OPINION
With the lion’s share of issues resolved in five earlier opinions, the U.S. International Trade Commission’s (“the Commission”) second sunset review of antidump-ing duty orders covering ball bearings from France, Germany, Italy, and Japan now pays the court a final visit before it assuredly heads to the Federal Circuit. 1 Views of the Commission on Remand, Inv. Nos. 731-TA-394-A, 731-TA-399-A (Mar. 1, 2011) (“Fourth Remand Determination ”). In the latest remand results, the agency found that subject imports would likely not have a significant adverse impact or cause injury to the domestic industry in the absence of the antidumping duty orders. 2 Fourth Remand Determination at 15-17. Although the Commission continues to mischaracterize the court’s remand instructions and to mistakenly insist that the court compelled this result, see infra p. 1298 and note 4, the court nevertheless sustains the agency’s findings for the reasons below.
*1298 I. Standard of Review
The Court will hold as unlawful any Commission determination “unsupported by substantial evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(l)(B)(i).
II. Discussion
In the final two pages of the Fourth Remand Determination, after providing a thorough procedural history and stating its intention not to reopen the record, 3 the Commission reasoned that subject imports from Japan “are not likely to have a significant [adverse] impact on the industry upon revocation.” Fourth Remand Determination at 16. The agency in turn found that subject imports from Japan likely will not “lead to continuation or recurrence of material injury to a domestic industry” absent the orders. Id. at 17. As a result, the Commission could not offer substantial evidence to warrant the continued application of antidumping duties on imports of the subject merchandise from Japan. 4
The remaining parties supplied numerous comments on the Commission’s
Fourth Remand Determination.
Plaintiffs NSK . Corporation, NSK Ltd., and NSK Europe Ltd. (“NSK”) urge the court to sustain the agency finding and to order Defendant to revoke the antidumping duty orders on ball bearings from Japan and the United Kingdom, and terminate the collection of antidumping duty cash deposits on those imports. NSK Comments 2-11. Plaintiffs JTEKT Corporation and Koyo Corporation of U.S.A. (together, “JTEKT”) echo these sentiments. JTEKT Comments 5-10. Another group of comments, filed by Plaintiff-Intervenors FAG Italia S.p.A., Schaeffler Group USA, Inc., Schaeffler KG, The Barden Corporation (U.K.) Ltd., and the Barden Corporation (“Schaeffler”) and Plaintiff-Intervenors SKF USA Inc. and SKF Aeroengine Bearings UK (“SKF”), advance the following claims; ambiguous language in NSK’s complaints
*1299
unambiguously demonstrates that the anti-dumping duty orders on ball bearings from France, Germany, and Italy remain subject to review in this proceeding; the Commission must reconsider its injury determinations for those orders; and that, by declining to de-cumulate Japanese imports from other ball bearings, the agency made a single injury determination applicable to the remaining antidumping duty orders on imports from France, Germany, and Italy.
5
Schaeffler Comments 2-11; SKF Comments 4-11. Finally, Defendant-Intervenor The Timken Company (“Timken”) points to a bevy of record evidence on non-subject imports and effectively asks the court impermissibly to step into the shoes of the Commission and re-weigh the facts on its own accord, cure certain substantial evidence defects by judicial fiat, and remand the proceeding anew so that the agency may enter an affirmative injury determination.
Compare
Timken Comments 4-28,
with Nippon Steel Corp. v. Int’l Trade Comm’n,
The court sustains the Commission’s determination. That the court may have limited the Commission’s options on remand is of no moment; “[ejven though a reviewing court’s decision that substantial evidence does not support a particular finding may have the practical effect of dictating a particular outcome, that is not the same as the court’s making its own factual finding.”
Nucor Corp. v. United States,
Finally, the court declines to grant NSK and JTEKT’s request for relief at this time. To succeed in their claim, NSK and JTEKT would need to prove the following four factors: “(1) the threat of immediate irreparable harm; (2) the likelihood of success on the merits; (3) [that] the public interest would be better served by the relief requested; and (4) [that] the balance of hardship on all the parties favors plaintiffs.”
GPX Int’l Tire Corp. v. United States,
32 CIT -, -,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the court hereby
ORDERS that the Commission’s negative determinations on likely significant adverse impact and causation are SUSTAINED; and further
ORDERS that the agency’s administrative conclusions in the Fourth Remand Determination are SUSTAINED.
The court shall enter judgment accordingly.
Notes
. The court presumes familiarity with the procedural history of the case.
See NSK Corp. v. United States,
. In
NSK V,
the court did not believe "that the existing record, taken as a whole” could support an affirmative determination on these remaining questions and, consequently, invited the Commission to reopen the record at its discretion.
. The Commission contends that the court, on several previously resolved issues, did not specifically identify deficiencies with the record or suggest data that the agency might seek to collect on remand.
See, e.g., Fourth Remand Determination
at 9 n. 39, 14. However, the court’s previous opinions belies the Commission's claim.
See, e.g., NSK V,
. The Commission makes clear that it would not have made these findings but for the court’s conclusion in
NSK V
that the record taken as a whole "cannot establish that the cumulated subject imports from France, Germany, Italy, and Japan would have a significant adverse impact on the domestic bearings industry in the event of revocation of the orders.”
Fourth Remand Determination
at 17;
accord NSK V,
. With these arguments, Schaeffler and SKF once again attempt to inject legal issues related to ball bearings from France, Germany, and Italy into the proceeding. The court previously declined to enlarge the litigation to cover these questions,
NSK Corp.
v.
United States, 32
CIT -, -,
