Application(s) for Duty-Free Entry of Scientific Instruments, 7399-7400 [2013-02132]
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7399
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 22 / Friday, February 1, 2013 / Notices
Period of review
SOCIALIST REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM: Frozen Warmwater Shrimp A–522–802 ........................................................................
THAILAND: Frozen Warmwater Shrimp A–549–822 ....................................................................................................................
THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA:
Certain Preserved Mushrooms A–570–851 ...........................................................................................................................
Frozen Warmwater Shrimp A–570–893 .................................................................................................................................
Heavy Forged Hand Tools, With or Without Handles A–570–803 ........................................................................................
Small Diameter Graphite Electrodes A–570–929 ..................................................................................................................
Uncovered Innerspring Units A–570–928 ..............................................................................................................................
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Countervailing Duty Proceedings
INDIA:
Certain Cut-To-Length Carbon-Quality Steel Plate C–533–818 ............................................................................................
Prestressed Concrete Steel Wire Strand C–533–829 ...........................................................................................................
INDONESIA: Certain Cut-To-Length Carbon-Quality Steel Plate C–560–806 .............................................................................
REPUBLIC OF KOREA: Certain Cut-To-Length Carbon-Quality Steel Plate C–580–837 ...........................................................
Suspension Agreements
None.
In accordance with 19 CFR
351.213(b), an interested party as
defined by section 771(9) of the Act may
request in writing that the Secretary
conduct an administrative review. For
both antidumping and countervailing
duty reviews, the interested party must
specify the individual producers or
exporters covered by an antidumping
finding or an antidumping or
countervailing duty order or suspension
agreement for which it is requesting a
review. In addition, a domestic
interested party or an interested party
described in section 771(9)(B) of the Act
must state why it desires the Secretary
to review those particular producers or
exporters.2 If the interested party
intends for the Secretary to review sales
of merchandise by an exporter (or a
producer if that producer also exports
merchandise from other suppliers)
which were produced in more than one
country of origin and each country of
origin is subject to a separate order, then
the interested party must state
specifically, on an order-by-order basis,
which exporter(s) the request is
intended to cover.
Please note that, for any party the
Department was unable to locate in
prior segments, the Department will not
accept a request for an administrative
review of that party absent new
information as to the party’s location.
Moreover, if the interested party who
files a request for review is unable to
locate the producer or exporter for
which it requested the review, the
interested party must provide an
explanation of the attempts it made to
locate the producer or exporter at the
2 If the review request involves a non-market
economy and the parties subject to the review
request do not qualify for separate rates, all other
exporters of subject merchandise from the nonmarket economy country who do not have a
separate rate will be covered by the review as part
of the single entity of which the named firms are
a part.
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17:26 Jan 31, 2013
Jkt 229001
same time it files its request for review,
in order for the Secretary to determine
if the interested party’s attempts were
reasonable, pursuant to 19 CFR
351.303(f)(3)(ii).
As explained in Antidumping and
Countervailing Duty Proceedings:
Assessment of Antidumping Duties, 68
FR 23954 (May 6, 2003), the Department
has clarified its practice with respect to
the collection of final antidumping
duties on imports of merchandise where
intermediate firms are involved. The
public should be aware of this
clarification in determining whether to
request an administrative review of
merchandise subject to antidumping
findings and orders. See also the Import
Administration Web site at https://
trade.gov/ia.
All requests must be filed
electronically in Import
Administration’s Antidumping and
Countervailing Duty Centralized
Electronic Service System (‘‘IA
ACCESS’’) on the IA ACCESS Web site
at https://iaaccess.trade.gov. See
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Proceedings: Electronic Filing
Procedures; Administrative Protective
Order Procedures, 76 FR 39263 (July 6,
2011). Further, in accordance with 19
CFR 351.303(f)(l)(i), a copy of each
request must be served on the petitioner
and each exporter or producer specified
in the request.
The Department will publish in the
Federal Register a notice of ‘‘Initiation
of Administrative Review of
Antidumping or Countervailing Duty
Order, Finding, or Suspended
Investigation’’ for requests received by
the last day of February 2013. If the
Department does not receive, by the last
day of February 2013, a request for
review of entries covered by an order,
finding, or suspended investigation
listed in this notice and for the period
identified above, the Department will
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instruct CBP to assess antidumping or
countervailing duties on those entries at
a rate equal to the cash deposit of (or
bond for) estimated antidumping or
countervailing duties required on those
entries at the time of entry, or
withdrawal from warehouse, for
consumption and to continue to collect
the cash deposit previously ordered.
For the first administrative review of
any order, there will be no assessment
of antidumping or countervailing duties
on entries of subject merchandise
entered, or withdrawn from warehouse,
for consumption during the relevant
provisional-measures ‘‘gap’’ period, of
the order, if such a gap period is
applicable to the period of review.
This notice is not required by statute
but is published as a service to the
international trading community.
Dated: January 18, 2013.
Christian Marsh,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Antidumping
and Countervailing Duty Operations.
[FR Doc. 2013–02224 Filed 1–31–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
Application(s) for Duty-Free Entry of
Scientific Instruments
Pursuant to Section 6(c) of the
Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Materials Importation Act of 1966 (Pub.
L. 89–651, as amended by Pub. L. 106–
36; 80 Stat. 897; 15 CFR part 301), we
invite comments on the question of
whether instruments of equivalent
scientific value, for the purposes for
which the instruments shown below are
intended to be used, are being
manufactured in the United States.
Comments must comply with 15 CFR
301.5(a)(3) and (4) of the regulations and
be postmarked on or before February 21,
E:\FR\FM\01FEN1.SGM
01FEN1
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
7400
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 22 / Friday, February 1, 2013 / Notices
2013. Address written comments to
Statutory Import Programs Staff, Room
3720, U.S. Department of Commerce,
Washington, DC 20230. Applications
may be examined between 8:30 a.m. and
5:00 p.m. at the U.S. Department of
Commerce in Room 3720.
Docket Number: 12–064. Applicant:
University of Pittsburgh, 4200 Fifth
Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15260. Instrument:
Dilution Refrigerator with 18T Solenoid
Superconducting Magnet. Manufacturer:
Leiden Cryogenics, the Netherlands.
Intended Use: The instrument will be
used for three purposes: To develop
ways for preserving quantum
information in a way that is immune to
a wide variety of decoherence
mechanisms by using predicted
topological properties of
superconductors in two dimensions, to
program fundamental couplings at nearatomic scales and quantum simulation
of ‘‘metasuperconductors’’ by using the
extreme nanoscale precision with which
the LaAIO3/SrTiO3 interface can be
gated, and to develop new mechanisms
for the transfer of quantum information
between long-lived localized states
(nitrogen-vacancy centers) and
delocalized states (superconducting
resonators). The experiments will
combine the unique local control
capable with the LaAIO3/SrTiO3
interface with the natural tendency of
SrTiO3 to become superconducting to
develop superconducting structures
with vortices that will be manipulated
to achieve topologically protected
quantum computation, as well as
electrostatic programming of the
LaAIO3/SrTiO3 interface with V(x,y) to
create new electronic states of matter
which themselves can become
superconducting. The unique properties
of this instrument are the capability of
cooling the sample below the
superconducting transition temperature
(Tc∼200mK), to apply large magnetic
fields (>18T) to investigate the large
spin-orbit present in these samples
(Bso∼15T), and the ability to orient the
sample in any orientation relative to the
magnetic fields. Justification for DutyFree Entry: There are no instruments of
the same general category manufactured
in the United States. Application
accepted by Commissioner of Customs:
December 13, 2012.
Docket Number: 12–066. Applicant:
University of Pittsburgh, 4200 Fifth
Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15260. Instrument:
mK Scanning Probe Microscope.
Manufacturer: Nanomagnetics, Turkey.
Intended Use: The instrument will be
used for three purposes: To develop
ways for preserving quantum
information in a way that is immune to
a wide variety of decoherence
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:26 Jan 31, 2013
Jkt 229001
mechanisms, by using predicted
topological properties of
superconductors in two dimensions, to
program fundamental couplings at nearatomic scales and quantum simulation
of ‘‘metasuperconductors’’ by using the
extreme nanoscale precision with which
the LaAIO3/SrTiO3 interface can be
gated, and to develop new mechanisms
for the transfer of quantum information
between long-lived localized states
(nitrogen-vacancy centers) and
delocalized states (superconducting
resonators). The experiments will
combine the unique local control
capable with the LaAIO3/SrTiO3
interface with the natural tendency of
SrTiO3 to become superconducting to
develop superconducting structures
with vortices that will be manipulated
to achieve topologically protected
quantum computation, as well as
electrostatic programming of the
LaAIO3/SrTiO3 interface with V(x,y) to
create new electronic states of matter
which themselves can become
superconducting. The unique properties
of this instrument are the capability of
scanning probe microscopy at base
temperature (T<50mK), and to locally
(on nanometer scales) gate, modify, and
probe nanowire devices and quantum
dot arrays. Justification for Duty-Free
Entry: There are no instruments of the
same general category manufactured in
the United States. Application accepted
by Commissioner of Customs: December
13, 2012.
Docket Number: 13–002. Applicant:
University of California, Berkeley,
Stanley Hall, Room B306, Berkeley, CA,
94720. Instrument: High Speed Atomic
Force Microscope (HSAFM).
Manufacturer: Research Institute of
Biomolecule Metrology (RIBM), Japan.
Intended Use: The instrument will be
used for a number of experiments
including tracking the enzymatic
activity of an RNA II polymerase along
its template, a DNA gene, while
synthesizing the messenger RNA.
Having access to higher scan rates in an
aqueous environment will provide an
unprecedented view of transcription
through nucleosomal DNA. By
visualizing transcription steps, it is
possible to precisely follow in real time
the dynamics of events that accompany
transcription by RNAP II through the
nucleosome including spontaneous
DNA unwrapping from the core particle,
histone transfer, and histone
dissociation under different conditions
while determining the main factors that
regulate nucleosome stability/instability
during transcription. In addition to this
capability, the instrument will have the
time and spatial resolution to visualize
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
individual tubulin subunits as they
arrive at the microtubule end and will
complement cryo-EM studies at near
nanometer resolution on stabilized
intermediates in the assembly process.
The unique characteristics of this
instrument are the ability to capture
images at a rate of up to 15–20 frames
per second, reading scan rates as high as
25 frames per second, resonant
frequencies of 3.5 MHz in air and 1.2
MHz in water, spring constants of 0.2 N
m¥1, a quality factor in water of ∼2, and
a response time in water of ∼0.5
microseconds. Justification for DutyFree Entry: There are no instruments of
the same general category manufactured
in the United States. Application
accepted by Commissioner of Customs:
January 17, 2013.
Dated: January 25, 2013.
Gregory W. Campbell,
Director of Subsidies Enforcement, Import
Administration.
[FR Doc. 2013–02132 Filed 1–31–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
Initiation of Five-Year (‘‘Sunset’’)
Review
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: In accordance with section
751(c) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
amended (‘‘the Act’’), the Department of
Commerce (‘‘the Department’’) is
automatically initiating five-year
reviews (‘‘Sunset Reviews’’) of the
antidumping duty orders listed below.
The International Trade Commission
(‘‘the Commission’’) is publishing
concurrently with this notice its notice
of Institution of Five-Year Review which
covers the same orders.
DATES: Effective Date: February 1, 2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: The
Department official identified in the
Initiation of Review section below at
AD/CVD Operations, Import
Administration, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20230.
For information from the Commission
contact Mary Messer, Office of
Investigations, U.S. International Trade
Commission at (202) 205–3193.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
AGENCY:
Background
The Department’s procedures for the
conduct of Sunset Reviews are set forth
E:\FR\FM\01FEN1.SGM
01FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 22 (Friday, February 1, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Pages 7399-7400]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-02132]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
Application(s) for Duty-Free Entry of Scientific Instruments
Pursuant to Section 6(c) of the Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Materials Importation Act of 1966 (Pub. L. 89-651, as amended
by Pub. L. 106-36; 80 Stat. 897; 15 CFR part 301), we invite comments
on the question of whether instruments of equivalent scientific value,
for the purposes for which the instruments shown below are intended to
be used, are being manufactured in the United States.
Comments must comply with 15 CFR 301.5(a)(3) and (4) of the
regulations and be postmarked on or before February 21,
[[Page 7400]]
2013. Address written comments to Statutory Import Programs Staff, Room
3720, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington, DC 20230. Applications
may be examined between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. at the U.S. Department
of Commerce in Room 3720.
Docket Number: 12-064. Applicant: University of Pittsburgh, 4200
Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15260. Instrument: Dilution Refrigerator
with 18T Solenoid Superconducting Magnet. Manufacturer: Leiden
Cryogenics, the Netherlands. Intended Use: The instrument will be used
for three purposes: To develop ways for preserving quantum information
in a way that is immune to a wide variety of decoherence mechanisms by
using predicted topological properties of superconductors in two
dimensions, to program fundamental couplings at near-atomic scales and
quantum simulation of ``metasuperconductors'' by using the extreme
nanoscale precision with which the LaAIO3/SrTiO3
interface can be gated, and to develop new mechanisms for the transfer
of quantum information between long-lived localized states (nitrogen-
vacancy centers) and delocalized states (superconducting resonators).
The experiments will combine the unique local control capable with the
LaAIO3/SrTiO3 interface with the natural tendency
of SrTiO3 to become superconducting to develop
superconducting structures with vortices that will be manipulated to
achieve topologically protected quantum computation, as well as
electrostatic programming of the LaAIO3/SrTiO3
interface with V(x,y) to create new electronic states of matter which
themselves can become superconducting. The unique properties of this
instrument are the capability of cooling the sample below the
superconducting transition temperature (Tc~200mK), to apply large
magnetic fields (>18T) to investigate the large spin-orbit present in
these samples (Bso~15T), and the ability to orient the sample in any
orientation relative to the magnetic fields. Justification for Duty-
Free Entry: There are no instruments of the same general category
manufactured in the United States. Application accepted by Commissioner
of Customs: December 13, 2012.
Docket Number: 12-066. Applicant: University of Pittsburgh, 4200
Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15260. Instrument: mK Scanning Probe
Microscope. Manufacturer: Nanomagnetics, Turkey. Intended Use: The
instrument will be used for three purposes: To develop ways for
preserving quantum information in a way that is immune to a wide
variety of decoherence mechanisms, by using predicted topological
properties of superconductors in two dimensions, to program fundamental
couplings at near-atomic scales and quantum simulation of
``metasuperconductors'' by using the extreme nanoscale precision with
which the LaAIO3/SrTiO3 interface can be gated,
and to develop new mechanisms for the transfer of quantum information
between long-lived localized states (nitrogen-vacancy centers) and
delocalized states (superconducting resonators). The experiments will
combine the unique local control capable with the LaAIO3/
SrTiO3 interface with the natural tendency of
SrTiO3 to become superconducting to develop superconducting
structures with vortices that will be manipulated to achieve
topologically protected quantum computation, as well as electrostatic
programming of the LaAIO3/SrTiO3 interface with
V(x,y) to create new electronic states of matter which themselves can
become superconducting. The unique properties of this instrument are
the capability of scanning probe microscopy at base temperature
(T<50mK), and to locally (on nanometer scales) gate, modify, and probe
nanowire devices and quantum dot arrays. Justification for Duty-Free
Entry: There are no instruments of the same general category
manufactured in the United States. Application accepted by Commissioner
of Customs: December 13, 2012.
Docket Number: 13-002. Applicant: University of California,
Berkeley, Stanley Hall, Room B306, Berkeley, CA, 94720. Instrument:
High Speed Atomic Force Microscope (HSAFM). Manufacturer: Research
Institute of Biomolecule Metrology (RIBM), Japan. Intended Use: The
instrument will be used for a number of experiments including tracking
the enzymatic activity of an RNA II polymerase along its template, a
DNA gene, while synthesizing the messenger RNA. Having access to higher
scan rates in an aqueous environment will provide an unprecedented view
of transcription through nucleosomal DNA. By visualizing transcription
steps, it is possible to precisely follow in real time the dynamics of
events that accompany transcription by RNAP II through the nucleosome
including spontaneous DNA unwrapping from the core particle, histone
transfer, and histone dissociation under different conditions while
determining the main factors that regulate nucleosome stability/
instability during transcription. In addition to this capability, the
instrument will have the time and spatial resolution to visualize
individual tubulin subunits as they arrive at the microtubule end and
will complement cryo-EM studies at near nanometer resolution on
stabilized intermediates in the assembly process. The unique
characteristics of this instrument are the ability to capture images at
a rate of up to 15-20 frames per second, reading scan rates as high as
25 frames per second, resonant frequencies of 3.5 MHz in air and 1.2
MHz in water, spring constants of 0.2 N m-1, a quality
factor in water of ~2, and a response time in water of ~0.5
microseconds. Justification for Duty-Free Entry: There are no
instruments of the same general category manufactured in the United
States. Application accepted by Commissioner of Customs: January 17,
2013.
Dated: January 25, 2013.
Gregory W. Campbell,
Director of Subsidies Enforcement, Import Administration.
[FR Doc. 2013-02132 Filed 1-31-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P