U.K. CARBON AND GRAPHITE CO., LTD., Plaintiff, v. UNITED STATES, Defendant, and SGL Carbon, LLC and Superior Graphite Co., Defendant-Intervenors.
Court No. 12-00242
United States Court of International Trade
Aug. 29, 2013
Slip Op. 13-114
CARMAN, Judge
Melissa M. Devine, Trial Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of Justice, of Washington, DC, for Defendant. With her on the brief were Stuart F. Delery, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Jeanne E. Davidson, Director, and Reginald T. Blades, Jr., Assistant Director. Of counsel on the brief was Daniel J. Calhoun, Attorney, Office of the Chief Counsel for Import Administration, United States Department of Commerce.
Mary T. Staley, David A. Hartquist, Katherine E. Wang and R. Alan Luberda, Kelley Drye & Warren, LLP, of Washington, DC, for Defendant-Intervenors.
OPINION & ORDER
CARMAN, Judge:
Plaintiff U.K. Carbon and Graphite Company, Ltd. (“Plaintiff” or “UKCG“) contests the final determination by Defendant United States Department of Commerce (“Defendant” or “Commerce“) regarding the circumvention1 inquiry related
BACKGROUND
A. Antidumping Duty Order
The product at issue is small diameter graphite electrodes (“SDGE“). In 2009, Commerce imposed an antidumping duty order upon imports of SDGE from China. Antidumping Duty Order: Small Diameter Graphite Electrodes from the People‘s Republic of China, 74 Fed. Reg. 8,775 (Feb. 26, 2009) (“AD Order” or “SDGE Order“). The scope of the AD Order covers:
all small diameter graрhite electrodes of any length, whether or not finished, of a kind used in furnaces, with a nominal or actual diameter of 400 millimeters (16 inches) or less, and whether or not attached to a graphite pin joining system or any other type of joining system or hardware. The merchandise covered by this order also includes graphite pin joining systems for small diameter graphite electrodes, of any length, whether or not finished, of a kind used in furnaces, and whether or not the graphite pin joining system is attached to, sold with, or sold separately from, the small diameter graphite electrode. Small diameter graphite electrodes and graphite pin joining systems for small diameter graphite electrodes are most commonly used in primary melting, ladle metallurgy, and specialty furnace applications in industries including fоundries, smelters, and steel refining operations. Small diameter graphite electrodes and graphite pin joining systems for small diameter graphite electrodes that are subject to this order are currently classified under the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (“HTSUS“) subheading 8545.11.0000. The HTSUS number is provided for convenience and customs purposes, but the written description of the scope is dispositive.
B. Circumvention Inquiry
On October 12, 2010, domestic producers of SDGE—SGL Carbon LLC and Superior Graphite Company, Defendant-Intervenors in the instant case (collectively referred to as “Defendant-Intervenors” or “Petitioners“)—requested that Commerce conduct a scope or an anticircumvention inquiry on SDGE produced by UKCG from Chinese manufactured artificial/synthetic graphite forms. See Petitioners’ Request for Scope Review or Anticircumvention Inquiry (Oct. 12, 2010) (“Initiation Request“), Part 1, P.R. 1. Petitioners alleged that UKCG was part of “an ongoing scheme to evade payment of antidumping duties under the SDGE Order” with Chinese producers. Id. at 1-2. Petitioners alleged that UKCG was first importing unfinished SDGE from China to the U.K. “for minor completion or assembly” then exporting to the U.S., thereby circumventing the AD Order duty assessment by improperly claiming the U.K. as
Petitioners asserted the SDGE that UKCG imported was “for every relevant purpose an unfinished graphite electrode subject to the antidumping duty order when it leaves China,” because “[a]ll of the physical, chemical and performance characteristics of an electrode have been given to the product in China.” Id. at 14. Petitioners explained that
[i]t is an electrode in unfinished form at that point, regardless of whether it is called a rod or an eleсtrode. The rod or unfinished electrode needs only final finishing (sizing, threading, fitting ends of electrode with a graphite pin joining system, etc.) [which] are merely machining operations and do not impart the essential performance characteristics of the product.
Id. at 14 (emphasis added).
Commerce acknowledged that there was “substantial record evidence which may support the initiation of either” a scope inquiry or an anticircumvention inquiry. Small Diameter Graphite Electrodes From the People‘s Republic of China: Initiation of Anti-Circumvention Inquiry, 76 Fed. Reg. 14,910, 14,912 (Mar. 18, 2011) (“Initiation Notice“). Commerce decided that an anticircumvention inquiry was the more appropriate avenue given the “specificity” of the allegation to a single company and “certain record information as to the timing of the pattеrn of trade.” Id.
UKCG provided timely responses to Commerce‘s information requests, and all parties submitted timely comments regarding surrogate country and surrogate value selection. Def.‘s Mem. in Opp‘n to Pl.‘s R. 56.2 Mot. for J. upon the Agency Record (“Def.‘s Opp‘n“) at 5. Commerce also conducted a verification of UKCG‘s questionnaire responses at two of its U.K. facilities during February 16-17, 2012. Pl. UKCG‘s Mem. of Law in Supp. of Their R. 56.2 Mot. for J. on the Agency Record (“Pl.‘s Mot.“) at 6, 38; Def.‘s Opp‘n at 5.
C. Preliminary Determination
In June 2012, Commerce subsequently issued a preliminary affirmative determination of circumvention. See Small Diameter Graphite Electrodes From the People‘s Republic of China: Affirmative Preliminary Determination of Circumvention of the Antidumping Duty Order and Extension of Final Determination, 77 Fed. Reg. 33,405 (June 6, 2012) (“Preliminary Determination“). In its Preliminary Determination, Commerce first found that the рroducts exported by UKCG to the U.S. were completed or assembled in the U.K. from “unfinished” Chinese-origin inputs “subject to” the AD Order, based upon the scope language and product descriptions from the petition and the report of the International Trade Commission (“ITC“). Id. at 33,410-11; Small Diameter Graphite Electrodes from China, Inv. No. 731-TA-1143 (Final), ITC Pub. 4062 (Feb. 2009) (“ITC Report“). Commerce therefore determined that it was appropriate to use the surrogate value methodology from antidumping proceedings for non-market economy (“NME“) countries. Preliminary Determination, 77 Fed. Reg. at 33,407-08.
Second, Commerce determined to use surrogate values from the Ukraine to analyze whether the value of the merchandise produced in China constituted a “significant portion” of the value of the merchandise exported to the United States. Id. at 33,407-08, 33,415. Third, Commerce determined that the value of UKCG‘s processing in the U.K. was “minor аnd insignificant.” Id. at 33,417. Commerce therefore preliminarily determined that UKCG had circumvented the antidumping duty order. Id.
D. Final Determination
A couple months after issuing its Preliminary Determination, Commerce issued its Final Determination. See 77 Fed. Reg. 47,596. The significant changes in the Final Determination from the Preliminary Determination are summarized as follows. First, regarding the product covered by the scope language, Commerce “specifically refuted UKCG‘s allegation that the agency manipulated language from the petition to supplement its textual analysis,” and after taking into account evidence submitted by UKCG, Commerce “determined that this evidence ‘d[id] not overcome [the] explicit inclusion’ of unfinished [SDGE] in the order.” Def.‘s Opp‘n at 7 (quoting I & D Memo at 6). Second, Commerce added HTSUS 3801.10 to the description of the AD Order‘s scope for “convenienсe and customs purposes.” Id. at 8.
Third, with respect to surrogate values, Commerce noted the circumvention provisions of the antidumping statute do not “prescribe a specific method to determine whether the value of the merchandise produced in China is a significant portion of the value of the merchandise exported to the United States.” Id. Noting that the antidumping statute “elsewhere presumes that costs and prices” from a NME are “inherently unreliable,” Commerce, “consistent with its past practice, found it reasonable to use surrogate values” from the Ukraine. Id. However, Commerce also noted that its circumvention analysis showed the Chinese inputs made up a significant portion of the value UKCG‘s U.S. exports, “regardless of whether it used Ukrainian surrogate values or UKCG‘s purchase рrice,” and that the choice to use surrogate values was therefore not essential to the outcome. Id. (citing I & D Memo at 7).
Fourth, Commerce rejected UKCG‘s complaints about its value-added calculation under
Fifth, relating to the cash deposit requirements, Commerce explained that it is “appropriate and consistent with past practice to assign UKCG‘s exports of SDGE to the United States the rate applicable to the relevant [Chinese]-producer of the subject input” since
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Court has jurisdiction pursuant to
DISCUSSION
Commerce has two types of inquiries available when examining allegations that a particular product should be covered by an existing antidumping order: scope inquiry or circumvention inquiry. Petitioners requested an examination of UKCG‘s product through both of these avenues, in the alternative. See Def.‘s Opp‘n at 4; accord Initiation Request. In a scope inquiry, Commerce analyzes “whether a particular product is included within the scope of an order” pursuant to regulatory criteria set forth in
Based on these particular facts, Commerce decided that the issues raised by the рarties are “better addressed in the context of an anticircumvention proceeding” rather than a scope inquiry. Initiation Notice, 76 Fed. Reg. at 14,912. Commerce explained that “due to the specificity of Petitioners’ request as it pertains to a particular company (i.e., UKCG) and certain record information as to the timing of the pattern of trade ..., [Commerce] has determined that a decision to initiate an anti-circumvention inquiry is the most appropriate course of action to address Petitioners’ concerns at present.” Id.
An anticircumvention inquiry is similar to the more frequently invoked scope inquiry because they are both subsets of a scope ruling. The criteria for circumvention and scope inquiries differ, however:
[A]nticircumvention inquiries are not like traditional scope inquiries conducted pursuant to
19 C.F.R. § 351.225(k) . Instead, anticircumvention determinations are a special subset of scope rulings as recognized by19 C.F.R. § 351.225 [(g) -(j)], and they are the only types of scope rulings governed by a specific statutory scheme. See generally19 U.S.C. § 1677j .... [Therefore,] subsection (k) factors do not apply to circumvention scope inquiries.
Def.‘s Opp‘n at 27-28. The Court may only review the underlying proceeding that Commerce chose to conduct, which is the anticircumvention inquiry in this case, and therefore any discussion relating to the scope factors pursuant to
A. Statutory Framework for Circumvention Inquiries
Circumvention cases are governed by
(b) Merchandise completed or assembled in other foreign countries
(1) In general
If—
(A) merchandise imported into the United States is of the same class or kind as any merchandise produced in a foreign country that is the subject of—
(i) an antidumping duty order issued under
section 1673e of this title , ...(B) before importation into the United States, such imported merchandise is completed or assembled in another foreign country from merchandise which—
(i) is subject to such order or finding, or
(ii) is produced in the foreign country with respect to which such order or finding applies,
(C) the process of assembly or completion in the foreign country referred to in subparagraph (B) is minor or insignificant,
(D) the value of the merchandise produced in the foreign country to which the antidumping duty order applies is a significant portion of the total value of the merchandise exported to the United States, and
(E) the administering authority determines that action is appropriate under this paragraph to prevent evasion of such order or finding, the administering authority, after taking into account any advice provided by the Commission under subsection (e) of this section, may include such imported merchandise within the scope of such order or finding at any time such order or finding is in effect.
(2) Determination of whether process is minor or insignificant
In determining whether the process of assembly or completion is minor or insignificant under paragraph (1)(C), the administering authority shall take into account—
(A) the level of investment in the foreign country,
(B) the level of research and development in the foreign country,
(C) the nature of the production process in the foreign country,
(D) the extent of production facilities in the foreign country, and
(E) whether the value of the processing performed in the foreign country represents a small proportion оf the value of the merchandise imported into the United States.
(3) Factors to consider
In determining whether to include merchandise assembled or completed in a foreign country in ... an antidumping duty order ..., the administering authority shall take into account such factors as—
(A) the pattern of trade, including sourcing patterns,
(B) whether the manufacturer or exporter of the merchandise described in paragraph (1)(B) is affiliated with the person who uses the merchandise described in paragraph (1)(B) to assemble or complete in the foreign country the merchandise that is subsequently imported into the United States, and
(C) whether imports into the foreign country of the merchandise described in paragraph (1)(B) have in-
creased after the initiation of the investigation which resulted in the issuance of such order or finding.
B. Production of SDGE
Defendant-Intervenors provided the following description of the production process for SDGE, which was taken from the Chinese respondents’ Section D questionnaire responses in the antidumping duty investigation:
Stage 1: Calcining:6 In this production process, petroleum coke becomes calcined petroleum coke by heating the petroleum coke at extreme temperatures over [a period of time].7
Stage 2: Crushing: In this stage, calcined petroleum coke or imported needle coke are crushed in a series of roller mills into fine grains for about half an hour.
Stage 3: Screening: The crushed and ground calcined petroleum coke or imported needle coke are divided into different sizes of grains or powders with the use of a vibrating sift over approximately a half an hour of processing.
Stage 4: Burdening: The screened coke grains or powders are mixed and prepared in accordance with a recipe, which takes approximately a half hour.
Stage 5: Preparing Coal Tar Pitch: Raw coal tar pitch is melted for [a number of] hours to remove the moisture and certain residues.
Stage 6: Kneading: The coke stock from the burdening stage and the prepared coal tar pitch are blended and mixed together for [a period of time] to create a mixture that is used in the next stage, forming.
Stage 7: Forming: The paste from the kneading stage is cooled and then put through an extrusion press to shape the cylindrical column form of the electrode. This process takes [a period of time].
Stage 8: Baking: The cylindrical column form is moved into a baking oven where they [sic] will remain for [a period of time].
Stage 9: Impregnation: The baked electrode will be preheated and then placed into an impregnation tank that is filled with melted pitch. The pitch will be impregnated into the electrode to fill the pores and increase the strength of the electrode. This process takes [a period of time].
Stage 10: Re-Baking: The impregnated electrode will be put into a baking oven and heated to coke the pitch in the impregnated electrode, by passing the electrode from a tunnel kiln, inverse-flame calciners, and open calciners for [a period of time].
Stage 11: Graphitization: In this stage, the electrode undergoes graphitization, where the carbon electrode is transformed into a graphitized electrode. It takes [a period of time] to complete graphitization.
Stage 12: Machining: After the graphitized electrode is cooled, it will go through two additional minor processes: shaping of the surface and ends of the electrode to exact size and dimensions; and, tooling and fitting of the ends of the electrode with a threaded graphite connecting pin (a hole is bore [sic] into the ends of the electrode, which is then threaded). In addition, threads are added to the connecting pin. In total, this process takes about [a period of] minutes to complete an electrode.
Stage 13: Packaging: In this process, the electrode is placed in a wooden crate with foam end caps placed over the ends of the electrode to protect the threading.
When summed together, the production process takes [a substantial number of] days. Def.-Intervenors’ Resp. Br. (“Def.-Ints.’ Opp‘n“) at 4-6 (citations omitted). These thirteen stages of production take place over a substantial number of days, and the first eleven stages are done in China. Id. at 13. The record shows that only the finishing is done by UKCG in the U.K., and Commerce determined at verification that finishing “takes approximately five minutes per electrode.” Verification of Responses of U.K. Carbon & Graphite Co. Ltd. in the Anti-Circumvention Inquiry of Small Diameter Graphite Electrodes From the People‘s Republic of China at 15 (May 30, 2012) (“Verification“), Part 2, P.R. 53; Part 4, C.R. 46.
C. Analysis
1. Parties’ Issues
Commerce claims that only subsections
- Whether Commerce‘s finding that the artificial graphite rods used as inputs in UKCG‘s production are subject to the scope of the AD Order is supported by substantial evidence on the record or otherwise in accordance with law.
- Whether Commerce‘s finding that UKCG‘s process of completion performed in the U.K. is minor or insignificant pursuant to the factors listed under
19 U.S.C. § 1677j(b)(2) is supported by substantial evidence on the recоrd or otherwise in accordance with law. - Whether Commerce‘s use of surrogate values from the Ukraine to value Chinese origin inputs of artificial gra-
phite rods used by UKCG to produce its finished SDGE is supported by substantial evidence on the record or otherwise in accordance with law. - Whether Commerce‘s requirement that UKCG pay a China-wide rate cash deposit is supported by substantial evidence on the record or otherwise in accordance with law.
See Pl.‘s Mot. at 1-2; Def.‘s Opp‘n at 2-3; Def.-Ints.’ Opp‘n at 2-3. The Court will address these four issues within the statutory scheme by reviewing the record for substantial evidence to support each statutory criterion.8
2. General Criteria
a. Same Class or Kind
The first statutory consideration is whether the merchandise imported to the U.S. is of the “same class or kind” as merchandise subject to the AD Order.
Defendant-Intervenors advise that Plaintiff‘s product, artificial graphite rod, is of the same class or kind of merchandise subject to the AD Order. They explain that artificial graphite rod is “an electrode in unfinished form ..., regardless of whether it is called a rod or an electrode.” Def.-Ints.’ Opp‘n at 3 (citing Initiation Request at 14) (emphasis added). Defendant-Intervenors counter Plaintiff‘s objection to the term “unfinished” as ambiguous and instead offer that the term is “quite common in antidumping lexicon and has
The Court finds that Commerce‘s affirmаtive determination regarding class or kind is supported by the record. For clarification‘s sake, while the parties use various terminology throughout their briefs and on the record—Petitioners characterize the inputs as “unfinished SDGE” while Plaintiff characterizes the inputs as “artificial graphite rods“—they are actually one and the same. See, e.g., Final Determination, 77 Fed. Reg. at 47,597 n. 2 (“For ease of reference, these materials are referred to as ‘unfinished SDGE components’ or ‘artificial graphite rods’ throughout this notice.“) Next, regarding the meaning of the term “unfinished,” Plaintiff admits that “there is no evidence on the record that ‘unfinished’ has any meaning whatsoever in the trade.” Pl.‘s Mot. at 16. Commerce considered carefully the scope language “whether or not finished,” and determined that “unfinished SDGE” meant “an SDGE product that has completеd the graphitization stage and needs only finishing to be used as a finished SDGE in a furnace.” Def.‘s Opp‘n at 19 (citing I & D Memo at 5).
Plaintiff admits that it has never argued that “the HTS categories are controlling,” but asserts that Petitioners’ “treatment of such categories is relevant in determining what the Petition meant by the vague term ‘unfinished.‘” Pl.‘s Mot. at 20. The Court declines to adopt Plaintiff‘s position. It is well-settled that “a reference to an HTSUS number is not dispositive about the scope” of an antidumping order. Novosteel SA v. United States, 284 F.3d 1261, 1270 (Fed. Cir. 2002) (internal citations omitted); see also Preliminary Determination, 77 Fed. Reg. at 33,411. Consequently, Plaintiff‘s HTSUS arguments are vitiated by settled case law regarding scope determinations. Despite Plaintiff‘s quibbling over the meaning of “unfinished,” the Court cannot say that Commerce‘s consideration and decision to use Petitioners’ definition of “unfinished” is unreasonable, arbitrary or capricious.
The Court also finds that Plaintiff‘s argument regarding Commerce‘s lack of consideration of the classification rulings is not supported by the record. Pl.‘s Mot. at 24 (contending that it is “flatly false” that Commerce “ever addressed, considered, or took into account” the U.K. and U.S. classification rulings). Commerce stressed that it considered the classification rulings, both foreign and domestic, and then explained throughout the record why it did not rely on these rulings. See, e.g., Initiation Notice, 76 Fed. Reg. at 14,917 (“neither the BOI nor the [CBP] ruling are legally binding for the purposes of antidumping proceedings in the United States“); Preliminary Determination, 77 Fed. Reg. at 33,410 (“U.S. and E.U. customs rulings are not controlling” in anticirumvention proceedings, “as the two determinations are made for different reasons and under different laws“); I & D Memo at 6 (“Contrary to UKCG‘s assertion, [Commerce] has indeed considered this information and taken the various rulings and actions into account in the instant dеtermination.“) Commerce has provided ample reasoned explanations for its decision to not rely on the classification rulings.
Accordingly, the Court finds that Commerce‘s determination that Plaintiff‘s artificial graphite rods are “of the same class or kind” as the subject merchandise of the AD Order, satisfying
b. Completed in a Third Country
The second statutory consideration is whether imported merchandise is completed or assembled in a third country from merchandise which is either subject to the order or is produced in the country to which the order applies.
Plaintiff asserts that subsection (ii) was not considered in the underlying administrative proceeding. Pl.‘s Reply Br. in Supp. of Its Mot. for J. on the Agency Record (“Pl.‘s Reply“) at 5 (“Commerce is not compelled to utilize both (i) and (ii) but instead may utilize either provision .... [it] did so here by analyzing (i) ... [n]ever once did it analyze or mention (ii).“)
A review of the record does not support Plaintiff‘s assertion. In the I & D Memo, Commerce stated:
the fact that UKCG‘s artificial graphite rod/unfinished SDGE component inputs—the sole input utilized by UKCG in the production of finished SDGE subject to this inquiry—are produced in [China] has never been contested on the record of this proceeding nor is this fact disputed for this final determination .... in this case, there is no dispute that the input in question is produced in the country subject to the AD order.
I & D Memo at 7. Commerce‘s conclusion is supported on the record. It is sufficient that Commerce reached a conclusion pursuant to subsection (ii), that UKCG‘s inputs were produced in China, a country to which the AD Order applied. Commerce, however, went further and analyzed the scope language of the AD Order, the petition and the ITC Report to determine if Plaintiff‘s inputs were subject to order pursuant to subsection (i). I & D Memo at 6-7. Commerce found that the plain language of the scope order includes UKCG‘s inputs where it indicates “small diameter graphite electrodes, whether or not finished.” AD Order, 74 Fed. Reg. at 8,775; ITC Report at I-9; I & D Memo at 5.
Thus, the Court finds that both of Commerce‘s determinations—that Plaintiff‘s artificial graphite rods are produced from input materials covered under the scope of the AD Order and that Plaintiff‘s exports are finished from inputs producеd in China—satisfy
c. Minor or Insignificant Completion
The third statutory consideration is whether the process of “assembly or completion” in the foreign country, in this case the U.K., is “minor or insignificant.”
(A) the level of investment in the foreign country,
(B) the level of research and development in the foreign country,
(D) the extent of production facilities in the foreign country, and
(E) whether the value of the processing performed in the foreign country represents a small proportion of the value of the merchandise imported into the United States.
In its underlying determination, Commerce compared in each country the level of investment, “both in initial capital and equipment,” the production facilities, the processes performed, and the number of production employees in each country (China and the U.K.). Preliminary Determination, 77 Fed. Reg. at 33,412. Commerce found that research and development (“R & D“) is not a significant factor in this case, because Plaintiff did not provide “any substantial evidence of R & D programs or expenditures.” Id.
Regarding the value-added factor, Commerce found that “aside from the cost of labor and energy, UKCG did not consume or impart any additional direct material inрuts to produce the finished SDGE” and found that “the value of the energy and labor consumed by UKCG in the production of the finished SDGE” is insignificant. Id. at 33,413. Commerce weighed all the factors and found that “the nature of the production process and extent of the production facilities in the U.K. are minor in comparison to those utilized in [China] for the production of the unfinished [SDGE] components sourced from [China],” explaining that Chinese producers “have invested extensively in the SDGE industry, which includes significant investment in both manufacturing facilities and production equipment worth millions of dollars, the bulk of which goes to the heavy industrial processes required for the production of SDGE ... which occur[s] prior to the final machining stage.” Id.
In the instant action Plaintiff only challenges subsection (E), the value-added factor. Pl.‘s Mot. at 32-38; Pl.‘s Reply at 20. The Court notes that the five factors are to be separately taken into consideration, as appropriate, and their totality weighed. Commerce “performed a qualitative and quantitative value-added analysis” pursuant to
Examining the breakdown of the pro-duction process for SDGE placed on the record by Defendant-Intervenors, all but five minutes of the production process that takes a substantial number of days is done in China. Verification at 15. Given the information on the record—breakdown of the production process, facility and employee number comparison, and relative gross value amounts—the Court cannot say that Commerce‘s conclusion that UKCG‘s finishing touches are minor or insignificant is unreasonable, arbitrary or capricious.
Upon review of the SDGE manufacturing process, the detailed information presented by Petitioners, and Commerce‘s weighing of all the factors with the information placed on the record, the Court finds that Commerce‘s determination that the manufacturing completed in the
d. Value of Merchandise
The fourth statutory consideration is whether the value of the merchandise produced in the foreign country to which the antidumping duty order applies—here, China—is a significant portion of the total value of the merchandise exported to the U.S.
Commerce, faced with the need to evaluate value in a NME, chose to apply the surrogate value methodology used in other antidumping proceedings to arrive at an accurate valuation of UKCG‘s inputs, explaining that “the same concerns about the reliability of NME prices that underlie its normal valuation calculation also underlie its analysis of circumvention of an order imposed upon NME-origin merchandise.” Def.‘s Opp‘n at 39 (citing I & D Memо at 8). Determining that “the actual prices that UKCG paid for its Chinese-sourced artificial graphite rods are ‘inherently unreliable’ as products of a NME, Commerce chose to use surrogate values from the Ukraine. Def.‘s Opp‘n at 37 (citing I & D Memo at 8). Commerce used Ukrainian surrogate values for artificial graphite rods in calculating “the value of the merchandise produced in [China] to which the [SDGE Order] applies.” Id. In doing so, Commerce rejected Plaintiff‘s contention that the proper method for a value-added analysis was to examine the difference between the input price and the U.S. sales price. Id. at 35-36.
The Court defers to Commerce‘s decision to use a surrogate value methodology in determining the value of inputs from a NME country in an anticircumvention inquiry, because it is a reasоnable construction of the statute. Upon review, the Court finds that Commerce‘s determination that the value of the merchandise produced in China was a significant portion of the total value of the merchandise exported to the U.S., satisfying
e. Other Factors
The circumvention statute also lists other factors to consider in determining whether to include merchandise assembled or completed in a foreign country in an antidumping duty order.
3. Other Issues
a. Deposit Rate
Plaintiff challenges Commerce‘s decision to аpply the China-wide cash-deposit rate to its exports to the U.S., claiming this decision is simultaneously punitive and erroneous, and requests relief in the form of a separate rate. See Pl.‘s Mot. at 38-40. Because it is “not under the control of any governmental entity of China,” Plaintiff urges that if a rate is to be applied at all, it is “entitled to the current separate rate.” Id. at 38. Further, Plaintiff argues that it
In the meantime, in accordance with its past practice in circumvention cases, Commerce found it “appropriate to instruct [CBP] to collect a cash deposit at the [China]-wide rate, consistent with [Commerce‘s] standard practice to assign the [China]-wide rate to non-reviewed exporters.” I & D Memo at 15. Commerce also notes that it has “made no final determination of dumping with respect to UKCG.” Def.‘s Opp‘n at 48 (citing I & D Memo at 15, Final Determination, 77 Fed. Reg. at 47,600).
The Court finds that Commerce‘s determination to apply a China-wide rate as a cash deposit to UKCG is supported by substantial evidence on the record and otherwise in accordance with law. To the extent that UKCG seeks a remedy regarding the cash deposit rate that it has not yet sought through normal administrative channels, the Court declines to grant relief due to the failure to exhaust administrative remedies. See
b. Remaining Issues
The Court has considered the remaining arguments and found them to be either subsumed into the analysis above or without merit.
CONCLUSION
As a result of the considerations detailed above, the Court holds that Commerce based its circumvention determination on substantial evidence on the administrative record and acted in accordance with law. Consequently, it is hereby
ORDERED that Small Diameter Graphite Electrodes From the People‘s Republic of China: Affirmative Final Determination of Circumvention of the Antidumping Duty Order, 77. Fed. Reg. 47,596 (Aug. 9, 2012) is sustained; and it is further
ORDERED that Plaintiff‘s motion for judgment on the agency record is denied; and it is further
ORDERED that the stay entered by the Court on Plaintiff‘s motion for oral argument (ECF No. 51) is hereby liftеd; and it is further
ORDERED that Plaintiff‘s motion for oral argument (ECF No. 50) is hereby denied.
Judgment to enter accordingly.
