Certain Pea Protein From the People's Republic of China: Preliminary Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, Preliminary Affirmative Critical Circumstances Determination, and Alignment of Final Determination With Final Antidumping Duty Determination, 87403-87406 [2023-27699]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 241 / Monday, December 18, 2023 / Notices
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entering either the title of the collection
or the OMB Control Number 0607–0110.
Sheleen Dumas,
Department PRA Clearance Officer, Office of
the Under Secretary for Economic Affairs,
Commerce Department.
[FR Doc. 2023–27729 Filed 12–15–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–07–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Foreign-Trade Zones Board
[B–49–2023]
Foreign-Trade Zone (FTZ) 81;
Authorization of Production Activity;
Millipore Corporation; (Beverage
Filtration and Purification Devices);
Jaffrey, New Hampshire
On August 15, 2023, Millipore
Corporation submitted a notification of
proposed production activity to the FTZ
Board for its facility within Subzone
81D, in Jaffrey, New Hampshire.
The notification was processed in
accordance with the regulations of the
FTZ Board (15 CFR part 400), including
notice in the Federal Register inviting
public comment (88 FR 56794, August
21, 2023). On December 13, 2023, the
applicant was notified of the FTZ
Board’s decision that no further review
of the activity is warranted at this time.
The production activity described in the
notification was authorized, subject to
the FTZ Act and the FTZ Board’s
regulations, including section 400.14.
Dated: December 13, 2023.
Elizabeth Whiteman,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–27743 Filed 12–15–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Foreign-Trade Zones Board
[B–63–2023]
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Foreign-Trade Zone (FTZ) 17,
Notification of Proposed Production
Activity; Panasonic Energy
Corporation of North America;
(Lithium-Ion Battery Cells); De Soto,
Kansas
Panasonic Energy Corporation of
North America submitted a notification
of proposed production activity to the
FTZ Board (the Board) for its facilities
in De Soto, Kansas within FTZ 17. The
notification conforming to the
requirements of the Board’s regulations
(15 CFR 400.22) was received on
December 11, 2023.
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Pursuant to 15 CFR 400.14(b), FTZ
production activity would be limited to
the specific foreign-status material(s)/
components and specific finished
product described in the submitted
notification (summarized below) and
subsequently authorized by the Board.
The benefits that may stem from
conducting production activity under
FTZ procedures are explained in the
background section of the Board’s
website—accessible via www.trade.gov/
ftz.
The proposed finished product is
finished lithium-ion battery cells (duty
rate is 3.4%).
The proposed foreign-status materials
and components include: graphite
components (natural; synthetic; natural
and synthetic blend); sealants; Nmethyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP); Nmethylpyrrolidone with carbon black
conductive agent; lithiated nickel oxide;
silicon monoxide; lithiated silicate;
silicon composite material;
poly(vinylidene fluoride) binder
(PVDF); polyacrylamide; sodium
carboxymethyl cellulose thickener;
polypropylene components (film with
acrylic adhesive tape; gaskets;
insulator); polyimide adhesive tape;
polyethylene separators; styrene
butadiene rubber latex; copper foil;
nickel clad copper negative tabs; and,
aluminum components (rolls; foil;
rupture discs; cathode tabs) (duty rate
ranges from duty-free to 6.5%).The
request indicates that some components
are subject to an antidumping/
countervailing duty (AD/CVD) order/
investigation if imported from certain
countries. The Board’s regulations (15
CFR 400.14(e)) require that merchandise
subject to AD/CVD orders, or items
which would be otherwise subject to
suspension of liquidation under AD/
CVD procedures if they entered U.S.
customs territory, be admitted to the
zone in privileged foreign (PF) status (19
CFR 146.41). The request also indicates
that certain materials/components are
subject to duties under section 232 of
the Trade Expansion Act of 1962
(section 232) or section 301 of the Trade
Act of 1974 (section 301), depending on
the country of origin. The applicable
section 232 and section 301 decisions
require subject merchandise to be
admitted to FTZs in PF status.
Public comment is invited from
interested parties. Submissions shall be
addressed to the Board’s Executive
Secretary and sent to: ftz@trade.gov. The
closing period for their receipt is
January 29, 2024.
A copy of the notification will be
available for public inspection in the
‘‘Online FTZ Information System’’
section of the Board’s website.
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87403
For further information, contact
Juanita Chen at juanita.chen@trade.gov.
Dated: December 12, 2023.
Juanita Chen,
Acting Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–27700 Filed 12–15–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[C–570–155]
Certain Pea Protein From the People’s
Republic of China: Preliminary
Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Determination, Preliminary Affirmative
Critical Circumstances Determination,
and Alignment of Final Determination
With Final Antidumping Duty
Determination
Enforcement and Compliance,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of
Commerce (Commerce) preliminarily
determines that countervailable
subsidies are being provided to
producers and exporters of certain pea
protein (pea protein) from the People’s
Republic of China (China) during the
period of investigation, January 1, 2022,
through December 31, 2022. Interested
parties are invited to comment on this
preliminary determination.
DATES: Applicable December 18, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kristen Johnson and Laura Griffth, AD/
CVD Operations, Office III, Enforcement
and Compliance, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 1401 Constitution Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20230; telephone:
(202) 482–4793 and (202) 482–6430,
respectively.
AGENCY:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This preliminary determination is
made in accordance with section 703(b)
of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended
(the Act). Commerce published the
notice of initiation of this investigation
on August 7, 2023.1 On September 8,
2023, Commerce postponed the
preliminary determination of this
investigation until December 11, 2023.2
1 See Certain Pea Protein from the People’s
Republic of China: Initiation of Countervailing Duty
Investigation, 88 FR 52116 (August 7, 2023)
(Initiation Notice).
2 See Certain Pea Protein from the People’s
Republic of China: Postponement of Preliminary
Determination in the Countervailing Duty
Investigation, 88 FR 62055 (September 8, 2023).
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For a complete description of the
events that followed the initiation of
this investigation, see the Preliminary
Decision Memorandum.3 A list of topics
discussed in the Preliminary Decision
Memorandum is included in Appendix
II of this notice. The Preliminary
Decision Memorandum is a public
document and is on file electronically
via Enforcement and Compliance’s
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Centralized Electronic Service System
(ACCESS). ACCESS is available to
registered users at https://
access.trade.gov. In addition, a complete
version of the Preliminary Decision
Memorandum can be accessed directly
at https://access.trade.gov/public/
FRNoticesListLayout.aspx.
Scope of the Investigation
The product covered by this
investigation is pea protein from China.
For a complete description of the scope
of this investigation, see Appendix I.
Scope Comments
In accordance with the preamble to
Commerce’s regulations,4 the Initiation
Notice set aside a period of time for
parties to raise issues regarding product
coverage (i.e., scope).5 Commerce
received timely filed comments from
interested parties on the scope of the
investigation as it appeared in the
Initiation Notice. Commerce intends to
issue its preliminary decision regarding
comments concerning the scope of the
antidumping duty (AD) and
countervailing duty (CVD)
investigations in the preliminary
determination of the companion AD
investigation, the deadline for which is
February 7, 2024.6 We will incorporate
the scope decision from the AD
investigation into the scope of the final
CVD determination for this investigation
after considering any relevant comments
submitted in case and rebuttal briefs.
Methodology
Commerce is conducting this
investigation in accordance with section
701 of the Act. For each of the subsidy
programs found countervailable,
Commerce preliminarily determines
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3 See
Memorandum, ‘‘Decision Memorandum for
the Preliminary Determination of the
Countervailing Duty Investigation of Certain Pea
Protein from the People’s Republic of China,’’ dated
concurrently with, and hereby adopted by, this
notice (Preliminary Decision Memorandum).
4 See Antidumping Duties; Countervailing Duties,
Final Rule, 62 FR 27296, 27323 (May 19, 1997).
5 See Initiation Notice, 88 FR at 52117.
6 See Certain Pea Protein from the People’s
Republic of China: Postponement of the Preliminary
Determination in the Less-Than-Fair-Value
Investigation, 88 FR 82831 (November 27, 2023)
(AD Postponement Notice).
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that there is a subsidy, i.e., a financial
contribution by an ‘‘authority’’ that
confers a benefit to the recipient, and
that the subsidy is specific.7 For a full
description of the methodology
underlying our preliminary conclusions,
see the Preliminary Decision
Memorandum.
Commerce notes that, in making the
preliminary findings, it relied, in part,
on facts available, and, because it finds
that one or more respondents did not act
to the best of their ability to respond to
Commerce’s requests for information, it
drew an adverse inference where
appropriate in selecting from among the
facts otherwise available.8 For further
information, see ‘‘Use of Facts
Otherwise Available and Adverse
Inferences’’ in the Preliminary Decision
Memorandum.
Preliminary Affirmative Determination
of Critical Circumstances
In accordance with section 703(e)(1)
of the Act, we preliminarily find that
critical circumstances exist with respect
to imports of subject merchandise for
Yantai Oriental Protein Tech Co., Ltd.
(Yantai Oriental), Zhaoyuan Junbang
Trading Co., Ltd. (Junbang), the nonresponsive companies,9 and all other
producers and/or exporters. For a full
discussion of our preliminary critical
circumstances determination, see the
‘‘Critical Circumstances’’ section of the
Preliminary Decision Memorandum.
Alignment
As noted in the Preliminary Decision
Memorandum, in accordance with
section 705(a)(1) of the Act and 19 CFR
351.210(b)(4)(i), Commerce is aligning
the final CVD determination in this
investigation with the final
determination in the companion AD
investigation of pea protein from China
based on a request made by PURIS
Proteins, LLC (the petitioner).10
Consequently, the final CVD
determination will be issued on the
same date as the final AD
determination, which is currently
scheduled no later than April 22, 2024,
unless postponed.11
7 See sections 771(5)(B) and (D) of the Act
regarding financial contribution; section 771(5)(E)
of the Act regarding benefit; and section 771(5A) of
the Act regarding specificity.
8 See sections 776(a) and (b) of the Act.
9 The non-responsive companies are: Focusherb
LLC, Golden Protein Limited, Shandong Jianyuan
Bioengineering Co., and Yantai Wanpy
International Trade.
10 See Petitioner’s Letter, ‘‘Petitioner’s Request to
Align Countervailing Duty Investigation Final
Determination with Antidumping Duty
Investigation Final Determination,’’ dated
November 14, 2023.
11 See AD Postponement Notice.
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All-Others Rate
Sections 703(d) and 705(c)(5)(A) of
the Act provide that in the preliminary
determination, Commerce shall
determine an estimated all-others rate
for companies not individually
examined. This rate shall be an amount
equal to the weighted average of the
estimated subsidy rates established for
those companies individually
examined, excluding any zero and de
minimis rates and any rates based
entirely under section 776 of the Act.
In this investigation, Commerce
calculated individual estimated
countervailable subsidy rates for
Junbang and Yantai Oriental that are not
zero, de minimis, or based entirely on
the facts otherwise available. Commerce
calculated the all-others rate using a
simple average of the individual
estimated subsidy rates calculated for
the examined respondents.12
Rate for Non-Responsive Companies
Four potential exporters and/or
producers of pea protein from China did
not respond to Commerce’s quantity and
value (Q&V) questionnaire.13 We find
that, by not responding to the Q&V
questionnaire, these companies
withheld requested information and
significantly impeded this proceeding.
Thus, in reaching our preliminary
determination, pursuant to sections
776(a)(2)(A) and (C) of the Act, we are
basing the CVD subsidy rate for these
four companies on facts otherwise
available.
We further preliminarily determine
that an adverse inference is warranted,
pursuant to section 776(b) of the Act. By
failing to submit responses to
Commerce’s Q&V Questionnaire, the
four companies did not cooperate to the
best of their ability in this investigation.
Accordingly, we preliminarily find that
an adverse inference is warranted to
ensure that the four companies will not
12 When two respondents are under examination,
Commerce normally calculates (A) a weightedaverage of the estimated subsidy rates calculated for
the examined respondents using each company’s
proprietary U.S. sale quantities for the merchandise
under consideration; (B) a simple average of the
estimated subsidy rates calculated for the examined
respondents; and (C) a weighted-average of the
estimated subsidy rates calculated for the examined
respondents using each company’s publicly-ranged
U.S. sale quantities for the merchandise under
consideration. Commerce then compares (B) and (C)
to (A) and selects the rate closest to (A) as the most
appropriate rate for all other producers and
exporters. See, e.g., Ball Bearings and Parts Thereof
from France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the United
Kingdom: Final Results of Antidumping Duty
Administrative Reviews, Final Results of ChangedCircumstances Review, and Revocation of an Order
in Part, 75 FR 53661, 53663 (September 1, 2010).
13 The four companies are Focusherb LLC, Golden
Protein Limited, Shandong Jianyuan Bioengineering
Co., and Yantai Wanpy International Trade.
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obtain a more favorable result than had
they fully complied with our request for
information. For more information on
the application of adverse facts available
to the non-responsive companies, see
‘‘Use of Facts Otherwise Available and
Adverse Inferences’’ in the Preliminary
Determination Memorandum.
Preliminary Determination
Commerce preliminarily determines
that the following estimated
countervailable subsidy rates exist:
Subsidy rate
(percent ad valorem)
Company
Yantai Oriental Protein Tech Co., Ltd.14 .............................................................................................................................
Zhaoyuan Junbang Trading Co., Ltd.15 ..............................................................................................................................
Focusherb LLC ....................................................................................................................................................................
Golden Protein Limited ........................................................................................................................................................
Shandong Jianyuan Bioengineering Co ..............................................................................................................................
Yantai Wanpy International Trade .......................................................................................................................................
All Others .............................................................................................................................................................................
Suspension of Liquidation
In accordance with section
703(e)(2)(A) of the Act, because we find
that critical circumstances exist for
Junbang, Yantai Oriental, the nonresponse companies, and all other
producers and/or exporters, Commerce
will direct U.S. Customs and Border
Protection (CBP) to suspend liquidation
of entries of subject merchandise as
described in the scope of the
investigation section entered, or
withdrawn from warehouse, for
consumption on or after the date 90
days prior to the date of publication of
this notice in the Federal Register.
Further, pursuant to 19 CFR 351.205(d),
Commerce will instruct CBP to require
a cash deposit equal to the rates
indicated above.
Disclosure
Commerce intends to disclose its
calculations and analysis performed to
interested parties in this preliminary
determination within five days of its
public announcement, or if there is no
public announcement, within five days
of the date of publication of this notice
in the Federal Register in accordance
with 19 CFR 351.224(b).
Verification
As provided in section 782(i)(1) of the
Act, Commerce intends to verify the
information relied upon in making its
final determination.
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Public Comment
All interested parties will have the
opportunity to submit scope case and
rebuttal briefs on the preliminary
decision regarding the scope of the AD
and CVD pea protein investigations. The
14 Commerce preliminary finds the following
companies to be cross-owned with Yantai Oriental:
Jiujiang Tiantai Food Co., Ltd.; Shandong Sanjia
Investment Holding Group Co., Ltd.; Yantai Yiyuan
Bioengineering Co., Ltd.; and Yantai Zhongzhen
Trading Co., Ltd.
15 Commerce preliminary finds Yantai Shuangta
Food Co. Ltd. to be cross-owned with Junbang.
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16.46
15.09
342.53
342.53
342.53
342.53
15.78
deadlines to submit scope case and
rebuttal briefs will be provided in the
preliminary scope decision
memorandum. For all scope case and
rebuttal briefs, parties must file
identical documents simultaneously on
the records of the AD and CVD pea
protein investigations. No new factual
information or business proprietary
information may be included in either
scope case or rebuttal briefs.
All interested parties will also have
the opportunity to submit case briefs or
other written comments on non-scope
issues within this CVD pea protein
investigation. Interested parties will be
notified of the timeline for the
submission of case briefs and written
comments at a later date. Rebuttal briefs,
limited to issues raised in the case
briefs, may be filed not later than five
days after the date for filing case
briefs.16 Interested parties who submit
case briefs or rebuttal briefs in this
proceeding must submit: (1) a table of
contents listing each issue; and (2) a
table of authorities.17 As provided under
19 CFR 351.309(c)(2) and (d)(2), in prior
proceedings we have encouraged
interested parties to provide an
executive summary of their brief that
should be limited to five pages total,
including footnotes. In this
investigation, we instead request that
interested parties provide at the
beginning of their briefs a public,
executive summary for each issue raised
in their briefs.18 Further, we request that
interested parties limit their executive
summary of each issue to no more than
450 words, not including citations. We
intend to use the executive summaries
as the basis of the comment summaries
included in the issues and decision
memorandum that will accompany the
final determination in this investigation.
We request that interested parties
include footnotes for relevant citations
in the executive summary of each issue.
Note that Commerce has amended
certain of its requirements pertaining to
the service of documents in 19 CFR
351.303(f).19
Pursuant to 19 CFR 351.310(c),
interested parties who wish to request a
hearing, limited to issues raised in the
case and rebuttal briefs, must submit a
written request to the Assistant
Secretary for Enforcement and
Compliance, U.S. Department of
Commerce, within 30 days after the date
of publication of this notice. Requests
should contain (1) the party’s name,
address, and telephone number; (2) the
number of participants and whether any
participant is a foreign national; and (3)
a list of the issues to be discussed. If a
request for a hearing is made, Commerce
intends to hold the hearing at a date,
time, and location to be determined.20
16 See 19 CFR 351.309(d); see also Administrative
Protective Order, Service, and Other Procedures in
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty Proceedings,
88 FR 67069, 67077 (September 29, 2023) (APO,
Service, and Other Procedures).
17 See 19 CFR 351.309(c)(2) and (d)(2).
18 We use the term ‘‘issue’’ here to describe an
argument that Commerce would normally address
in a comment of the Issues and Decision
Memorandum.
19 See APO, Service, and Other Procedures, 88 FR
at 67069.
20 See 19 CFR 351.310(d).
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U.S. International Trade Commission
(ITC) Notification
In accordance with section 703(f) of
the Act, Commerce will notify the ITC
of its determination. If Commerce’s final
determination is affirmative, the ITC
will determine before the later of 120
days after the date of this preliminary
determination or 45 days after the final
determination whether imports of pea
protein from China are materially
injuring, or threaten material injury to,
the U.S. industry.
Notification to Interested Parties
This determination is issued and
published pursuant to sections 703(f)
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and 777(i) of the Act and 19 CFR
351.205(c).
Dated: December 11, 2023.
Abdelali Elouaradia,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Enforcement
and Compliance.
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Appendix I
Scope of the Investigation
The product within the scope of this
investigation is high protein content (HPC)
pea protein, which is a protein derived from
peas (including, but not limited to, yellow
field peas and green field peas) and which
contains at least 65 percent protein on a dry
weight basis. HPC pea protein may also be
identified as, for example, pea protein
concentrate, pea protein isolate, hydrolyzed
pea protein, pea peptides, and fermented pea
protein. Pea protein, including HPC pea
protein, has the Chemical Abstracts Service
(CAS) registry number 222400–29–5.
The scope covers HPC pea protein in all
physical forms, including all liquid (e.g.,
solution) and solid (e.g., powder) forms,
regardless of packaging or the inclusion of
additives (e.g., flavoring, suspension agents,
preservatives).
The scope also includes HPC pea protein
described above that is blended, combined,
or mixed with non-subject pea protein or
with other ingredients (e.g., proteins derived
from other sources, fibers, carbohydrates,
sweeteners, and fats) to make products such
as protein powders, dry beverage blends, and
protein fortified beverages. For any such
blended, combined, or mixed products, only
the HPC pea protein component is covered
by the scope of this investigation. HPC pea
protein that has been blended, combined, or
mixed with other products is included
within the scope, regardless of whether the
blending, combining, or mixing occurs in
third countries.
HPC pea protein that is otherwise within
the scope is covered when commingled (i.e.,
blended, combined, or mixed) with HPC pea
protein from sources not subject to this
investigation. Only the subject component of
the commingled product is covered by the
scope.
A blend, combination, or mixture is
excluded from the scope if the total HPC pea
protein content of the blend, combination, or
mixture (regardless of the source or sources)
comprises less than five percent of the blend,
combination, or mixture on a dry weight
basis.
All products that meet the written physical
description are within the scope of the
investigation unless specifically excluded.
The following products, by way of example,
are outside and/or specifically excluded from
the scope of the investigation:
• burgers, snack bars, bakery products,
sugar and gum confectionary products, milk,
cheese, baby food, sauces and seasonings,
and pet food, even when such products are
made with HPC pea protein.
• HPC pea protein that has gone through
an extrusion process to alter the HPC pea
protein at the structural and functional level,
resulting in a product with a fibrous structure
which resembles muscle meat upon
hydration. These products are commonly
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described as textured pea protein or
texturized pea protein.
• HPC pea protein that has been further
processed to create a small crunchy nugget
commonly described as a pea protein crisp.
• protein derived from chickpeas.
The merchandise covered by the scope is
currently classified under Harmonized Tariff
Schedule of the United States (HTSUS)
categories 3504.00.1000, 3504.00.5000, and
2106.10.0000. Such merchandise may also
enter the U.S. market under HTSUS category
2308.00.9890. Although HTSUS categories
and the CAS registry number are provided for
convenience and customs purposes, the
written description of the scope of the
investigation is dispositive.
Appendix II
List of Topics Discussed in the Preliminary
Decision Memorandum
I. Summary
II. Background
III. Scope Comments
IV. Scope of the Investigation
V. Critical Circumstances
VI. Analysis of China’s Financial System
VII. Diversification of China’s Economy
VIII. Use of Facts Otherwise Available and
Adverse Inferences
IX. Subsidies Valuation
X. Benchmarks and Interest Rates
XI. Analysis of Programs
XII. Calculation of the All-Others Rate
XIII. Recommendation
[FR Doc. 2023–27699 Filed 12–15–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
Limitation of Duty-Free Imports of
Apparel Articles Assembled in Haiti
Under the Caribbean Basin Economic
Recovery Act (CBERA), as Amended
by the Haitian Hemispheric
Opportunity Through Partnership
Encouragement Act (HOPE)
International Trade
Administration, Department of
Commerce. ACTION: Notification of
annual quantitative limit on imports of
certain apparel from Haiti.
SUMMARY: CBERA, as amended,
provides duty-free treatment for certain
apparel articles imported directly from
Haiti. One of the preferences is known
as the ‘‘value-added’’ provision, which
requires that apparel meet a minimum
threshold percentage of value added in
Haiti, the United States, and/or certain
beneficiary countries. The provision is
subject to a quantitative limitation,
which is calculated as a percentage of
total apparel imports into the United
States for each 12-month period. For the
period from December 20, 2023 through
December 19, 2024, the quantity of
imports eligible for preferential
AGENCY:
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treatment under the value-added
provision is 313,655,640 square meters
equivalent.
DATES: The new limitations become
applicable December 20, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kayla Johnson, International Trade
Specialist, Office of Textiles and
Apparel, U.S. Department of Commerce,
(202) 482–2532.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority: Section 213A of the
Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act
(19 U.S.C. 2703a) (‘‘CBERA’’), as
amended; and as implemented by
Presidential Proc. No. 8114, 72 FR
13655 (March 22, 2007), and No. 8596,
75 FR 68153 (November 4, 2010).
Background: Section 213A(b)(1)(B) of
CBERA, as amended (19 U.S.C.
2703a(b)(1)(B)), outlines the
requirements for certain apparel articles
imported directly from Haiti to qualify
for duty-free treatment under a ‘‘valueadded’’ provision. In order to qualify for
duty-free treatment, apparel articles
must be wholly assembled, or knit-toshape, in Haiti from any combination of
fabrics, fabric components, components
knit-to-shape, and yarns, as long as the
sum of the cost or value of materials
produced in Haiti or one or more
beneficiary countries, as described in
CBERA, as amended, or any
combination thereof, plus the direct
costs of processing operations
performed in Haiti or one or more
beneficiary countries, as described in
CBERA, as amended, or any
combination thereof, is not less than an
applicable percentage of the declared
customs value of such apparel articles.
Pursuant to CBERA, as amended, the
applicable percentage for the period
December 20, 2023 through December
19, 2024, is 60 percent.
For every twelve-month period
following the effective date of CBERA,
as amended, duty-free treatment under
the value-added provision is subject to
a quantitative limitation. CBERA, as
amended, provides that the quantitative
limitation will be recalculated for each
subsequent 12-month period. Section
213A(b)(1)(C) of CBERA, as amended
(19 U.S.C. 2703a(b)(1)(C)), requires that,
for the twelve-month period beginning
on December 20, 2023, the quantitative
limitation for qualifying apparel
imported from Haiti under the valueadded provision will be an amount
equivalent to 1.25 percent of the
aggregate square meter equivalent of all
apparel articles imported into the
United States in the most recent 12month period for which data are
available. The aggregate square meters
equivalent of all apparel articles
E:\FR\FM\18DEN1.SGM
18DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 241 (Monday, December 18, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 87403-87406]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-27699]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[C-570-155]
Certain Pea Protein From the People's Republic of China:
Preliminary Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, Preliminary
Affirmative Critical Circumstances Determination, and Alignment of
Final Determination With Final Antidumping Duty Determination
AGENCY: Enforcement and Compliance, International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Commerce (Commerce) preliminarily
determines that countervailable subsidies are being provided to
producers and exporters of certain pea protein (pea protein) from the
People's Republic of China (China) during the period of investigation,
January 1, 2022, through December 31, 2022. Interested parties are
invited to comment on this preliminary determination.
DATES: Applicable December 18, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kristen Johnson and Laura Griffth, AD/
CVD Operations, Office III, Enforcement and Compliance, International
Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1401 Constitution
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20230; telephone: (202) 482-4793 and (202)
482-6430, respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This preliminary determination is made in accordance with section
703(b) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (the Act). Commerce
published the notice of initiation of this investigation on August 7,
2023.\1\ On September 8, 2023, Commerce postponed the preliminary
determination of this investigation until December 11, 2023.\2\
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\1\ See Certain Pea Protein from the People's Republic of China:
Initiation of Countervailing Duty Investigation, 88 FR 52116 (August
7, 2023) (Initiation Notice).
\2\ See Certain Pea Protein from the People's Republic of China:
Postponement of Preliminary Determination in the Countervailing Duty
Investigation, 88 FR 62055 (September 8, 2023).
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[[Page 87404]]
For a complete description of the events that followed the
initiation of this investigation, see the Preliminary Decision
Memorandum.\3\ A list of topics discussed in the Preliminary Decision
Memorandum is included in Appendix II of this notice. The Preliminary
Decision Memorandum is a public document and is on file electronically
via Enforcement and Compliance's Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Centralized Electronic Service System (ACCESS). ACCESS is available to
registered users at https://access.trade.gov. In addition, a complete
version of the Preliminary Decision Memorandum can be accessed directly
at https://access.trade.gov/public/FRNoticesListLayout.aspx.
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\3\ See Memorandum, ``Decision Memorandum for the Preliminary
Determination of the Countervailing Duty Investigation of Certain
Pea Protein from the People's Republic of China,'' dated
concurrently with, and hereby adopted by, this notice (Preliminary
Decision Memorandum).
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Scope of the Investigation
The product covered by this investigation is pea protein from
China. For a complete description of the scope of this investigation,
see Appendix I.
Scope Comments
In accordance with the preamble to Commerce's regulations,\4\ the
Initiation Notice set aside a period of time for parties to raise
issues regarding product coverage (i.e., scope).\5\ Commerce received
timely filed comments from interested parties on the scope of the
investigation as it appeared in the Initiation Notice. Commerce intends
to issue its preliminary decision regarding comments concerning the
scope of the antidumping duty (AD) and countervailing duty (CVD)
investigations in the preliminary determination of the companion AD
investigation, the deadline for which is February 7, 2024.\6\ We will
incorporate the scope decision from the AD investigation into the scope
of the final CVD determination for this investigation after considering
any relevant comments submitted in case and rebuttal briefs.
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\4\ See Antidumping Duties; Countervailing Duties, Final Rule,
62 FR 27296, 27323 (May 19, 1997).
\5\ See Initiation Notice, 88 FR at 52117.
\6\ See Certain Pea Protein from the People's Republic of China:
Postponement of the Preliminary Determination in the Less-Than-Fair-
Value Investigation, 88 FR 82831 (November 27, 2023) (AD
Postponement Notice).
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Methodology
Commerce is conducting this investigation in accordance with
section 701 of the Act. For each of the subsidy programs found
countervailable, Commerce preliminarily determines that there is a
subsidy, i.e., a financial contribution by an ``authority'' that
confers a benefit to the recipient, and that the subsidy is
specific.\7\ For a full description of the methodology underlying our
preliminary conclusions, see the Preliminary Decision Memorandum.
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\7\ See sections 771(5)(B) and (D) of the Act regarding
financial contribution; section 771(5)(E) of the Act regarding
benefit; and section 771(5A) of the Act regarding specificity.
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Commerce notes that, in making the preliminary findings, it relied,
in part, on facts available, and, because it finds that one or more
respondents did not act to the best of their ability to respond to
Commerce's requests for information, it drew an adverse inference where
appropriate in selecting from among the facts otherwise available.\8\
For further information, see ``Use of Facts Otherwise Available and
Adverse Inferences'' in the Preliminary Decision Memorandum.
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\8\ See sections 776(a) and (b) of the Act.
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Preliminary Affirmative Determination of Critical Circumstances
In accordance with section 703(e)(1) of the Act, we preliminarily
find that critical circumstances exist with respect to imports of
subject merchandise for Yantai Oriental Protein Tech Co., Ltd. (Yantai
Oriental), Zhaoyuan Junbang Trading Co., Ltd. (Junbang), the non-
responsive companies,\9\ and all other producers and/or exporters. For
a full discussion of our preliminary critical circumstances
determination, see the ``Critical Circumstances'' section of the
Preliminary Decision Memorandum.
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\9\ The non-responsive companies are: Focusherb LLC, Golden
Protein Limited, Shandong Jianyuan Bioengineering Co., and Yantai
Wanpy International Trade.
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Alignment
As noted in the Preliminary Decision Memorandum, in accordance with
section 705(a)(1) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.210(b)(4)(i), Commerce is
aligning the final CVD determination in this investigation with the
final determination in the companion AD investigation of pea protein
from China based on a request made by PURIS Proteins, LLC (the
petitioner).\10\ Consequently, the final CVD determination will be
issued on the same date as the final AD determination, which is
currently scheduled no later than April 22, 2024, unless postponed.\11\
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\10\ See Petitioner's Letter, ``Petitioner's Request to Align
Countervailing Duty Investigation Final Determination with
Antidumping Duty Investigation Final Determination,'' dated November
14, 2023.
\11\ See AD Postponement Notice.
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All-Others Rate
Sections 703(d) and 705(c)(5)(A) of the Act provide that in the
preliminary determination, Commerce shall determine an estimated all-
others rate for companies not individually examined. This rate shall be
an amount equal to the weighted average of the estimated subsidy rates
established for those companies individually examined, excluding any
zero and de minimis rates and any rates based entirely under section
776 of the Act.
In this investigation, Commerce calculated individual estimated
countervailable subsidy rates for Junbang and Yantai Oriental that are
not zero, de minimis, or based entirely on the facts otherwise
available. Commerce calculated the all-others rate using a simple
average of the individual estimated subsidy rates calculated for the
examined respondents.\12\
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\12\ When two respondents are under examination, Commerce
normally calculates (A) a weighted-average of the estimated subsidy
rates calculated for the examined respondents using each company's
proprietary U.S. sale quantities for the merchandise under
consideration; (B) a simple average of the estimated subsidy rates
calculated for the examined respondents; and (C) a weighted-average
of the estimated subsidy rates calculated for the examined
respondents using each company's publicly-ranged U.S. sale
quantities for the merchandise under consideration. Commerce then
compares (B) and (C) to (A) and selects the rate closest to (A) as
the most appropriate rate for all other producers and exporters.
See, e.g., Ball Bearings and Parts Thereof from France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, and the United Kingdom: Final Results of Antidumping
Duty Administrative Reviews, Final Results of Changed-Circumstances
Review, and Revocation of an Order in Part, 75 FR 53661, 53663
(September 1, 2010).
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Rate for Non-Responsive Companies
Four potential exporters and/or producers of pea protein from China
did not respond to Commerce's quantity and value (Q&V)
questionnaire.\13\ We find that, by not responding to the Q&V
questionnaire, these companies withheld requested information and
significantly impeded this proceeding. Thus, in reaching our
preliminary determination, pursuant to sections 776(a)(2)(A) and (C) of
the Act, we are basing the CVD subsidy rate for these four companies on
facts otherwise available.
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\13\ The four companies are Focusherb LLC, Golden Protein
Limited, Shandong Jianyuan Bioengineering Co., and Yantai Wanpy
International Trade.
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We further preliminarily determine that an adverse inference is
warranted, pursuant to section 776(b) of the Act. By failing to submit
responses to Commerce's Q&V Questionnaire, the four companies did not
cooperate to the best of their ability in this investigation.
Accordingly, we preliminarily find that an adverse inference is
warranted to ensure that the four companies will not
[[Page 87405]]
obtain a more favorable result than had they fully complied with our
request for information. For more information on the application of
adverse facts available to the non-responsive companies, see ``Use of
Facts Otherwise Available and Adverse Inferences'' in the Preliminary
Determination Memorandum.
Preliminary Determination
Commerce preliminarily determines that the following estimated
countervailable subsidy rates exist:
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\14\ Commerce preliminary finds the following companies to be
cross-owned with Yantai Oriental: Jiujiang Tiantai Food Co., Ltd.;
Shandong Sanjia Investment Holding Group Co., Ltd.; Yantai Yiyuan
Bioengineering Co., Ltd.; and Yantai Zhongzhen Trading Co., Ltd.
\15\ Commerce preliminary finds Yantai Shuangta Food Co. Ltd. to
be cross-owned with Junbang.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subsidy rate (percent
Company ad valorem)
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Yantai Oriental Protein Tech Co., Ltd.\14\..... 16.46
Zhaoyuan Junbang Trading Co., Ltd.\15\......... 15.09
Focusherb LLC.................................. 342.53
Golden Protein Limited......................... 342.53
Shandong Jianyuan Bioengineering Co............ 342.53
Yantai Wanpy International Trade............... 342.53
All Others..................................... 15.78
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Suspension of Liquidation
In accordance with section 703(e)(2)(A) of the Act, because we find
that critical circumstances exist for Junbang, Yantai Oriental, the
non-response companies, and all other producers and/or exporters,
Commerce will direct U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to
suspend liquidation of entries of subject merchandise as described in
the scope of the investigation section entered, or withdrawn from
warehouse, for consumption on or after the date 90 days prior to the
date of publication of this notice in the Federal Register. Further,
pursuant to 19 CFR 351.205(d), Commerce will instruct CBP to require a
cash deposit equal to the rates indicated above.
Disclosure
Commerce intends to disclose its calculations and analysis
performed to interested parties in this preliminary determination
within five days of its public announcement, or if there is no public
announcement, within five days of the date of publication of this
notice in the Federal Register in accordance with 19 CFR 351.224(b).
Verification
As provided in section 782(i)(1) of the Act, Commerce intends to
verify the information relied upon in making its final determination.
Public Comment
All interested parties will have the opportunity to submit scope
case and rebuttal briefs on the preliminary decision regarding the
scope of the AD and CVD pea protein investigations. The deadlines to
submit scope case and rebuttal briefs will be provided in the
preliminary scope decision memorandum. For all scope case and rebuttal
briefs, parties must file identical documents simultaneously on the
records of the AD and CVD pea protein investigations. No new factual
information or business proprietary information may be included in
either scope case or rebuttal briefs.
All interested parties will also have the opportunity to submit
case briefs or other written comments on non-scope issues within this
CVD pea protein investigation. Interested parties will be notified of
the timeline for the submission of case briefs and written comments at
a later date. Rebuttal briefs, limited to issues raised in the case
briefs, may be filed not later than five days after the date for filing
case briefs.\16\ Interested parties who submit case briefs or rebuttal
briefs in this proceeding must submit: (1) a table of contents listing
each issue; and (2) a table of authorities.\17\ As provided under 19
CFR 351.309(c)(2) and (d)(2), in prior proceedings we have encouraged
interested parties to provide an executive summary of their brief that
should be limited to five pages total, including footnotes. In this
investigation, we instead request that interested parties provide at
the beginning of their briefs a public, executive summary for each
issue raised in their briefs.\18\ Further, we request that interested
parties limit their executive summary of each issue to no more than 450
words, not including citations. We intend to use the executive
summaries as the basis of the comment summaries included in the issues
and decision memorandum that will accompany the final determination in
this investigation. We request that interested parties include
footnotes for relevant citations in the executive summary of each
issue. Note that Commerce has amended certain of its requirements
pertaining to the service of documents in 19 CFR 351.303(f).\19\
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\16\ See 19 CFR 351.309(d); see also Administrative Protective
Order, Service, and Other Procedures in Antidumping and
Countervailing Duty Proceedings, 88 FR 67069, 67077 (September 29,
2023) (APO, Service, and Other Procedures).
\17\ See 19 CFR 351.309(c)(2) and (d)(2).
\18\ We use the term ``issue'' here to describe an argument that
Commerce would normally address in a comment of the Issues and
Decision Memorandum.
\19\ See APO, Service, and Other Procedures, 88 FR at 67069.
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Pursuant to 19 CFR 351.310(c), interested parties who wish to
request a hearing, limited to issues raised in the case and rebuttal
briefs, must submit a written request to the Assistant Secretary for
Enforcement and Compliance, U.S. Department of Commerce, within 30 days
after the date of publication of this notice. Requests should contain
(1) the party's name, address, and telephone number; (2) the number of
participants and whether any participant is a foreign national; and (3)
a list of the issues to be discussed. If a request for a hearing is
made, Commerce intends to hold the hearing at a date, time, and
location to be determined.\20\
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\20\ See 19 CFR 351.310(d).
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U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) Notification
In accordance with section 703(f) of the Act, Commerce will notify
the ITC of its determination. If Commerce's final determination is
affirmative, the ITC will determine before the later of 120 days after
the date of this preliminary determination or 45 days after the final
determination whether imports of pea protein from China are materially
injuring, or threaten material injury to, the U.S. industry.
Notification to Interested Parties
This determination is issued and published pursuant to sections
703(f)
[[Page 87406]]
and 777(i) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.205(c).
Dated: December 11, 2023.
Abdelali Elouaradia,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Enforcement and Compliance.
Appendix I
Scope of the Investigation
The product within the scope of this investigation is high
protein content (HPC) pea protein, which is a protein derived from
peas (including, but not limited to, yellow field peas and green
field peas) and which contains at least 65 percent protein on a dry
weight basis. HPC pea protein may also be identified as, for
example, pea protein concentrate, pea protein isolate, hydrolyzed
pea protein, pea peptides, and fermented pea protein. Pea protein,
including HPC pea protein, has the Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS)
registry number 222400-29-5.
The scope covers HPC pea protein in all physical forms,
including all liquid (e.g., solution) and solid (e.g., powder)
forms, regardless of packaging or the inclusion of additives (e.g.,
flavoring, suspension agents, preservatives).
The scope also includes HPC pea protein described above that is
blended, combined, or mixed with non-subject pea protein or with
other ingredients (e.g., proteins derived from other sources,
fibers, carbohydrates, sweeteners, and fats) to make products such
as protein powders, dry beverage blends, and protein fortified
beverages. For any such blended, combined, or mixed products, only
the HPC pea protein component is covered by the scope of this
investigation. HPC pea protein that has been blended, combined, or
mixed with other products is included within the scope, regardless
of whether the blending, combining, or mixing occurs in third
countries.
HPC pea protein that is otherwise within the scope is covered
when commingled (i.e., blended, combined, or mixed) with HPC pea
protein from sources not subject to this investigation. Only the
subject component of the commingled product is covered by the scope.
A blend, combination, or mixture is excluded from the scope if
the total HPC pea protein content of the blend, combination, or
mixture (regardless of the source or sources) comprises less than
five percent of the blend, combination, or mixture on a dry weight
basis.
All products that meet the written physical description are
within the scope of the investigation unless specifically excluded.
The following products, by way of example, are outside and/or
specifically excluded from the scope of the investigation:
burgers, snack bars, bakery products, sugar and gum
confectionary products, milk, cheese, baby food, sauces and
seasonings, and pet food, even when such products are made with HPC
pea protein.
HPC pea protein that has gone through an extrusion
process to alter the HPC pea protein at the structural and
functional level, resulting in a product with a fibrous structure
which resembles muscle meat upon hydration. These products are
commonly described as textured pea protein or texturized pea
protein.
HPC pea protein that has been further processed to
create a small crunchy nugget commonly described as a pea protein
crisp.
protein derived from chickpeas.
The merchandise covered by the scope is currently classified
under Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS)
categories 3504.00.1000, 3504.00.5000, and 2106.10.0000. Such
merchandise may also enter the U.S. market under HTSUS category
2308.00.9890. Although HTSUS categories and the CAS registry number
are provided for convenience and customs purposes, the written
description of the scope of the investigation is dispositive.
Appendix II
List of Topics Discussed in the Preliminary Decision Memorandum
I. Summary
II. Background
III. Scope Comments
IV. Scope of the Investigation
V. Critical Circumstances
VI. Analysis of China's Financial System
VII. Diversification of China's Economy
VIII. Use of Facts Otherwise Available and Adverse Inferences
IX. Subsidies Valuation
X. Benchmarks and Interest Rates
XI. Analysis of Programs
XII. Calculation of the All-Others Rate
XIII. Recommendation
[FR Doc. 2023-27699 Filed 12-15-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P