Secretary for Import Administration using IA ACCESS,
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.
This determination is published pursuant to sections 703(f) and
777(i) of the Act.
Dated: March 26, 2012.
Paul Piquado,
Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
[FR Doc. 2012-7839 Filed 3-30-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P