TMK IPSCO, et al., Plaintiffs and Consolidated Plaintiffs, and Maverick Tube Corporation, et al., Plaintiff-Intervenors and Consolidated Plaintiff-Intervenors, v. UNITED STATES, Defendant, and Tianjin Pipe (Group) Corp. and Tianjin Pipe International Economic & Trading Corp., Defendant-Intervenors and Consolidated Defendant-Intervenors.
Consol. Court No. 10-00055
United States Court of International Trade
May 3, 2017
Slip Op. 17-54
Kelly, Judge
Plaintiffs make a “legal” argument that Commerce‘s use of the relatively small set of CHEMK‘s factoring arrangements to derive the weighted-average short term rate violates Commerce‘s interest rate selection practice because Commerce failed to use all of CHEMK‘s factoring arrangements during the POI. Plaintiffs instead prefer that Commerce use ruble-denominated rates from published sources that were used in the preliminary determination.
Plaintiffs misunderstand Commerce‘s practice. As noted above, Commerce attempts to select an interest rate that is “reflective of” all short-term borrowings. In this case CHEMK‘s complete short-term borrowing data was (for a variety of non-nefarious reasons) not on the record. Properly framed, the issue is simply which of the two proposed rates best reflects CHEMK‘s short-term borrowing. A reasonable mind could choose a rate derived from CHEMK‘s verified data as being more reflective of CHEMK‘s borrowing experience than a rate derived from published rates with no connection to CHEMK. Accordingly, Commerce‘s short-term borrowing rate selection is sustained.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Remand Results are sustained. Judgment will enter accordingly.
Alan Hayden Price and Robert Edward DeFrancesco, III, Wiley Rein, LLP, of Washington, DC, for consolidated plaintiff and consolidated plaintiff-intervenor Maverick Tube Corporation.
Debbie Leilani Shon, Jon David Corey, Jonathan Gordon Cooper, and Kelsey Marie Rule, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP, of Washington, DC, for consolidated plaintiff and consolidated plaintiff-intervenor United States Steel Corporation.
Loren Misha Preheim, Assistant Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Division, Commercial Litigation Branch, of Washington, DC. for defendant. With him on the brief were Chad A. Readler, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Jeanne E. Davidson, Director, and Claudia Burke, Assistant Director. Of counsel on the brief was Shelby Mitchell Anderson, Attorney, U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of the Chief Counsel for Trade Enforcement & Compliance, of Washington, DC.
Daniel Lewis Porter, William Henry Barringer, and Matthew Paul McCullough, Curtis Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle LLP, of Washington, DC, for defendant-intervenors and consolidated defendant-intervenors.
OPINION
Kelly, Judge:
Before the court for review is the U.S. Department of Commerce‘s (“Department” or “Commerce“) Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand filed pursuant to the court‘s decision in TMK IPSCO v. United States, 40 CIT —, 179 F.Supp.3d 1328 (2016). See Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand, Dec. 21, 2016, ECF No. 171 (“Remand Results“). The court remanded Commerce‘s final determination in its countervailing duty (“CVD“) investigation of certain oil country tubular goods (“OCTG“) from the People‘s Republic of China (“China“) to explain or reconsider its determinations: (1) to use China‘s World Trade Organization (“WTO“) accession date as a cut-off for identifying and measuring countervailable subsidies; (2) to include two disparate freight rates in Commerce‘s benchmark price for the benefit conferred by the provision of steel rounds for less than adequate remuneration (“LTAR“) as representative of what an importer would pay; (3) to attribute subsidies received by Changbao Precision Steel Tube Co., Ltd. (“Precision“) to its parent company Jiangsu Changbao Steel Tube Co., Ltd. (“Changbao“) and to all of Changbao‘s other subsidiaries; (4) to attribute subsidies received by four subsidiaries of Tianjin Pipe (Group) Corp. (“TPCO“) to sales of other subsidiaries of TPCO; (5) that the provision of steel rounds and billets at LTAR is tied to sales of seamless steel pipe; and (6) to include the Steel Business Briefing (“SBB“) “East Asia” benchmark data for billets in the benchmark calculation for the provision of steel rounds and billets. See TMK IPSCO, 40 CIT at —, 179 F.Supp.3d at 1335; see generally Certain Oil Country Tubular Goods From the People‘s Republic of China, 74 Fed. Reg. 64,045 (Dep‘t Commerce Dec. 7, 2009) (final affirmative countervailing duty determination, final negative critical circumstances determination) (“Final Results“) and accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum for the Final Determination in the Countervailing Duty Investigation of Certain Oil Country Tubular Goods (“OCTG“) from the People‘s Republic of China, PD 318 (Nov. 23, 2009) (“Final Decision Memo“).1 Commerce‘s Remand Results adequately address the concerns raised in the court‘s prior decision, and Commerce‘s revised results are supported by substantial evidence. Therefore, the Remand Results are sustained.
BACKGROUND
The court presumes familiarity with the facts as discussed in TMK IPSCO. Never-
investigate each subsidy program and allocate subsidies beginning on the first date it could identify and measure the subsidy considering the particular program in question and the impact of relevant economic reforms on that program.
TMK IPSCO, 40 CIT at —, 179 F.Supp.3d at 1344.
Second, Commerce included ocean freight quotes from both Maersk and an unaffiliated freight forwarder used by mandatory respondent Zhejiang Jianli Enterprise Co., Ltd. (“Jianli“) to generate an average price for ocean freight in calculating its world market price benchmark to measure the adequacy of remuneration for steel rounds provided to Jianli in its final determination. See Final Decision Memo at 84. The court remanded the issue to Commerce to reconsider or further explain its decision to use an average of these two freight quotes because Commerce had inadequately explained how both quotes could be representative given the significant disparity between them. See TMK IPSCO, 40 CIT at —, 179 F.Supp.3d at 1350-51.
Third, Commerce included monthly export pricing data for billets from SBB “East Asia” among the data included in its benchmark calculation for determining the adequacy of remuneration of the provision of steel rounds and billets in its final determination. See Final Decision Memo at 77. The court granted Commerce‘s request for a remand to allow it to reconsider its determination to include the SBB “East Asia” series pricing data in its benchmark calculation. See TMK IPSCO, 40 CIT at —, 179 F.Supp.3d at 1347.
Fourth, Commerce attributed subsidies received by Precision to Changbao, Precision‘s parent company, and to all of Changbao‘s other subsidiaries. See Final Decision Memo at 8. Commerce likewise attributed or cumulated subsidies received by four of TPCO‘s subsidiaries to the consolidated sales of TPCO and all of its subsidiaries. See Final Decision Memo at 9 (citing Certain Oil Country Tubular Goods From the People‘s Republic of China, 74 Fed. Reg. 47,210, 47,215 (Dep‘t Commerce Sept. 15, 2009) (preliminary affirmative countervailing duty determination, prelimi-
Lastly, in its final determination, Commerce attributed the provision of steel rounds to TPCO‘s consolidated sales of all merchandise, not just to its sales of seamless steel pipe products. See Final Decision Memo 128-29. The court held that Commerce‘s attribution decision is not supported by substantial evidence because the court could not “discern whether Commerce determined that the provision of steel rounds at LTAR is tied to sales of seamless pipe.” TMK IPSCO, 40 CIT at —, 179 F.Supp.3d at 1359. The court remanded Commerce‘s determination to determine whether its tying regulation applies to TPCO and support its determination with record evidence. See id.
In its remand determination Commerce makes the following determinations. Under protest, Commerce no longer adopts China‘s WTO accession date as a uniform date when subsidy programs were identifiable and measurable in China.4 See Remand Results 11. Instead, Commerce identified four categories of programs alleged in the petition to assess when “a sufficiently developed legal framework relevant” to each existed such that Commerce could appropriately evaluate whether a subsidy had been bestowed. See Remand Results 11, 13-19. Commerce applies the benefit conferred on the earliest date when the government bestowal was identifiable or measurable. See id. at 31-35. Commerce continues to use the ocean freight quotes provided by Maersk and by Jianli‘s freight forwarder. See id. at 42. Commerce reverses its prior conclusion regarding the attribution of subsidies received by TPCO‘s and Changbao‘s subsidiaries. See id. at 38-39. Commerce maintains its determination to attribute steel rounds and billets provided at LTAR program to TPCO‘s applicable total sales and not solely to sales of seamless steel pipe. See id. at 46. Finally, Commerce excludes the SBB East Asia pricing data from its benchmark calculation for steel rounds. See id. at 48.
Commerce‘s changes in approach resulted in revised subsidy rates for all mandatory respondents and for all respondents not individually investigated. See Remand Results 56. On remand, Commerce assigned mandatory respondents the following subsidy rates: (1) Changbao a subsidy rate of 28.70%; (2) Jianli a subsidy rate of 30.56%; (3) TPCO a subsidy rate of 21.48%; (4) Wuxi a subsidy rate of 29.48%. Id. For all other exporters not individually investigated, Commerce assigned a subsidy rate of 27.08%.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The court continues to have jurisdiction pursuant to
DISCUSSION
I. Commerce‘s Evaluation of Non-Recurring Subsidy Programs
In TMK IPSCO, the court held that by cutting off its investigation and measurement of subsidies on December 11, 2001, the date China acceded to the WTO, Commerce had failed to countervail all identifiable and measurable subsidies, as the statute requires it to do. See id.; see generally
Commerce generally must impose countervailing duties on merchandise from a non-market economy (“NME“) country if Commerce makes the findings necessary to countervail a subsidy more generally under the statute. See
On remand Commerce articulated a rational relationship between specific legal reforms in China and the effect of such reforms on Commerce‘s ability to identify and measure subsidies. See Remand Results 13-19. Commerce “assessed when a sufficiently developed legal framework relevant to th[e] particular type of subsidy existed that would enable [it] to identify the sphere of commercial activity involved, the economic actors involved and the government action required to bestow that type of subsidy.” Id. at 11. Commerce identified four types of subsidies alleged in the petition: grants, credit-oriented subsidies, tax-related subsidies and land-oriented subsidies. See id. at 11-19. Commerce explained that it evaluated each type of non-recurring subsidy to determine when China first developed a sufficient “legal framework relevant to that particular type of subsidy . . . that would enable [it] to identify the sphere of commercial activity involved, the economic actors involved and the government action required to bestow that type of subsidy.” Remand Results 11.
Commerce determined that grant programs could first be identified and meas-
For programs that Commerce determined were established prior to December 11, 2001, Commerce next proceeded to consider each specific subsidy program alleged in the petition to determine the extent to which any investigated programs may have provided a benefit prior to December 11, 2001.6 See id. at 19-35. Depending upon the extent of the information available on the record, Commerce determined that each program conferred a benefit either based on facts otherwise available or adverse facts available (“AFA“) because neither the Government of China (“GOC“) nor the mandatory respondents responded to additional questionnaires issued by Commerce.7 See Remand Results
Lacking information on the record for certain subsidy programs alleged in the petition, Commerce applied an adverse inference that they were in effect prior to December 11, 2001 and that the respondents benefited from the program.9 Remand Results 31. Commerce used its standard AFA rate selection methodology to apply an AFA rate for these individual programs.10 Id. at 31-35. For the State
U.S. Steel argues that the cut-off dates adopted by Commerce for each type of program are as arbitrary as Commerce‘s use of China‘s accession to the WTO in its final determination. See U.S. Steel Remand Comments 4-5. The court labeled Commerce‘s selection of China‘s WTO accession date as arbitrary because Commerce failed to identify specific economic reforms that occurred on China‘s accession date and match those reforms to conditions it deemed necessary to identify and measure subsidies. TMK IPSCO, 40 CIT at —, 179 F.Supp.3d at 1343. Here, the dates adopted for each type of subsidy program tie specific reforms to Commerce‘s ability to identify the sphere of commercial activity involved, the economic actors involved, and the government action required to bestow the type of subsidy. See Remand Results 13-19. Therefore, Commerce identifies the dates that specific reforms are implemented and connects those reforms to the presence of legal conditions it reasonably deemed necessary to identifying and measuring a particular type of bestowal. U.S. Steel points to no reason or instance where one program of a particular type would be identifiable and measurable before another program of the same type. Therefore, Commerce‘s determination to establish categories of programs and determine when each type of program would first be countervailable and measurable is reasonable and consistent with the statutory obligations to countervail all identifiable and measurable subsidies in a NME country.
In the alternative, U.S. Steel argues that, even if Commerce‘s practice of examining subsidy programs by type is reasonable, the specific cut-off dates adopted for land-oriented subsidies and credit-oriented subsidies are not supported by substantial evidence.12 U.S. Steel Remand Comments 6-7. For credit-oriented subsidies, U.S. Steel “disagrees with Commerce‘s conclusion that the earliest it could evaluate the countervailability of credit-oriented subsidies is 1996.” Id. at 6 (citing Remand Results 16). U.S. Steel focuses on Commerce‘s acknowledgment that specific economic actors involved in providing credit in China could be identified as of 1993, and U.S. Steel contends this evidence renders Commerce‘s conclusion that credit-oriented subsidies could not be identified and measured until 1996 unsupported by substantial evidence. Id. at 7. Commerce notes that before a credit-oriented subsidy can be considered countervailable in an NME, Commerce “needs to be able to identify the loan as a legal, binding contract between distinct parties.” Remand Results 15. Although Commerce says that it could identify specific actors involved in the provision of credit as early as 1993, it is reasonably discernible that Commerce determined the banking sector reforms leading up to 1993 did not permit the identification of a binding contract between distinct parties. See id. Commerce notes that, until the passage of the 1995 Commercial Bank Law, commercial banks were not responsible for their own profits and losses, and banks lacked legal autonomy from the state. See id. In addition, Commerce states that the General Rules on Loans, enacted in 1996, regulated activities related to loans and protected the lawful rights and interests of all parties. Id. at 15-16. In particular, Commerce credited the 1996 General Rules on Loans as setting the legal rights and obligations for both lenders and borrowers as providing the legal basis for defining the legal terms of a given loan. Id. at 16. Commerce reasonably determined that both the identification of distinct legal actors and the legal underpinnings required to render a loan legally binding are necessary to identifying and measuring credit-oriented subsidies. See id. at 15-16. U.S. Steel offers no evidence that the legal requirements to render a loan legally binding between independent economic actors occurred earlier than 1996. The court declines to re-weigh the evidence.
II. Continued Inclusion of the Ocean Freight Quote from Jianli‘s Freight Forwarder
The court remanded to Commerce to reconsider or further explain its decision to use an average of two freight quotes from Maersk and Jianli‘s freight-forwarder because Commerce had not adequately explained how two such disparate quotes could be representative of freight prices available to respondents. See TMK IPSCO, 40 CIT at —, 179 F.Supp.3d at 1350-51. U.S. Steel continues to challenge Commerce‘s explanation. See U.S. Steel Remand Comments 10-12. Commerce has now adequately explained how both quotes could be reflective of market rates and, as a result, its determination is supported by substantial evidence.
If Commerce determines that the government of a country or any public entity is providing, directly or indirectly, a countervailable subsidy, then Commerce shall impose a duty equal to the amount of the benefit conferred by the subsidy subject to certain adjustments. See
On remand, Commerce continued to find that the ocean freight quotes provided by Maersk and by Jianli‘s freight forwarder are both reflective of market rates that the importer would have paid to import steel rounds and billets notwithstanding the pricing disparity. Remand Results 42. Commerce explained that the pricing disparity results from the avenue the importer chooses to import the products, but both paths reflect market rates for ocean freight and are representative of the rates an importer would have paid. See id. at 43. Commerce reasoned that working directly with a shipping company may result in a different freight cost than contracting with a freight forwarder that works with a shipping company. Id. Commerce supports its conclusion that both the Maersk rate and that of Jianli‘s freight forwarder are representative of market rates by relying upon a statement from Jianli‘s freight forwarder explaining that “most shipping companies and freight forwarders that work with them arrange for the shipment of goods from China to the destinations identified . . . and then offer lower rates on the China-bound leg of their voyage.” Id. at 42 (citing Jianli Group Submission of Factual Information at Attach. 1, CD 87 (Oct. 5, 2009) (“Jianli Freight Quote“)). Moreover, Commerce concluded that this “deadfreight rate” is negotiated between the freight forwarder and the shipping company because the service contracts submitted by Jianli reflect the practice of offering lower rates on the China-bound leg.13 Id. at 43. Commerce found that record evidence demonstrates that the prices provided to Jianli by its freight forwarder are actual shipping charges paid by the freight forwarder‘s customers, and not solely by Jianli, during the calendar year 2008, see id. at 54, which coincides with the period of investigation (“POI“). See id. at 3. Therefore, Commerce‘s determination that Jianli‘s freight forwarder‘s freight pricing reflects market rates that an importer would have paid is supported by substantial evidence.
U.S. Steel implies that it is unreasonable to conclude that two freight options available in the marketplace could be so disparate because no importer would choose the higher-priced route in such an environment. See U.S. Steel Remand Comments 11. It is reasonably discernible that Commerce concluded both the Maersk price quote data and that of Jianli‘s freight forwarder are market prices available to importers of steel billets because no evidence indicates these rates were not available to importers other than Jianli and market-driven reasons other than price could motivate some importers to contract with a freight provider directly rather than through a freight forwarder for a “deadfr-
U.S. Steel also questions the reliability of the rate of Jianli‘s freight forwarder, implying that it “is not normal market price, but rather a sweetheart deal.” U.S. Steel Remand Comments 11. However, Commerce references the affidavit provided by Jianli‘s freight forwarder, which indicates that the prices provided are actual shipping charges paid by the freight forwarder‘s customers from multiple countries to Shanghai throughout the POI. Remand Results 54 (citing Jianli Freight Quote at 2-3, Attach. 1). U.S. Steel provides no record evidence supporting its speculation that the prices reflect a special deal not available to other importers. In fact, Defendant points out that Jianli‘s pricing data, which is relied upon by Commerce, reflects a series of transactions from more than one customer throughout the POI. See Def.‘s Resp. United States Steel Corporation‘s Comments Remand Redetermination 14, Mar. 7, 2017, ECF No. 182.
III. Exclusion of SBB East Asia Pricing Data From Tier ii Benchmark
The court remanded Commerce‘s determination to include the SBB East Asia pricing from its tier ii benchmark price for steel rounds and billets because Commerce‘s inclusion of this pricing data in its benchmark calculation is not supported by substantial evidence. See TMK IPSCO, 40 CIT at —, 179 F.Supp.3d at 1347. On remand, Commerce determined that the SBB East Asia pricing data should be excluded from its tier ii benchmark pricing for steel rounds. Remand Results 48.
As already discussed, if there is no useable market-determined price with which to make the comparison, Commerce will measure the adequacy of remuneration by comparing the government price to a world market price “where it is reasonable to conclude that such price would be available to purchasers in the country in question” (i.e., a tier ii benchmark).14
IV. Subsidy Attribution
The court held that Commerce did not explain what authority allowed it to
In general, Commerce “calculate[s] an ad valorem subsidy rate by dividing the amount of the benefit allocated to the period of investigation . . . by the sales value during the same period of the product or products to which [Commerce] attributes the subsidy.”
Here, Commerce attributed subsidies received by Precision to the combined unconsolidated sales of Changbao and to sales of Precision under
No party challenges Commerce‘s attribution methodology. Commerce has explained its attribution methodology and supports its attribution methodology by referring to uncontroverted record evidence. Therefore, Commerce has complied with the court‘s order.
V. Provision of Steel Rounds Tied to Production of Subject Merchandise
The court remanded Commerce‘s decision to attribute the benefit received by TPCO from the provision of steel rounds at LTAR because the court could not “discern whether Commerce determined that the provision of steel rounds at LTAR is tied to sales of seamless pipe.” TMK IPSCO, 40 CIT at —, 179 F.Supp.3d at 1359. On remand, Commerce finds no record evidence as to the purpose or intended use of the steel rounds and billets under the subsidy program. See Remand Results 46. Therefore, Commerce again attributes the subsidies at issue to TPCO‘s applicable total sales, not just sales of seamless pipe. See id. U.S. Steel continues to challenge that substantial evidence supports Commerce‘s determination. U.S. Steel Remand Comments 8-10. The court disagrees with U.S. Steel.
Here, Commerce attributed the provision of steel rounds and billets at LTAR to all sales of TPCO rather than to only sales of seamless pipe tubes because record evidence does not establish that the GOC intended the subsidy to benefit or knew that the subsidy would benefit the production of seamless pipe and tube at the time of bestowal. Remand Results 46. Commerce evaluated the subsidy based upon information at the time of bestowal and there were no documents or statements from the GOC or from state-owned producers and suppliers on the purpose or intended use of steel rounds and billets under the program. Id. at 46. U.S. Steel points to no evidence demonstrating that the GOC intended the subsidy to benefit or knew that the subsidy would benefit the production of seamless pipe and tube at the time of bestowal.
U.S. Steel contends that the GOC‘s statement in its response to Commerce‘s request for a list of industries in China that directly purchase steel rounds that “[s]teel rounds (billets in round shape that can be used to produce OCTG) are [purchased] by the OCTG industry,” renders Commerce‘s conclusion unreasonable. U.S. Steel Remand Comments 9 (citing Response of the Government of the People‘s Republic of China to the Department‘s Initial Questionnaire at 49, PD 107 (July 20, 2009)). However, Commerce reasoned that “the mere fact that a good ‘can be used’ does not demonstrate that the provision of that good is tied to a particular product within the meaning of
U.S. Steel also argues that Commerce‘s statement that the GOC has a policy of “supporting and promoting the production of innovative and high-value added products, including OCTG” contradicts Commerce‘s tying determination. U.S. Steel Remand Comments 9 (citing Prelim. Results, 74 Fed. Reg. at 47,217). It is also reasonably discernible that Commerce did not consider this statement inconsistent with its tying determination because the GOC‘s acknowledgment of support for one of several products does not mean that it knew and acknowledged prior to or concurrent with the bestowal of the subsidy that the program was intended to benefit any one of those products. See Remand Results 46 (citing Countervailing Duties, 63 Fed. Reg. at 65,403 (stating that Commerce analyzes the purpose of the subsidy based on information available at the time of bestowal)).
Lastly, U.S. Steel argues that Commerce‘s tying determination is unsupported because there is no affirmative evidence suggesting that the steel rounds and billets provided at LTAR are used to produce any products other than OCTG. See U.S. Steel Remand Comments 10. However, Commerce makes clear that its practice does not consider the actual use of the products provided under the subsidy program in evaluating whether the subsidy program is tied to the production of subject merchandise. See Remand Results 45 (citing Large Residential Washers from Korea I & D at 41). Commerce has explained this practice in the past by noting that tracing funds only establishes whether funds are actually used for their stated purpose or the purpose Commerce evinces from record evidence and not whether a benefit is conferred or what specific products the grantor intended to benefit. See Countervailing Duties, 63 Fed. Reg. at 65,403. U.S. Steel highlights no reason this practice is unreasonable generally or as applied here. Commerce‘s determination is therefore supported by substantial evidence.
CONCLUSION
Therefore, for the reasons discussed, the court sustains the Remand Results. Judgment will enter accordingly.
UNITED STATES, Plaintiff, v. INTERNATIONAL TRADING SERVICES, LLC and Julio Lorza, Defendants.
Court No. 12-00135
Slip Op. 17-55
United States Court of International Trade.
May 5, 2017
