[Federal Register: November 9, 2009 (Volume 74, Number 215)]
[Notices]
[Page 57629-57648]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr09no09-30]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[C-570-950]
Wire Decking From the People's Republic of China: Preliminary
Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination and Alignment of Final
Countervailing Duty Determination with Final Antidumping Duty
Determination
AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce (the Department) preliminarily
determines that countervailable subsidies are being provided to
producers and exporters of wire decking from the People's Republic of
China (the PRC). For information on the estimated subsidy rates, see
the ``Suspension of Liquidation'' section of this notice.
EFFECTIVE DATE: November 9, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kristen Johnson or John Conniff, AD/
CVD Operations, Office 3, Operations, Import Administration, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Room 4014, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue,
NW, Washington, DC 20230; telephone: (202) 482-4793 and (202) 482-1009,
respectively.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Case History
On June 5, 2009, the Department received the petition filed in
proper form by the petitioners.\1\ This investigation was initiated on
June 25, 2009. See Wire Decking From the People's Republic of China:
Initiation of Countervailing Duty Investigation, 74 FR 31700 (July 2,
2009) (Initiation Notice), and accompanying Initiation Checklist.\2\
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\1\ Petitioners are AWP Industries, Inc., ITC Manufacturing,
Inc., J&L Wire Cloth, Inc., Nashville Wire Products Mfg., Co., Inc.,
and Wireway Husky Corporation.
\2\ A public version of this and all public Departmental
memoranda are on file in the Central Records Unit (CRU), room 1117
in the main building of the Commerce Department.
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As explained in the Initiation Notice, the categories of the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS) that include
subject merchandise are very broad and include products other than
those subject to this investigation. See 74 FR at 31704. Therefore, on
June 26, 2009, the Department requested Quantity and Value (Q&V)
information from the 83 companies that petitioners identified as
potential producers/exporters of wire decking in the PRC. See Q&V
Questionnaire (June 26, 2009); see also Petition for the Imposition of
Antidumping and Countervailing Duties on Wire Decking from the People's
Republic of China (June 5, 2009) (Petition) at Volume I, Exhibit 4, for
the list of wire decking producers/exporters.\3\ We received Q&V
questionnaire responses from 10 producers/exporters of wire decking.
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\3\ The Petition is a proprietary document for which the public
version is on file in the CRU.
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On July 16, 2009, we selected two Chinese producers/exporters of
wire decking as mandatory respondents: Dalian Huameilong Metal Products
Co., Ltd. (DHMP) and Dalian Eastfound Metal Products Co., Ltd.
(Eastfound Metal) and its affiliate Dalian Eastfound Material Handling
Products Co., Ltd. (Eastfound Material) (collectively, Eastfound). See
Memorandum from the Team through Melissa G. Skinner, Director, AD/CVD
Operations, Office 3, to John M. Andersen, Acting Deputy Assistant
Secretary for AD/CVD Operations, regarding ``Respondent Selection''
(July 16, 2009). Also on July 16, 2009, we issued the initial
countervailing duty (CVD) questionnaire to the Government of the
People's Republic of China (the GOC) and the
[[Page 57630]]
mandatory respondents. We received Eastfound Metal's, Eastfound
Material's and DHMP's initial questionnaire responses on September 9,
2009. On September 10, 2009, we received the GOC's initial
questionnaire response.
On August 13, 2009, the Department postponed the deadline for the
preliminary determination by 65 days to no later than November 2, 2009.
See Wire Decking From the People's Republic of China: Notice of
Postponement of Preliminary Determination in the Countervailing Duty
Investigation, 74 FR 40812 (August 13, 2009).
Regarding supplemental questionnaires, we issued to the GOC
supplemental questionnaires on September 16, 18, and 22, 2009, and
October 1, 14, and 22, 2009,\4\ to which the GOC submitted responses on
September 29, 2009, and October 5, 15, 21, and 26, 2009.
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\4\ The GOC and Eastfound Metal coordinated with regard to the
October 1, 2009, supplemental questionnaire. Eastfound Metal
submitted a response to the questionnaire on October 19, 2009.
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We issued supplemental questionnaires to Eastfound Metal on
September 17, 2009, and October 14, 2009, and received responses on
October 19, 2009, October 20, 2009,\5\ and October 23, 2009. On
September 23, 2009, we issued a supplemental questionnaire to Eastfound
Material and the company submitted its response on October 15, 2009.
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\5\ On October 19, 2009, counsel for Eastfound Metal was
instructed to re-file the company's supplemental questionnaire
response dated October 13, 2009, because the submission contained a
document not germane to this investigation. See Letter from Melissa
G. Skinner, Director, AD/CVD Operations Office 3, to Gregory S.
Menegaz of DeKieffer and Horgan, dated October 19, 2009. Mr. Menegaz
re-filed Eastfound Metal's supplemental questionnaire response on
October 20, 2009.
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We issued supplemental questionnaires to DHMP on September 18, 2009
and October 15, 2009 and received responses on October 2, 2009 and
October 22, 2009. Additionally, DHMP made submissions on September 14,
2009 and October 26, 2009.
Period of Investigation
The period of investigation (the POI) for which we are measuring
subsidies is January 1, 2008, through December 31, 2008, which
corresponds to the most recently completed fiscal year. See 19 CFR
351.204(b)(2).
Scope of the Investigation
The scope of the investigation covers welded-wire rack decking,
which is also known as, among other things, ``pallet rack decking,''
``wire rack decking,'' ``wire mesh decking,'' ``bulk storage
shelving,'' or ``welded-wire decking.'' Wire decking consists of wire
mesh that is reinforced with structural supports and designed to be
load bearing. The structural supports include sheet metal support
channels, or other structural supports, that reinforce the wire mesh
and that are welded or otherwise affixed to the wire mesh, regardless
of whether the wire mesh and supports are assembled or unassembled and
whether shipped as a kit or packaged separately. Wire decking is
produced from carbon or alloy steel wire that has been welded into a
mesh pattern. The wire may be galvanized or plated (e.g., chrome, zinc,
or nickel coated), coated (e.g., with paint, epoxy, or plastic), or
uncoated (``raw''). The wire may be drawn or rolled and may have a
round, square or other profile. Wire decking is sold in a variety of
wire gauges. The wire diameters used in the decking mesh are 0.105
inches or greater for round wire. For wire other than round wire, the
distance between any two points on a cross-section of the wire is 0.105
inches or greater. Wire decking reinforced with structural supports is
designed generally for industrial and other commercial storage rack
systems.
Wire decking is produced to various profiles, including, but not
limited to, a flat (``flush'') profile, an upward curved back edge
profile (``backstop'') or downward curved edge profile
(``waterfalls''), depending on the rack storage system. The wire
decking may or may not be anchored to the rack storage system. The
scope does not cover the metal rack storage system, comprised of metal
uprights and cross beams, on which the wire decking is ultimately
installed. Also excluded from the scope is wire mesh shelving that is
not reinforced with structural supports and is designed for use without
structural supports.
Wire decking enters the United States through several basket
categories in the HTSUS. U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has
issued a ruling (NY F84777) that wire decking is to be classified under
HTSUS 9403.90.8040. Wire decking has also been entered under HTSUS
7217.10, 7217.20, 7326.20, 7326.90, 9403.20.0020, and 9403.20.0030.
While HTSUS subheadings are provided for convenience and Customs
purposes, the written description of the scope of the investigation is
dispositive.
Scope Comments
In accordance with the Preamble to the Department's regulations
(see Antidumping Duties; Countervailing Duties, 62 FR 27296, 27323 (May
19, 1997) (Preamble)), in the Initiation Notice, we set aside a period
of time for parties to raise issues regarding product coverage, and
encouraged all parties to submit comments within 20 calendar days of
publication of the Initiation Notice. The Department did not receive
scope comments from any interested party.
Injury Test
Because the PRC is a ``Subsidies Agreement Country'' within the
meaning of section 701(b) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (the
Act), the International Trade Commission (the ITC) is required to
determine whether imports of the subject merchandise from the PRC
materially injure, or threaten material injury to, a U.S. industry. On
July 31, 2009, the ITC published its preliminary determination finding
that there is a reasonable indication that an industry in the United
States is materially injured by reason of imports of wire decking from
the PRC. See Wire Decking From China, Investigation Nos. 701-TA-466 and
731-TA-1162 (Preliminary), 74 FR 38229 (July 31, 2009).
Alignment of Final Countervailing Duty Determination With Final
Antidumping Duty Determination
On June 25, 2009, the Department initiated AD and CVD
investigations of wire decking from the PRC. See Wire Decking From the
People's Republic of China: Initiation of Antidumping Duty
Investigation, 74 FR 31691 (July 2, 2009) and also Initiation Notice
(for the PRC CVD investigation). The AD and CVD investigations have the
same scope with regard to the merchandise covered.
On October 28, 2009, the petitioners submitted a letter, in
accordance with section 705(a)(1) of the Act, requesting alignment of
the final CVD determination with the final determination in the
companion AD investigation of wire decking from the PRC. Therefore, in
accordance with section 705(a)(1) of the Act, and 19 CFR 351.210(b)(4),
we are aligning the final CVD determination with the final
determination in the companion AD investigation of wire decking from
the PRC. The final CVD determination will be issued on the same date as
the final AD determination, which is currently scheduled to be issued
on or about March 20, 2010.
Application of the Countervailing Duty Law to Imports from the PRC
On October 25, 2007, the Department published Coated Free Sheet
Paper From the People's Republic of China: Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty
[[Page 57631]]
Determination, 72 FR 60645 (October 25, 2007) (CFS from the PRC), and
accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum (CFS Decision Memorandum).
In CFS from the PRC, the Department found that
. . . given the substantial differences between the Soviet-style
economies and the China's economy in recent years, the Department's
previous decision not to apply the CVD law to these Soviet-style
economies does not act as a bar to proceeding with a CVD investigation
involving products from China.
See CFS Decision Memorandum at Comment 6. The Department has affirmed
its decision to apply the CVD law to the PRC in subsequent final
determinations. See, e.g., Circular Welded Carbon Quality Steel Pipe
From the People's Republic of China: Final Affirmative Countervailing
Duty Determination and Final Affirmative Determination of Critical
Circumstances, 73 FR 31966 (June 5, 2008) (CWP from the PRC), and
accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum (CWP Decision Memorandum)
at Comment 1.
Additionally, for the reasons stated in the CWP Decision
Memorandum, we are using the date of December 11, 2001, the date on
which the PRC became a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO), as
the date from which the Department will identify and measure subsidies
in the PRC for purposes of this investigation. See CWP Decision
Memorandum at Comment 2.
Use of Facts Otherwise Available and Adverse Inferences
Sections 776(a)(1) and (2) of the Act provide that the Department
shall apply ``facts otherwise available'' if, inter alia, necessary
information is not on the record or an interested party or any other
person: (A) withholds information that has been requested; (B) fails to
provide information within the deadlines established, or in the form
and manner requested by the Department, subject to subsections (c)(1)
and (e) of section 782 of the Act; (C) significantly impedes a
proceeding; or (D) provides information that cannot be verified as
provided by section 782(i) of the Act.
Section 776(b) of the Act further provides that the Department may
use an adverse inference in applying the facts otherwise available when
a party has failed to cooperate by not acting to the best of its
ability to comply with a request for information.
Application of Facts Available: Provision of Zinc for Less Than
Adequate Remuneration (LTAR)
The Department is investigating the extent to which firms, acting
as government authorities, sold zinc to the mandatory respondents for
LTAR. As discussed in further detail below in the ``Provision of Zinc
for LTAR'' section, the Department sought information from the
mandatory respondents and the GOC concerning the identity of the firms
that produced the zinc ultimately purchased by the mandatory
respondents during the POI. The Department specifically sought
information that would enable it to determine whether the input
suppliers acted as producers of the input or as trading companies (or
non-producing suppliers) that resold the input that was produced by
other firms. In the case of DHMP, information from the company and the
GOC identified the name of the supplier(s) that sold the zinc to DHMP
during the POI. However, DHMP and the GOC did not identify the firm(s)
that actually produced the zinc that was sold to DHMP during the
POI.\6\ As explained below in the ``Provision of Zinc for LTAR''
program, the Department requires information concerning the producer(s)
of the zinc purchased by DHMP in order to determine whether DHMP
acquired zinc from a producer that acted as a government authority
capable of providing a financial contribution as described under
section 771(5)(D)(iv) of the Act. Thus, we find that the necessary
information is not on the record.
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\6\ Eastfound reported that it did not purchase zinc during the
POI.
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In prior CVD cases involving the PRC, in instances in which the
mandatory respondent and the GOC have failed to identify the firm that
produced the input sold to the mandatory respondent during the POI, the
Department has resorted to the use of facts available as described
under sections 776(a)(1) and (2)(b) of the Act. See, e.g., Circular
Welded Austenitic Stainless Pressure Pipe From the People's Republic of
China: Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, 74 FR 4936
(January 28, 2009) (CWASPP from the PRC), and accompanying Issues and
Decision Memorandum (CWASPP Decision Memorandum) at ``Provision of SSC
for LTAR.'' In such instances, the Department has utilized aggregate
production data provided by the GOC to estimate the amount of the input
that is produced by state-owned enterprises. Id. In keeping with this
approach, we have resorted to the use of facts available under sections
776(a)(1) and (2) of the Act in order to determine the extent to which
the zinc purchased by DHMP during the POI was produced by firms acting
as government authorities capable of providing a financial contribution
within the meaning of section 771(5)(D)(iv) of the Act.
The GOC provided the amount of zinc produced by state-owned
enterprises (SOEs), collectives, private firms, and firms for which the
ownership category was unknown. In the final determination of LWRP from
the PRC, the Department affirmed its decision to treat collectives as
government authorities. See Light-Walled Rectangular Pipe and Tube From
the People's Republic of China: Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Investigation Determination, 73 FR 35642 (June 24, 2008) (LWRP from the
PRC), and accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum (LWRP Decision
Memorandum) at Comment 5. We have adopted the same approach with regard
to collectives in the instant investigation. Using this data, we
calculated the share of zinc produced by government authorities to be
approximately 67 percent.\7\ Therefore, pursuant to sections 776(a)(1)
and (2) of the Act, we are assuming that 67 percent of the zinc sold to
DHMP during the POI was produced by government authorities capable of
providing a financial contribution within the meaning of section
771(5)(D)(iv) of the Act.
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\7\ In deriving this ratio, we did not include in our
calculations the quantity of zinc produced by firms that the GOC
categorized as unknown.
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Application of Adverse Inferences: Provision of Electricity for LTAR
On July 16, 2009, the Department issued its initial questionnaire
to the GOC. In the questionnaire, the Department asked the GOC several
questions regarding its alleged provision of electricity to the
mandatory respondents for LTAR. See Department's Initial Questionnaire
at Appendix 7 (July 16, 2009). The GOC failed to respond to those
questions. See GOC's Initial Questionnaire Response at 27-30 (September
10, 2009). The Department issued a supplemental questionnaire in which
it asked the GOC once again to submit the requested information
concerning the provision of electricity for LTAR program. See
Department's Second Supplemental Questionnaire at 2 (September 18,
2009). The GOC, however, again failed to provide the requested
information with regard to several of the Department's questions on the
provision
[[Page 57632]]
of electricity. See GOC's Second Supplemental Questionnaire Response at
1-2 (October 15, 2009).
Section 776(a)(2)(D) of the Act states that the Department shall
use the facts otherwise available in reaching a determination if an
interested party provides information that cannot be verified as
provided by section 782(i) of the Act. In addition, section
776(a)(2)(A) of the Act states that the Department shall use facts
available when a party withholds information that has been requested by
the Department. Further, section 776(b) of the Act states that if the
Department finds that an interested party fails to cooperate by not
acting to the best of its ability to comply with a request for
information, the Department may use an inference that is adverse to the
interests of that party in selecting from the facts otherwise
available.
As summarized above, the GOC did not provide the information
requested by the Department as it pertains to the provision of
electricity for LTAR program. We preliminarily find that, in failing to
provide the requested information, the GOC did not act to the best of
its ability. Accordingly, in selecting from among the facts available,
we are drawing an adverse inference with respect to the provision of
electricity in the PRC and preliminarily determine that the GOC is
providing a financial contribution that is specific within the meaning
of section 771(5A)(D)(iv) of the Act. See ``Provision of Electricity
for LTAR'' section below for a discussion of the program benefit.
Application of Adverse Inferences: Non-Cooperative Companies
In this investigation, 74 companies did not provide a response to
the Department's Q&V questionnaire issued during the respondent
selection process. These non-cooperative Q&V companies are listed below
in the ``Suspension of Liquidation'' section. We confirmed that each of
these companies received the Q&V questionnaire which was sent via
either Federal Express or DHL.\8\
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\8\ See Memorandum to the File regarding ``Delivery of Quantity
and Value Questionnaires via Federal Express and DHL'' (July 16,
2009).
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The 74 non-cooperative Q&V companies withheld requested information
and significantly impeded this proceeding. Specifically, by not
responding to requests for information concerning the quantity and
value of their sales, they impeded the Department's ability to select
the most appropriate respondents in this investigation. Thus, in
reaching our preliminary determination, pursuant to sections
776(a)(2)(A) and (C) of the Act, we are basing the CVD rate for the
non-cooperative Q&V 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 the Department's Q&V questionnaires, these 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 non-cooperating Q&V companies will not
obtain a more favorable result than had they fully complied with our
request for information.
In deciding which facts to use as adverse facts available (AFA),
section 776(b) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.308(c)(1) and (2) authorize
the Department to rely on information derived from: (1) the petition;
(2) a final determination in the investigation; (3) any previous review
or determination; or (4) any other information placed on the record.
The Department's practice when selecting an adverse rate from among the
possible sources of information is to ensure that the rate is
sufficiently adverse ``as to effectuate the statutory purposes of the
adverse facts available rule to induce respondents to provide the
Department with complete and accurate information in a timely manner.''
See, e.g., Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair
Value: Static Random Access Memory Semiconductors From Taiwan, 63 FR
8909, 8932 (February 23, 1998). The Department's practice also ensures
``that the party does not obtain a more favorable result by failing to
cooperate than if it had cooperated fully.'' See Statement of
Administrative Action (SAA) accompanying the Uruguay Round Agreements
Act, H.R. Rep. No. 103-316, Vol. I, at 870 (1994), reprinted at 1994
U.S.C.C.A.N. 4040, 4199.
It is the Department's practice to select, as AFA, the highest
calculated rate in any segment of the proceeding. See, e.g., Laminated
Woven Sacks From the People's Republic of China: Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination and Final Affirmative Determination,
in Part, of Critical Circumstances, 73 FR 35639 (June 24, 2008) (LWS
from the PRC), and accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum (LWS
Decision Memorandum) at ``Selection of the Adverse Facts Available.''
In previous CVD investigations of products from the PRC, we adapted
the practice to use the highest rate calculated for the same or similar
program in other PRC CVD investigations. See id. and Certain Tow-Behind
Lawn Groomers and Certain Parts Thereof From the People's Republic of
China: Preliminary Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination and
Alignment of Final Countervailing Duty Determination with Final
Antidumping Duty Determination, 73 FR 70971, 70975 (November 24, 2008)
(unchanged in the Certain Tow-Behind Lawn Groomers and Certain Parts
Thereof From the People's Republic of China: Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination, 74 FR 29180 (June 19, 2009), and
accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum (Lawn Groomers Decision
Memorandum) at ``Application of Facts Available, Including the
Application of Adverse Inferences''). For this preliminary
determination, consistent with the Department's recent practice, we are
computing a total AFA rate for the non-cooperating companies generally
using program-specific rates calculated for the cooperating respondents
in the instant investigation or calculated in prior PRC CVD cases.
Specifically, for programs other than those involving income tax
exemptions and reductions, we are applying the highest calculated rate
for the identical program in this investigation if a responding company
used the identical program, and the rate is not zero. If there is no
identical program match within the investigation, we are using the
highest non-de minimis rate calculated for the same or similar program
in another PRC CVD investigation. Absent an above-de minimis subsidy
rate calculated for the same or similar program, we are applying the
highest calculated subsidy rate for any program otherwise listed that
could conceivably be used by the non-cooperating companies. See, e.g.,
Lightweight Thermal Paper From the People's Republic of China: Final
Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, 73 FR 57323 (October 2,
2008) (LWTP from the PRC), and accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum (LWTP Decision Memorandum) at ``Selection of the Adverse
Facts Available Rate.''
Further, where the GOC can demonstrate through complete,
verifiable, positive evidence that non-cooperative Q&V companies
(including all their facilities and cross-owned affiliates) are not
located in particular provinces whose subsidies are being investigated,
the Department will not include those provincial programs in
determining the countervailable subsidy rate for the non-cooperative
Q&V companies. See, e.g., Certain Kitchen
[[Page 57633]]
Shelving and Racks from the People's Republic of China: Final
Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, 74 FR 37012 (July 27,
2009) (Shelving from the PRC), and accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum (Shelving Decision Memorandum) at ``Use of Facts Otherwise
Available and Adverse Facts Available.'' In this investigation, the GOC
has not provided any such information. Therefore, we are making the
adverse inference that the non-cooperative Q&V companies had facilities
and/or cross-owned affiliates that received subsidies under all of the
sub-national programs on which the Department initiated.
For the income tax rate reduction or exemption programs, we are
applying an adverse inference that the non-cooperative Q&V companies
paid no income taxes during the POI. The six programs are: (1) Two
Free, Three Half Tax Exemptions for FIEs, (2) Income Tax Exemptions for
Export-Oriented FIEs, (3) Local Income Tax Exemption and Reduction
Program for Productive FIEs, (4) Preferential Tax Programs for FIEs
Recognized as High or New Technology Enterprises, (5) Income Tax
Benefits for FIEs Based on Geographical Location, and (6) Income Tax
Exemption for Investors in Designated Geographical Regions within
Liaoning.
The standard income tax rate for corporations in the PRC is 30
percent, plus a 3 percent provincial income tax rate.\9\ The highest
possible benefit for all income tax reduction or exemption programs
combined is 33 percent. Therefore, we are applying a CVD rate of 33
percent on an overall basis for these six income tax programs (i.e.,
these six income tax programs combined provide a countervailable
benefit of 33 percent). This 33 percent AFA rate does not apply to tax
credit or tax refund programs. This approach is consistent with the
Department's past practice. See, e.g., CWP Decision Memorandum at 2,
and LWTP Decision Memorandum at ``Selection of the Adverse Facts
Available Rate.''
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\9\ See GOC's supplemental questionnaire response at 9 (October
15, 2009).
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The 33 percent AFA rate does not apply to the following four income
tax credit and rebate or accelerated depreciation programs because such
programs may not affect the tax rate and, hence, the subsidy conferred,
in the current year: (1) Income Tax Credit for Domestically-owned
Companies Purchasing Domestically-produced Equipment, (2) Income Tax
Exemption for Investment in Domestic Technological Renovation,\10\ (3)
Preferential Income Tax Policy for Enterprises in the Northeast
Region,\11\ and (4) Forgiveness of Tax Arrears for Enterprises in the
Old Industrial Bases of Northeast China.\12\ Neither mandatory
respondent used these programs, nor have we found greater than de
minimis benefits for these direct tax programs in other CVD PRC
proceedings. Therefore, we preliminarily determine to use the highest
non-de minimis rate for any indirect tax program from a China CVD
investigation. The rate we select is 1.51 percent, calculated for the
``Value-Added Tax and Tariff Exemptions on Imported Equipment'' program
in CFS from the PRC. See CFS Decision Memorandum at 13-14.
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\10\ Program provides a tax credit to enterprises for a certain
portion of investment in any domestically-produced equipment that
relates to technology updates. See Initiation Checklist at 15.
\11\ Program reduces the depreciation life of fixed assets by up
to 40 percent for tax purposes and shortens the period of
amortization of intangible assets by up to 40 percent for tax
purposes. See Initiation Checklist at 15.
\12\ Petitioner alleged that this program forgives tax
liabilities owed by companies in the northeast region of China. See
Initiation Checklist at 16.
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We are also investigating VAT and tariff reduction programs.
Eastfound used the Import Tariff and VAT Exemptions for FIEs and
Certain Domestic Enterprises Using Imported Equipment in Encouraged
Industries program and VAT Refunds for FIEs Purchasing Domestically-
produced Equipment program and, therefore, we are using, as AFA,
Eastfound's rates of 0.02 percent and 0.13 percent, respectively. For
the other following VAT and tariff reduction programs, for which we do
not have respondent program usage, we are applying the 1.51 percent
rate calculated in CFS from the PRC: (1) VAT Deductions on Fixed Assets
and (2) VAT Exemptions for Newly Purchased Equipment in Jinzhou
District.
Neither respondent used any of the loan programs on which the
Department initiated. Therefore, for the following loan programs, we
preliminarily determine to apply the highest non-de minimis subsidy
rate for any loan program in a prior China CVD investigation: (1)
Honorable Enterprise Program,\13\ (2) Preferential Loans for Key
Projects and Technologies, (3) Preferential Loans as Part of the
Northeast Revitalization Program, and (4) Policy Loans for Firms
Located in Industrial Zones in the City of Dalian in Liaoning Province.
The highest non-de minimis subsidy rate is 8.31 percent calculated for
the ``Government Policy Lending Program,'' from LWTP from the PRC. See
Lightweight Thermal Paper From the People's Republic of China: Notice
of Amended Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination and
Notice of Countervailing Duty Order, 73 FR 70958 (November 24, 2008)
(Amended LWTP from the PRC).
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\13\ In its September 29, 2009, supplemental questionnaire
response, the GOC reported that the Honorable Enterprise Program was
terminated and provided termination legislation (see page 1 and
Exhibit 1). The GOC also reported that it has not enacted a
successor program. We require more information regarding the GOC's
claim that the program has been terminated and will continue to
examine the GOC's claim of program termination.
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We also investigated on a number of grant programs. Neither
respondent used the following grant programs: (1) Five Points, One Line
Program, (2) Export Interest Subsidies, (3) State Key Technology Fund,
(4) Subsidies for Development of Famous Export Brands and China Top
Brands, (5) Sub-Central Government Programs to Promote Famous Export
Brands and China World Top Brands, and (6) Exemption of Fees for Firms
Located in Designated Geographical Areas in Dalian. In addition, the
Department has not calculated an above de minimis rates for any of
these programs in prior investigations, and, moreover, all previously
calculated rates for grant programs from prior China CVD investigations
have been de minimis. Therefore, for each of these grant programs, we
preliminarily determine to use the highest calculated subsidy rate for
any program otherwise listed, which could have been used by the non-
cooperative Q&V companies. We preliminarily determine that this rate is
44.91 percent for the ``Provision of HRS for LTAR'' program from CWP
from the PRC. See Circular Welded Carbon Quality Steel Pipe From the
People's Republic of China: Notice of Amended Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination and Notice of Countervailing Duty
Order, 73 FR 42545 (July 22, 2008) (Amended CWP from the PRC).
Finally, there are several provision of a good or service for LTAR
programs, which we are investigating. For the Provision of Wire Rod for
LTAR, we are using the rate of 1.21 percent calculated for Eastfound
(see program section below). For the Provision of HRS for LTAR, we are
using the rate of 0.26 percent calculated for Eastfound (see program
section below). For the Provision of Zinc for LTAR, though we have
respondent use of this program, DHMP's rate is 0.00 percent. Therefore,
we are using, as the AFA rate, the 44.91 percent calculated for the
``Provision of HRS for LTAR'' program from Amended CWP from the PRC.
[[Page 57634]]
Regarding the Provision of Electricity for LTAR,\14\ for reasons
discussed in the program section below, we preliminarily determine to
use, as AFA, the rate of 0.07 percent, which was calculated for the
program ``Provision of Electricity for LTAR in Zhanjiang Zone'' in LWTP
from the PRC.
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\14\ Our preliminary findings regarding the federal provision of
electricity for LTAR encompasses the program ``Provision of
Electricity for LTAR for Firms Located in Designated Geographical
Areas in Dalian,'' which is listed in the Initiation Notice and
accompanying Initiation Checklist.
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For the Provision of Land for LTAR for Firms Located in Designated
Geographical Areas in Dalian, we are using the rate of 1.46 percent
calculated for DHMP (see program section below). Regarding the
Provision of Water for LTAR for Firms Located in Designated
Geographical Areas in Dalian, which neither respondent used, the
Department has not calculated a rate for this type of program in a
prior CVD PRC investigation. Therefore, we have preliminarily
determined to use the highest non-de minimis rate calculated for a
provision of a good or service at LTAR program for which the non-
cooperative Q&V companies could have benefitted. We preliminarily
determine that this rate is 44.91 percent for the ``Provision of HRS
for LTAR'' program from Amended CWP from the PRC.
For further explanation of the derivation of the AFA rates, see
Memorandum to the File, regarding ``Preliminary Determination of
Adverse Facts Available Rate'' (November 2, 2009) (AFA Memorandum).
Section 776(c) of the Act provides that, when the Department relies on
secondary information rather than on information obtained in the course
of an investigation or review, it shall, to the extent practicable,
corroborate that information from independent sources that are
reasonably at its disposal. Secondary information is ``information
derived from the petition that gave rise to the investigation or
review, the final determination concerning the subject merchandise, or
any previous review under section 751 concerning the subject
merchandise.'' See, e.g., SAA, at 870, 1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 4199. The
Department considers information to be corroborated if it has probative
value. Id. To corroborate secondary information, the Department will,
to the extent practicable, examine the reliability and relevance of the
information to be used. The SAA emphasizes, however, that the
Department need not prove that the selected facts available are the
best alternative information. Id. at 869.
With regard to the reliability aspect of corroboration, we note
that these rates were calculated in recent final CVD determinations.
Further, the calculated rates were based upon verified information
about the same or similar programs. Moreover, no information has been
presented that calls into question the reliability of these calculated
rates that we are applying as AFA. Finally, unlike other types of
information, such as publicly available data on the national inflation
rate of a given country or national average interest rates, there
typically are no independent sources for data on company-specific
benefits resulting from countervailable subsidy programs.
With respect to the relevance aspect of corroborating the rates
selected, the Department will consider information reasonably at its
disposal in considering the relevance of information used to calculate
a countervailable subsidy benefit. Where circumstances indicate that
the information is not appropriate as AFA, the Department will not use
it. See Fresh Cut Flowers From Mexico; Final Results of Antidumping
Duty Administrative Review, 61 FR 6812 (February 22, 1996).
In the absence of record evidence concerning these programs due to
the decision of the non-cooperative Q&V companies to not participate in
the investigation, we have reviewed the information concerning PRC
subsidy programs in this and other cases. For those programs for which
the Department has found a program-type match, we find that, because
these are the same or similar programs, they are relevant to the
programs of this case. For the programs for which there is no program-
type match, we have selected the highest calculated subsidy rate for
any PRC program from which the non-cooperative Q&V companies could
receive a benefit to use as AFA. The relevance of these rates is that
it is an actual calculated CVD rate for a PRC program from which the
non-cooperative Q&V companies could actually receive a benefit.
Further, these rates were calculated for periods close to the POI in
the instant case. Moreover, the failure of these companies to respond
to requests for information by the Department has ``resulted in an
egregious lack of evidence on the record to suggest an alternative
rate.'' See Shanghai Taoen Int'l Trading Co. v. United States, 360 F.
supp. 2d 1339, 1348 (CIT 2005). Due to the lack of participation by the
non-cooperative Q&V companies and the resulting lack of record
information concerning their use of the programs under investigation,
the Department has corroborated the rates it selected to use as AFA to
the extent practicable.
On this basis, we preliminarily determine the AFA countervailable
subsidy rate for the non-cooperative Q&V companies to be 437.73 percent
ad valorem. See AFA Memorandum.
Application of All Others Rate to Companies Not Selected as Mandatory
Respondents
In addition to DHMP and Eastfound, we received responses to the Q&V
questionnaire from the following eight companies: Brynick Enterprises
Limited;\15\ C-F Industries LLC; Dalian Xingbo Metal Products Co.,
Ltd.; Dandong Riqian Logistics Equipment Co., Ltd.; Globsea Co., Ltd.;
Nanjing Topsun Racking Manufacturing Co., Ltd.; Ningbo Xinguang Rack
Co., Ltd.; and Tianjin Jiali Machine Co., Ltd. See Memorandum to the
File regarding ``Q&V Cooperative Companies'' (November 2, 2009). Though
these eight companies were not chosen as mandatory respondents, they
did cooperate fully with the Department's request for quantity and
value information. We, therefore, are applying the all others rate to
them.\16\
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\15\ Also known as, Ningbo Brynick Enterprises Limited.
\16\ We are also applying the all others rate to Yangzhou Hynet
Imp and Exp Corp. because the Department inadvertently failed to
send to the company a Q&V questionnaire. See Memorandum to the File
regarding ``Yangzhou Hynet Imp and Exp Corp.'' (November 2, 2009).
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Subsidies Valuation Information
Allocation Period
Under 19 CFR 351.524(b), non-recurring subsidies are allocated over
a period corresponding to the average useful life (AUL) of the
renewable physical assets used to produce the subject merchandise.
Pursuant to 19 CFR 351.524(d)(2), there is a rebuttable presumption
that the AUL will be taken from the U.S. Internal Revenue Service's
1977 Class Life Asset Depreciation Range System (IRS Tables), as
updated by the Department of Treasury. For the subject merchandise, the
IRS Tables prescribe an AUL of 12 years. No interested party has
claimed that the AUL of 12 years is unreasonable.
Further, for non-recurring subsidies, we have applied the ``0.5
percent expense test'' described in 19 CFR 351.524(b)(2). Under this
test, we compare the amount of subsidies approved under a given program
in a particular year to sales (total sales or total export sales, as
appropriate) for the same year. If the amount of subsidies is less than
0.5 percent of the relevant sales, then the benefits are allocated to
[[Page 57635]]
the year of receipt rather than allocated over the AUL period.
Attribution of Subsidies
The Department's regulations at 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(i) state that
the Department will normally attribute a subsidy to the products
produced by the corporation that received the subsidy. However, 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(ii)-(v) directs the Department to attribute subsidies
received by certain other companies to the combined sales of those
companies if (1) cross-ownership exists between the companies, and (2)
the cross-owned companies produce the subject merchandise, are a
holding or parent company of the subject company, produce an input that
is primarily dedicated to the production of the downstream product, or
transfer a subsidy to a cross-owned company.
According to 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(vi), cross-ownership exists
between two or more corporations where one corporation can use or
direct the individual assets of the other corporation(s) in essentially
the same ways it can use its own assets. This regulation states that
this standard will normally be met where there is a majority voting
interest between two corporations or through common ownership of two
(or more) corporations. The Court of International Trade (CIT) has
upheld the Department's authority to attribute subsidies based on
whether a company could use or direct the subsidy benefits of another
company in essentially the same way it could use its own subsidy
benefits. See Fabrique de Fer de Charleroi v. United States, 166 F.
Supp. 2d 593, 600-604 (CIT 2001).
Eastfound
Eastfound Metal and Eastfound Material are affiliated companies
that produce and export the subject merchandise. These companies are
cross-owned within the meaning of 19 CFR 351.525(b)(6)(vi) by virtue of
high levels of common ownership. Therefore, pursuant to 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(ii), we are attributing the subsidies received by
Eastfound Metal and Eastfound Material to the combined sales of the
companies, excluding the sales between them.
Eastfound Metal and Eastfound Material reported other affiliated
parties; however, both companies reported that these other affiliates
do not produce the subject merchandise and do not provide inputs.
Therefore, because these other affiliates do not produce subject
merchandise or otherwise fall within the situations outlined in 19 CFR
351.525(b)(6)(iii)-(v), we are not including these companies in our
subsidy calculations.
DHMP
In its questionnaire response, DHMP indicated that is the sole
producer of subject merchandise. It also indicated that it is owned by
a parent company. We sent a CVD questionnaire to the parent company of
DHMP. The parent company supplied its response on September 9, 2009.
Based on the information in the response, we preliminarily determine
that the parent company did not produce subject merchandise or supply
DHMP with an input that is primarily dedicated to the production of
subject merchandise during the POI. Furthermore, based on the
questionnaire response of the parent company, we preliminarily
determine that it had no sales revenue during the POI and did not use
any of the alleged subsidy programs. Therefore, in accordance with 19
CFR 351.525(b)(6)(i), we are attributing subsidies found to have been
received by DHMP solely to the sales of DHMP.
Benchmarks and Discount Rates
Although the Department is not calculating subsidy rates for any
loans in this investigation, the benchmark interest rate is used to
compute the discount rate that we are using to allocate benefits over
time. Therefore, we discuss the derivation of the benchmark rates
below.
Benchmark for Short-Term RMB Denominated Loans: Section
771(5)(E)(ii) of the Act explains that the benefit for loans is the
``difference between the amount the recipient of the loan pays on the
loan and the amount the recipient would pay on a comparable commercial
loan that the recipient could actually obtain on the market.''
Normally, the Department uses comparable commercial loans reported by
the company for benchmarking purposes. See 19 CFR 351.505(a)(3)(i). If
the firm did not have any comparable commercial loans during the
period, the Department's regulations provide that we ``may use a
national interest rate for comparable commercial loans.'' See 19 CFR
351.505(a)(3)(ii).
As noted above, section 771(5)(E)(ii) of the Act indicates that the
benchmark should be a market-based rate. However, for the reasons
explained in CFS from the PRC, loans provided by Chinese banks reflect
significant government intervention in the banking sector and do not
reflect rates that would be found in a functioning market. See CFS
Decision Memorandum at Comment 10. Because of this, any loans received
by respondents from private Chinese or foreign-owned banks would be
unsuitable for use as benchmarks under 19 CFR 351.505(a)(2)(i).
Similarly, we cannot use a national interest rate for commercial loans
as envisaged by 19 CFR 351.505(a)(3)(ii). Therefore, because of the
special difficulties inherent in using a Chinese benchmark for loans,
the Department is selecting an external market-based benchmark interest
rate. The use of an external benchmark is consistent with the
Department's practice. For example, in Softwood Lumber from Canada, the
Department used U.S. timber prices to measure the benefit for
government-provided timber in Canada. See Notice of Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination and Final Negative Critical
Circumstances Determination: Certain Softwood Lumber Products From
Canada, 67 FR 15545 (April 2, 2002) (Softwood Lumber from Canada), and
accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum (Softwood Lumber Decision
Memorandum) at ``Analysis of Programs, Provincial Stumpage Programs
Determined to Confer Subsidies, Benefit.''
We are calculating the external benchmark using the regression-
based methodology first developed in CFS from the PRC and more recently
updated in LWTP from the PRC. See CFS Decision Memorandum at Comment
10; see also LWTP Decision Memorandum at ``Benchmarks and Discount
Rates.'' This benchmark interest rate is based on the inflation-
adjusted interest rates of countries with per capita gross national
incomes (GNIs) similar to the PRC, and takes into account a key factor
involved in interest rate formation, that of the quality of a country's
institutions, that is not directly tied to the state-imposed
distortions in the banking sector discussed above.
Following the methodology developed in CFS from the PRC, we first
determined which countries are similar to the PRC in terms of GNI,
based on the World Bank's classification of countries as: low income;
lower-middle income; upper-middle income; and high income. The PRC
falls in the lower-middle income category, a group that includes 55
countries as of July 2007. As explained in CFS from the PRC, this pool
of countries captures the broad inverse relationship between income and
interest rates.
Many of these countries reported lending and inflation rates to the
International Monetary Fund and are included in that agency's
international financial statistics (IFS). With the exceptions noted
below, we have used the interest and inflation rates reported
[[Page 57636]]
in the IFS for the countries identified as ``low middle income'' by the
World Bank. First, we did not include those economies that the
Department considered to be non-market economies for AD purposes for
any part of the years in question, for example: Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Belarus, Georgia, Moldova, and Turkmenistan. Second, the pool
necessarily excludes any country that did not report both lending and
inflation rates to IFS for those years. Third, we removed any country
that reported a rate that was not a lending rate or that based its
lending rate on foreign-currency denominated instruments. For example,
Jordan reported a deposit rate, not a lending rate, and the rates
reported by Ecuador and Timor L'Este are dollar-denominated rates;
therefore, the rates for these three countries have been excluded.
Finally, for each year the Department calculated an inflation-adjusted
short-term benchmark rate, we have also excluded any countries with
aberrational or negative real interest rates for the year in question.
Benchmark for Long-Term RMB Denominated Loans: The lending rates
reported in the IFS represent short- and medium-term lending, and there
are no sufficient publicly available long-term interest rate data upon
which to base a robust long-term benchmark. To address this problem,
the Department has developed an adjustment to the short- and medium-
term rates to convert them to long-term rates using Bloomberg U.S.
corporate BB-rated bond rates. See LWRP Decision Memorandum at
``Discount Rates.'' In Citric Acid from the PRC, this methodology was
revised by switching from a long-term mark-up based on the ratio of the
rates of BB-rated bonds to applying a spread which is calculated as the
difference between the two-year BB bond rate and the n-year BB bond
rate, where n equals or approximates the number of years of the term of
the loan in question. See Citric Acid and Certain Citrate Salts From
the People's Republic of China: Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Determination, 74 FR 16836 (April 13, 2009) (Citric Acid from the PRC),
and accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum (Citric Acid Decision
Memorandum) at Comment 14.
Discount Rates: Consistent with 19 CFR 351.524(d)(3)(i)(A), we have
used, as our discount rate, the long-term interest rate calculated
according to the methodology described above for the year in which the
government provided the subsidy.
Analysis of Programs
I. Programs Preliminarily Determined To Be Countervailable
A. Provision of Wire Rod for LTAR
The Department is investigating whether producers and suppliers,
acting as Chinese government authorities, sold wire rod to the
mandatory respondents for LTAR. DHMP and Eastfound reported obtaining
wire rod during the POI from trading companies as well as directly from
wire rod producers.
In Tires from the PRC, the Department determined that majority
government ownership of an input producer is sufficient to qualify it
as an ``authority.'' See Certain New Pneumatic Off-the-Road Tires From
the People's Republic of China: Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty
Determination and Final Negative Determination of Critical
Circumstances, 73 FR 40480 (July 15, 2008) (Tires from the PRC), and
accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum (Tires Decision Memorandum)
at ``Government Provision of Rubber for Less than Adequate
Remuneration.'' Based on the record in the instant investigation, we
preliminarily determine that wire rod producers, which supplied
respondents, and that are majority-government owned are
``authorities.'' See Memorandum to the File regarding ``Preliminary
Calculations for Eastfound'' (November 2, 2009) (Eastfound Preliminary
Calculations). As a result, we determine that wire rod supplied by
companies deemed to be government authorities constitute(s) a financial
contribution to Eastfound in the form of a governmental provision of a
good and that the respondents received a benefit to the extent that the
price they paid for wire rod produced by these suppliers was for LTAR.
See sections 771(5)(D)(iv) and 771(5)(E)(iv) of the Act.\17\
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\17\ Regarding DHMP, we preliminarily determine that none of the
wire rod it acquired during the POI was produced by government
authorities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In prior CVD proceedings involving the PRC, the Department has
determined that when a respondent purchases an input from a trading
company or non-producing supplier, a subsidy is conferred if the
producer of the input is an ``authority'' within the meaning of section
771(5)(B) of the Act and the price paid by the respondent for the input
was sold for LTAR. See CWP Decision Memorandum at ``Hot-Rolled Steel
for Less Than Adequate Remuneration;'' Shelving Decision Memorandum at
``Provision of Wire Rod for Less than Adequate Remuneration;'' and
CWASPP Decision Memorandum at ``Provision of SSC for LTAR.'' Therefore,
in our initial questionnaire, we requested that the respondent
companies and the GOC together identify the producers from whom the
trading companies acquired the wire rod that was subsequently sold to
respondents during the POI and to provide information that would allow
the Department to determine whether those producers were government
authorities.
In response to these requests, DHMP and Eastfound were able to
identify the firms that produced the wire rod that was ultimately sold
to them. We have used the information concerning the ownership status
of the wire rod suppliers to determine whether DHMP and Eastfound
purchased wire rod that was produced by government authorities. In the
case of DHMP, we preliminarily determine that none of the wire rod it
purchased was produced by firms acting as government authorities.
Therefore, we have not conducted a subsidy analysis for DHMP's
purchases of wire rod during the POI. Regarding Eastfound, we
preliminarily determine that it purchased a certain quantity of wire
rod that was produced by government authorities during the POI.
Therefore, we preliminarily determine, with regard to wire rod produced
by these firms, that Eastfound received a financial contribution within
the meaning of section 771(5)(D)(iv) of the Act.
Having addressed the issue of financial contribution, we must next
analyze whether the sale of wire rod to Eastfound by suppliers
designated as government authorities conferred a benefit within the
meaning of section 771(5)(iv) of the Act. The Department's regulations
at 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2) set forth the basis for identifying appropriate
market-determined benchmarks for measuring the adequacy of remuneration
for government-provided goods or services. These potential benchmarks
are listed in hierarchical order by preference: (1) market prices from
actual transactions within the country under investigation (e.g.,
actual sales, actual imports or competitively run government auctions)
(tier one); (2) world market prices that would be available to
purchasers in the country under investigation (tier two); or (3) an
assessment of whether the government price is consistent with market
principles (tier three). As we explained in Softwood Lumber from
Canada, the preferred benchmark in the hierarchy is an observed market
price from actual transactions within the country under investigation
because such prices generally would be expected
[[Page 57637]]
to reflect most closely the prevailing market conditions of the
purchaser under investigation. See Softwood Lumber Decision Memorandum
at ``Market-Based Benchmark.''
Beginning with tier-one, we must determine whether the prices from
actual sales transactions involving Chinese buyers and sellers are
significantly distorted. As explained in the CVD Preamble:
Where it is reasonable to conclude that actual transaction prices
are significantly distorted as a result of the government's involvement
in the market, we will resort to the next alternative {tier two{time}
in the hierarchy.
See Preamble to Countervailing Duty Regulations, 63 FR 65377, (November
25, 1998) (CVD Preamble). The CVD Preamble further recognizes that
distortion can occur when the government provider constitutes a
majority or, in certain circumstances, a substantial portion of the
market.
In the instant investigation, the GOC reported the total wire rod
production by state-owned entities during the POI. The number of these
state-owned entities (SOEs and COEs) accounted for approximately the
same percentage of the wire rod production in the PRC as was recently
found in Shelving and Racks from the PRC, in which the Department
determined that the GOC had direct ownership or control of wire rod
production. See Shelving and Racks Decision Memorandum, at Comment 4.
Because the GOC has not provided any information that would lead the
Department to reconsider the determination in Shelving and Racks from
the PRC, we find that the substantial market share held by SOEs shows
that the government plays a predominant role in the this market. See
Shelving and Racks Decision Memorandum at 15. The government's
predominant position is further demonstrated by the low level of
imports, which accounted for only one percent of the volume of wire rod
available in the Chinese market during the POI. See GOC's September 10,
2009, questionnaire response at 11. Because the share of imports of
wire rod into the PRC is small relative to Chinese domestic production
of wire rod, it would be inappropriate to use import values to
calculate a benchmark. This is consistent with the Department's
approach discussed in LWRP Decision Memorandum, at Comment 7.
In addition to the government's predominant role in the market, we
found in Shelving and Racks from the PRC that the 10 percent export
tariff and export licensing requirement instituted by the GOC
contributed to the distortion of the domestic market in the PRC for
wire rod. Such export restraints can discourage exports and increase
the supply of wire rod in the domestic market, with the result that
domestic prices are lower than they would otherwise be. See Shelving
and Racks Decision Memorandum at 15. Consequently, we determine that
there are no appropriate tier one benchmark prices available for wire
rod.
We examined whether the record contained data that could be used as
a tier-two wire rod benchmark under 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(ii). The
Department has on the record of the investigation prices for wire rod
(industrial quality, low carbon), as sourced from the American Metals
Market (AMA). See Petitioners' Benchmark Comments at Exhibit 1. The
benchmark prices are reported on a monthly basis in U.S. dollars per
metric ton (MT). No other interested party submitted tier-two wire rod
prices on the record of this investigation.
Therefore, for purposes of the preliminary determination, we find
that the data from AMA should be used to derive a tier-two, world
market price for wire rod that would be available to purchasers of wire
rod in the PRC. We note that the Department has relied on pricing data
from industry publications in recent CVD proceedings involving the PRC.
See, e.g., CWP Decision Memorandum at ``Hot-Rolled Steel for Less Than
Adequate Remuneration'' and LWRP Decision Memorandum at ``Hot-Rolled
Steel for Less Than Adequate Remuneration.'' Further, we find that, for
purposes of the preliminary determination, there is no basis to
conclude that prices from the AMA are any less reliable or
representative than data from other trade industry publications used by
the Department in prior CVD proceedings involving the PRC.
To determine whether wire rod suppliers, acting as government
authorities, sold wire rod to respondents for LTAR, we compared the
prices that Eastfound paid to the suppliers to our wire rod benchmark
price. We conducted our comparison on a monthly basis. When conducting
the price comparison, we converted the benchmark to the same currency
and unit of measure as reported by Eastfound for its purchases of wire
rod.
Under 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(iv), when measuring the adequacy of
remuneration under tier one or tier two, the Department will adjust the
benchmark price to reflect the price that a firm actually paid or would
pay if it imported the product, including delivery charges and import
duties. Regarding delivery charges, at this time we lack information
concerning delivery charges and, therefore, have not adjusted the
benchmark in this regard, but will continue to seek the relevant
information. However, we have added import duties, as reported by the
GOC, and the VAT applicable to imports of wire rod into the PRC. With
respect to the three percent insurance charge on imports noted by the
petitioner, consistent with Shelving from the PRC, while the Department
will consider in future determinations the propriety of including
insurance as a delivery charge, the existing record of this
investigation does not support such an adjustment. See Shelving from
the PRC Decision Memorandum at Comment 9.
Comparing the benchmark unit prices to the unit prices paid by
Eastfound for wire rod, we preliminarily determine that wire rod was
provided for LTAR and that a benefit exists in the amount of the
difference between the benchmark and what the respondent paid. See
section 771(5)(E)(iv) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.511(a). We calculated
the total benefit by multiplying the unit benefit by the quantity of
wire rod purchased.
Finally, with respect to specificity, the third subsidy element
specified under the Act, the GOC has provided information on end uses
for wire rod. See GOC's Initial Questionnaire Response at 14 (September
10, 2009). The GOC stated that the consumption of wire rod occurs
across a broad range of industries. Id. While numerous companies may
comprise the listed industries, section 771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of the Act
clearly directs the Department to conduct its analysis on an industry
or enterprise basis. Based on our review of the data and consistent
with our past practice, we determine that the industries named by the
GOC are limited in number and, hence, the subsidy is specific. See
section 771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of the Act; see also LWRP Decision
Memorandum at Comment 7, and Shelving Decision Memorandum at
``Provision of Wire Rod from Less Than Adequate Remuneration.''
We preliminarily find that the GOC's provision of wire rod for LTAR
to be a domestic subsidy as described under 19 CFR 351.525(b)(3).
Therefore, to calculate the net subsidy rate, we divided the benefit by
a denominator comprised of total sales. On this basis, we calculated a
total net subsidy rate of 1.21 percent ad valorem for Eastfound.
[[Page 57638]]
B. Provision of Hot-Rolled Steel for LTAR
The Department is investigating whether producers and suppliers,
acting as Chinese government authorities, sold HRS to the mandatory
respondents for LTAR. DHMP and Eastfound reported purchasing HRS during
the POI from trading companies as well as directly from HRS producers.
As explained above, in Tires from the PRC, the Department
determined that majority government ownership of an input producer is
sufficient to qualify the producer as an ``authority.'' See Tires
Decision Memorandum at ``Government Provision of Rubber for Less than
Adequate Remuneration.'' Based on the record of this investigation, we
preliminarily determine that HRS producers that supply respondents and
that are majority-government owned are ``authorities.'' See Eastfound
Preliminary Calculations. As a result, we preliminarily determine that
HRS supplied by companies deemed to be government authorities
constitute a financial contribution to respondents in the form of a
governmental provision of a good and that the respondents received a
subsidy to the extent that the price they paid for HRS produced by
these suppliers was sold for LTAR. See sections 771(5)(D)(iv) and
771(5)(E)(iv) of the Act.
In prior CVD proceedings involving the PRC, the Department has
determined that when a respondent purchases an input from a trading
company or non-producing supplier, a subsidy is conferred if the
producer of the input is an ``authority'' within the meaning of section
771(5)(B) of the Act and the price paid by the respondent for the input
was sold for LTAR. See CWP Decision Memorandum at ``Hot-Rolled Steel
for Less Than Adequate Remuneration,'' Shelving Decision Memorandum at
``Provision of HRS for Less than Adequate Remuneration,'' and CWASPP
Decision Memorandum at ``Provision of SSC for LTAR.'' Therefore, in our
initial questionnaire, we requested that the respondent companies and
the GOC together identify the producers from whom the trading companies
acquired the HRS that was subsequently sold to respondents during the
POI and to provide information that would allow the Department to
determine whether those producers were government authorities.
In response to these requests, DHMP and Eastfound were able to
identify the firms that produced the HRS that was ultimately sold to
them. We have used the information concerning the ownership status of
the HRS suppliers to determine whether DHMP and Eastfound purchased HRS
that was produced by government authorities. In the case of DHMP, we
preliminarily determine that none of the HRS it purchased was produced
by firms acting as government authorities. Therefore, we have not
conducted a subsidy analysis for DHMP's purchases of HRS during the
POI. Regarding Eastfound, we preliminarily determine that it purchased
a certain quantity of HRS that was produced by government authorities
during the POI. Therefore, we preliminarily determine, with regard to
HRS produced by these firms, that Eastfound received a financial
contribution within the meaning of section 771(5)(D)(iv) of the Act.
Having addressed the issue of financial contribution, we must next
analyze whether the sale of HRS to the mandatory respondents by
suppliers designated as government authorities conferred a benefit
within the meaning of section 771(5)(iv) of the Act. The Department's
regulations at 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2) set forth the basis for identifying
appropriate market-determined benchmarks for measuring the adequacy of
remuneration for government-provided goods or services. These potential
benchmarks are listed in hierarchical order by preference: (1) market
prices from actual transactions within the country under investigation
(e.g., actual sales, actual imports or competitively run government
auctions) (tier one); (2) world market prices that would be available
to purchasers in the country under investigation (tier two); or (3) an
assessment of whether the government price is consistent with market
principles (tier three). As we explained in Softwood Lumber from
Canada, the preferred benchmark in the hierarchy is an observed market
price from actual transactions within the country under investigation
because such prices generally would be expected to reflect most closely
the prevailing market conditions of the purchaser under investigation.
See Softwood Lumber Decision Memorandum at ``Market-Based Benchmark.''
Beginning with tier-one, we must determine whether the prices from
actual sales transactions involving Chinese buyers and sellers are
significantly distorted. As explained in the CVD Preamble:
Where it is reasonable to conclude that actual transaction prices
are significantly distorted as a result of the government's involvement
in the market, we will resort to the next alternative {tier two{time}
in the hierarchy.
See 63 FR at 65377. The CVD Preamble further recognizes that distortion
can occur when the government provider constitutes a majority or, in
certain circumstances, a substantial portion of the market.
As instructed, the GOC provided the percentage of HRS production
accounted for by SOEs during the POI. The GOC further reported the
portion of HRS produced by ``collectives.'' In the final determination
of LWRP from the PRC, the Department affirmed its decision to treat
collectives as government authorities. See LWRP Decision Memorandum at
Comment 5. Based on this aggregate data, we preliminarily determine
that government authorities accounted for a majority of the HRS
produced during the POI. Based on these data, we preliminarily
determine that domestic prices for HRS cannot serve as a viable tier-
one benchmark as described under 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(i). Consequently,
as there are no other available tier-one benchmark prices, we have
turned to tier-two, i.e., world market prices available to purchasers
in the PRC.
We examined whether the record contained data that could be used as
a tier-two HRS benchmark under 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(ii). The Department
has on the record of the investigation prices for HRS, as sourced from
the Steel Benchmarker Report. See Petitioners' Benchmark Comments at
Exhibit 2. The benchmark prices are reported on a monthly basis in U.S.
dollars per metric ton (MT). No other interested party submitted tier-
two HRS prices on the record of this investigation.
Therefore, for purposes of the preliminary determination, we find
that the data from the Steel Benchmarker Report should be used to
derive a tier-two, world market price for HRS that would be available
to purchasers of HRS in the PRC. We note that the Department has relied
on pricing data from industry publications in recent CVD proceedings
involving the PRC. See, e.g., CWP Decision Memorandum at ``Hot-Rolled
Steel for Less Than Adequate Remuneration,'' and LWRP Decision
Memorandum at ``Hot-Rolled Steel for Less Than Adequate Remuneration.''
Further, we find that, for purposes of the preliminary determination,
there is no basis to conclude that prices from the Steel Benchmarker
Report are any less reliable or representative than data from other
trade industry publications used by the Department in prior CVD
proceedings involving the PRC.
To determine whether HRS suppliers, acting as government
authorities, sold HRS to Eastfound for LTAR, we
[[Page 57639]]
compared the prices the respondents paid to the suppliers to our HRS
benchmark price. We conducted our comparison on a monthly basis. The
Steel Benchmarker Report provides multiple prices for each month of the
POI. Therefore, to arrive at a single monthly benchmark HRS price, we
simple averaged the prices for each month. When conducting the price
comparison, we converted the benchmark to the same currency and unit of
measure as reported by Eastfound for its purchases of HRS.
Under 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(iv), when measuring the adequacy of
remuneration under tier one or tier two, the Department will adjust the
benchmark price to reflect the price that a firm actually paid or would
pay if it imported the product, including delivery charges and import
duties. Regarding delivery charges, at this time we lack information
concerning delivery charges and, therefore, have not adjusted the
benchmark in this regard, but will continue to seek the relevant
information. With respect to the three percent insurance charge on
imports noted by the petitioner, consistent with Shelving from the PRC,
while the Department will consider in future determinations the
propriety of including insurance as a delivery charge, the existing
record of this investigation does not support such an adjustment. See
Shelving from the PRC Decision Memorandum at Comment 9.
Comparing the benchmark unit prices to the unit prices paid by
Eastfound for HRS, we preliminarily determine that HRS was provided for
LTAR and that a benefit exists in the amount of the difference between
the benchmark and what the respondent paid. See section 771(5)(E)(iv)
of the Act and 19 CFR 351.511(a). We calculated the total benefit by
multiplying the unit benefit by the quantity of HRS purchased.
Finally, with respect to specificity, in prior cases involving the
provision of HRS for LTAR, the Department has found that the program is
specific under section 771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of the Act because the
industries that utilize HRS are limited. See LWRP Decision Memorandum
at Comment 7, and Shelving Decision Memorandum at ``Provision of HRS
from Less Than Adequate Remuneration.'' We preliminarily determine that
there is no information on the record at this time to warrant
reconsideration of the Department's prior findings in this regard.
We preliminarily find that the GOC's provision of HRS for LTAR to
be a domestic subsidy as described under 19 CFR 351.525(b)(3).
Therefore, to calculate the net subsidy rate, we divided the benefit by
a denominator comprised of total sales. On this basis, we calculated a
total net subsidy rate of 0.26 percent ad valorem for Eastfound.
C. Provision of Land for LTAR
As explained in the Initiation Checklist,\18\ the Department is
investigating whether the City of Dalian sells land for LTAR to firms
located in the municipality's Huayuankou Industrial Zone. In the
initial questionnaire, the Department asked the respondents to report
their purchase of land located in Dalian's designated industrial zones.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ See Initiation Checklist at 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Though Eastfound Metal and Eastfound Material reported that they
are not located at any development zone or special area in Dalian,\19\
each company responded to the Department's questions on the ``Provision
of Land for LTAR for Firms Located in Designated Geographical Areas in
the City of Dalian in Liaoning Province.'' Therefore, for purposes of
this preliminary determination, we find that the respondents are
located in a designated zone.
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\19\ See Eastfound Metal's supplemental questionnaire response
at1 (October 20, 2009) and Eastfound Material's supplemental
questionnaire response at 1 (October 15, 2009).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eastfound Metal reported that it obtained its land-use rights in
May 2000,\20\ which is prior to the date (i.e., December 11, 2001) from
which the Department will identify and measure subsidies in the PRC for
purposes of this investigation. Eastfound Material reported that it
acquired two parcels of land (Land A and Land B) located in Jinzhou
District within the City of Dalian from local government authorities.
There is conflicting information on the record as to whether Eastfound
Material had an additional land transaction. We will seek additional
information regarding a possible third land purchase.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See Eastfound Metal's initial questionnaire response at
III-17 (September 9, 2009).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eastfound Material's purchase of Land A occurred in 2008 and the
purchase of Land B in 2006. Regarding Land B, Eastfound Material
reported that it purchased this land from Beihai Village in Jinzhou
District, and paid a price determined through a mutual agreement with
Beihai Village.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See Eastfound Material's supplemental response at 22-23
(October 15, 2009 Response).
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Regarding Land A, Eastfound Material stated that it purchased Land
A from Dalian Municipal Bureau of Land Resource and Housing Management
(Dalian Municipal Bureau). Unlike Land B, however, Eastfound Material
reported that it purchased Land A through a ``public listing'' process
which has elements of an auction where the land authorities issue a
``notice of public listing'' and all parties who are interested in the
land use right of this land are free to participate in the public
listing competition.\22\ We note that the notice for public listing
includes 10 serial numbers of land (Land A included) for sale, and all
of the land are designated for construction purposes and are designated
to be used for ``storage'' or used by ``industry.''\23\ With respect to
Land A, the ``Public Listing Notice'' further designates that ``the
nature of the land use'' for Land A is ``metal products industry.''\24\
Moreover, information supplied by the Eastfound Material indicates that
while there were multiple companies participating in the public listing
process in the notice which includes 10 parcels of land, Eastfound
Material was the only company participating in the public listing for
Land A. As a result, Eastfound Material was the sole bidder of Land A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ Id. at page 17 and Exhibits 8 and 9.
\23\ See ``Listing Transfer Announcement on the Use Right of the
State-owned Land for Construction Purposes of Dalian Municipal Land
and Resources Bureau and Housing Bureau Jinzhou Land and Resources
Branch'' No.4 Da Jin Guo Tu Gao Zi (2008) in Exhibit 8.
\24\ See Eastfound Material's supplemental response at Exhibit 9
(October 15, 2009) for the ``Notice of Competitive Buying Of Land-
Use Right Under Public Listing (Public Listing Notice).''
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The Department has previously determined that the provision of
land-use rights constitutes the provision of a good within the meaning
of section 771(5)(D)(iii) of the Act. See LWS Decision Memorandum at
Comment 8; see also Citric Acid Decision Memorandum at ``Provision of
Land in the AEDZ for LTAR.''
The Department also found that when the land is in an industrial
park located within the seller's (e.g., county's or municipality's)
jurisdiction, the provision of the land-use rights is regionally
specific under section 771(5A)(D)(iv) of the Act. See, e.g., LWS
Decision Memorandum at Comment 9. In the instant investigation, both
Land A and Land B are designated areas within the area under the
jurisdiction of the City of Dalian as described under section
771(5A)(D)(iv) of the Act. Further, in the case of Eastfound Material's
purchase of Land A, as noted above, the GOC limited firms that could
respond to the public listing notice to those in the metal products
industry. Thus, with regard to Land A, we preliminarily determine this
program also meets the specificity criteria
[[Page 57640]]
described under 771(5A)(D)(i) of the Act. Therefore, consistent with
LWS from the PRC, we preliminarily determine that Eastfound Material's
purchase of granted land-use rights located within the Jinzhou District
in 2006 and 2008 gives rise to countervailable subsidies to the extent
that the purchases conferred a benefit.
To determine whether the Eastfound Material received a benefit, we
have analyzed potential benchmarks in accordance with 19 CFR
351.511(a). First, we looked to whether there are market-determined
prices (referred to as tier-one prices in the LTAR regulation) within
the country. See 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(i). In LWS from the PRC, the
Department determined that ``Chinese land prices are distorted by the
significant government role in the market'' and, hence, tier-one
benchmarks do not exist. See LWS Decision Memorandum at Comment 10. The
Department also found that tier-two benchmarks (world market prices
that would be available to purchasers in China) are not appropriate.
Id. at ``Analysis of Programs - Government Provision of Land for Less
Than Adequate Remuneration;'' see also 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(ii).
Therefore, the Department determined the adequacy of remuneration by
reference to tier-three and found that the sale of land-use rights in
China was not consistent with market principles because of the
overwhelming presence of the government in the land-use rights market
and the widespread and documented deviation from the authorized methods
of pricing and allocating land. See LWS Decision Memorandum at Comment
10; see also 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(iii). We preliminarily determine that
there is insufficient new information on the record of this
investigation to warrant a change from the findings in LWS from the
PRC.
With respect to Eastfound Material's claim that it purchased Land A
through a public listing process that contains auction elements, we
resort to the Department's regulations and past practice. Section
351.511(a)(2)(i) of the regulations states that the Department can use
sales from a government-run auction in certain circumstances to
determine whether a government-provided good or service is provided for
LTAR, but only if the government sells a significant portion of the
good or service through competitive bid procedures that are open to
everyone. These circumstances are not present here. The Public Listing
Notice clearly states that Land A can only be used for ``metal products
industry.''\25\ Therefore, the public listing process is only open to
metal products industry. Thus, the overwhelming majority of the
purchasers of this government good or service are explicitly excluded
from this auction. As a result, Eastfound Material was the only bidder
for Land A. Therefore, the bidding price set by the Land Authority in
Jinzhou District cannot be used as benchmark prices under section
351.511(a)(2)(i) of the regulations. See Notice of Preliminary
Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, Preliminary Affirmative
Critical Circumstances Determination, and Alignment of Final
Countervailing Duty Determination With Final Antidumping Duty
Determination: Certain Softwood Lumber Products From Canada (Lumber
from Canada), 66 FR 43186 (August 17, 2001),\26\ (unchanged in the
final determination, see Softwood Lumber from Canada).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ See Eastfound Material's supplemental questionnaire
response at Exhibit 9, pages 1-2 (October 15, 2009).
\26\ In Softwood Lumber from Canada, British Columbia provided
stumpage prices set by government auction. The Department determined
that the auction is only open to small businesses that are
registered as small business forest enterprises. Thus, the
overwhelming majority of the purchasers of this government good or
service are explicitly excluded from this auction. Therefore, the
auction prices submitted by British Columbia cannot be used as
benchmark prices under section 351.511(a)(2)(i) of the CVD
Regulations. Furthermore, the Department found that the provincial
government provider constitutes a majority or substantial portion of
the market, thus, there is a significant distortion in the private
transaction prices for the good or service with that country's
market. Thus, the Department determined that it cannot use the
private transaction prices provided by the provincial governments.
The Department determined that stumpage prices from the United
States qualify as commercially available world market prices because
it is reasonable to conclude that U.S. stumpage would be available
to softwood lumber producers in Canada at the same prices available
to U.S. lumber producers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For these reasons, we are not able to use Chinese or world market
prices as a benchmark. Therefore, we are preliminarily comparing the
price that the Eastfound Material paid for its granted land-use rights
with comparable market-based prices for land purchases in a country at
a comparable level of economic development that is reasonably proximate
to, but outside of, China. Specifically, we are preliminarily comparing
the prices Eastfound Material paid to Beihai Village in 2006, and to
Dalian Municipal Bureau in 2008, to the respective Thailand prices in
2006 and 2008 for Thailand's certain industrial land in industrial
estates, parks, and zones, consistent with LWS from the PRC. See LWS
Decision Memorandum at ``Analysis of Programs - Government Provision of
Land for Less Than Adequate Remuneration.''
To calculate the benefit, we computed the amounts that Eastfound
Material would have paid for both of its granted land-use rights and
subtracted the amounts Eastfound Material actually paid for both of its
purchases, Land B in 2006 and Land A in 2008. Our comparison indicates
that the prices Eastfound Material paid to the government authority in
2006 for Land B, and the price it paid for Land A in 2008 were less
than our land benchmark prices for each respective year and, thus,
Eastfound Material received a benefit under section 771(5)(E)(iv) of
the Act. Next, in accordance with 19 CFR 351.524(b)(2), we examined
whether the subsidy amount exceeded 0.5 percent of Eastfound's total
consolidated sales in the years of purchase. Our analysis indicates
that the subsidy amount exceeded the 0.5 percent threshold for both
land purchases. Therefore, we used the discount rate described under
the ``Benchmarks and Discount Rates'' section of this preliminary
determination to allocate the benefit over the life of the land-use
rights contracts, which is 50 years.
On this basis, we preliminarily determine the total net subsidy
rate to be 0.56 percent for Eastfound.
DHMP reported that it is not located in the industrial zones
designated by Dalian Municipality and did not benefit from this subsidy
program. According to DHMP, it acquired the land rights in 2005 from
Dalian Shagangzi village and does not own the land use rights, but
rents the land. See DHMP's September 9, 2009, submission at 18-20.
Petitioners contested DHMP's statement on the location of its
facility. In a submission to the Department petitioners stated that
based on the company's website information that it is located within
one of the designated preferential areas in Dalian that was alleged in
the countervailing duty petition. See petitioners' October 22, 2009,
submission at 2 and Exhibit 1. Furthermore, it advocated that because
DHMP failed to act to the best of its ability to the Department's
questionnaires, and because other publicly available information
indicates that DHMP's facilities are located in a designated
preferential area of Dalian, the Department should countervail the
parcel of land, pursuant to sections 776(a)(2)(D) and 776(b) of the
Act.
In an October 26, 2009, submission to the Department, DHMP argued
that petitioners' submission did not contain a factual certification in
addition to misstating the facts of the issue. See DHMP's October 26,
2009, submission.
[[Page 57641]]
However, DHMP's response did not refute the central theme of
petitioners' October 22, 2009, submission, that it is located in one of
the designated preferential areas that was not reported in its
questionnaire response. Because petitioners were able to document their
assertion from DHMP's home page as opposed to DHMP's narrative
description, the Department is preliminarily determining that DHMP's
production facility is located within one of the designated
preferential areas in Dalian that was alleged in the countervailing
duty petition. See January 5, 2009, Countervailing Duty Petition, at
Exhibit CVD-12.
To calculate the benefit, we computed the amounts that DHMP would
have paid for its granted land-use rights and subtracted the amounts
DHMP actually paid for its purchase in 2005. Our comparison indicates
that the prices DHMP paid to the government authority in 2005 were less
than our land benchmark prices for the year and, thus, that DHMP
received a benefit under section 771(5)(E)(iv) of the Act. Next, in
accordance with 19 CFR 351.524(b)(2), we examined whether the subsidy
amount exceeded 0.5 percent of DHMP total consolidated sales in the
year of purchase. Our analysis indicates that the subsidy amount
exceeded the 0.5 percent threshold for the land purchase. Therefore, we
used the discount rate described under the ``Benchmarks and Discount
Rates'' section of this preliminary determination to allocate the
benefit over the life of the land-use rights contract, which is 50
years.
On this basis, we preliminarily determine the total net subsidy
rate to be 1.46 percent for the DHMP.
D. Provision of Electricity for LTAR \27\
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\27\ Our preliminary findings regarding the federal provision of
electricity for LTAR encompasses the program ``Provision of
Electricity for LTAR for Firms Located in Designated Geographical
Areas in Dalian,'' which is listed in the Initiation Notice and
accompanying Initiation Checklist.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the reasons explained, supra, at ``Adverse Facts Available,''
we are basing our determination regarding the government's provision of
electricity programs on AFA. Section 776(b) of the Act authorizes the
Department to use as AFA information derived from the petition, the
final determination, a previous administrative review, or other
information placed on the record. In a CVD case, the Department
requires information from both the government of the country whose
merchandise is under the order and the foreign producers and exporters.
When the government fails to provide requested information concerning
alleged subsidy programs, the Department, as AFA, typically finds that
a financial contribution exists under the alleged program and that the
program is specific. For example in CTL Plate from Korea, the
Department, relying on adverse inferences, determined that the
Government of Korea directed credit to the steel industry in a manner
that constituted a financial contribution and was specific to the steel
industry within the meaning of sections 771(5)(D)(i) and
771(5A)(D)(iii) of the Act, respectively. See Notice of Preliminary
Results of Countervailing Duty Administrative Review: Certain Cut-to-
Length Carbon-Quality Steel Plate from the Republic of Korea, 71 FR
11397, 11399 (March 7, 2006) (Preliminary Results of CTL Plate from
Korea) (unchanged in the Notice of Final Results of Countervailing Duty
Administrative Review: Certain Cut-to-Length Carbon-Quality Steel Plate
from the Republic of Korea, 71 FR 38861 (July 10, 2006) (CTL Plate from
Korea). Similarly, in this instance, because the GOC failed to provide
certain information concerning the Provision of Electricity for Less
than Adequate Remuneration program, the Department, as AFA, determines
that the program confers a financial contribution and is specific
pursuant to sections 771(5)(D) and 771(5A) of the Act, respectively.
Where possible, the Department will normally rely on the responsive
producer's or exporter's records to determine the existence and amount
of the benefit to the extent that those records are useable and
verifiable. For example, in prior investigations including LWTP from
the PRC and Racks from the PRC, the Department determined the existence
and amount of the benefit attributable to the provision of electricity
for LTAR by comparing the rates paid by the mandatory respondents for
electricity to the higher, benchmark electricity rates. In this
investigation, however, while respondents provided some information
with respect to their electricity usage and payments, we do not have on
the record information that could be meaningfully compared to the
appropriate benchmarks. Therefore, we have determined that, for the
purposes of this preliminary determination, the rate found for the
provision of electricity for LTAR in the LWTP from the PRC of 0.07
percent ad valorem is appropriate. We find that this rate is both
reliable and relevant as it was calculated in prior final CVD
determination for a program of the same type.
On this basis, we calculated a net subsidy rate of 0.07 percent ad
valorem for Eastfound Metal and Eastfound Material and a net subsidy
rate of 0.07 percent ad valorem for DHMP.
E. Two Free, Three Half Program
The Foreign Invested Enterprise and Foreign Enterprise Income Tax
Law (FIE Tax Law), enacted in 1991, established the tax guidelines and
regulations for FIEs in the PRC. The intent of this law is to attract
foreign businesses to the PRC. According to Article 8 of the FIE Tax
Law, FIEs which are ``productive'' and scheduled to operate not less
than 10 years are exempt from income tax in their first two profitable
years and pay half of their applicable tax rate for the following three
years. FIEs are deemed ``productive'' if they qualify under Article 72
of the Detailed Implementation Rules of the Income Tax Law of the
People's Republic of China of Foreign Investment Enterprises and
Foreign Enterprises.
DHMP and Eastfound Material are ``productive'' FIEs and received
benefits under this program during the POI. Eastfound Metal did not use
this program during the POI.
We preliminarily determine that the exemption or reduction in the
income tax paid by ``productive'' FIEs under this program confers a
countervailable subsidy. The exemption/reduction is a financial
contribution in the form of revenue forgone by the GOC and it provides
a benefit to the recipients in the amount of the tax savings. See
sections 771(5)(D)(ii) and 771(5)(E) of the Act and 19 CFR
351.509(a)(1). We further preliminarily determine that the exemption/
reduction afforded by this program is limited as a matter of law to
certain enterprises, i.e., ``productive'' FIEs, and, hence, is specific
under section 771(5A)(D)(i) of the Act. Our approach in this regard is
consistent with the Department's practice. See CFS from the PRC and
Citric Acid from the PRC.
To calculate the benefit, we treated the income tax savings enjoyed
by DHMP and Eastfound Material as a recurring benefit, consistent with
19 CFR 351.524(c)(1) and divided the company's tax savings received
during the POI by each company's total sales during that period.\28\ To
compute the amount of the tax savings, we compared the income tax rate
that each respondent would have paid in absence of the program (for
Eastfound Material, 24 percent, as described under ``Income Tax
Benefits for FIEs Based on Geographical Location''), with the income
rate that each respondent
[[Page 57642]]
actually paid (for Eastfound Material, 0 percent). On this basis, we
preliminarily determine a countervailable subsidy of 0.63 percent ad
valorem for Eastfound Material, and a countervailable subsidy of 0.49
percent ad valorem for DHMP.
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\28\ For Eastfound Material, we used as the denominator the
combined total sales for Eastfound Material and Eastfound Metal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, the respondents reported that the GOC terminated the Two
Free, Three Half Tax Exemption for FIEs on January 1, 2008. We will
continue to examine their claims that this program has been terminated.
F. Income Tax Benefits for FIEs Based on Geographical Location
To promote economic development and attract foreign investment,
``productive'' FIEs located in coastal economic zones, special economic
zones, or economic and technical development zones in the PRC receive
preferential tax rates depending on the zone. This program was first
enacted on June 15, 1988, pursuant to the Provisional Rules on
Exemption and Reduction of Corporate Income Tax and Business Tax of
FIEs in Coastal Economic Zones, as issued by the Ministry of Finance.
The program was continued on July 1, 1991, pursuant to Article 30 of
the FIE Tax Law. Pursuant to Article 7 of the FIE Tax Law, productive
FIEs established in a coastal economic development zone, special
economic zone, or economic technology development zone, receive
preferential income tax rates of 15 or 24 percent, depending on the
zones in which the companies are located, as opposed to the standard 30
percent income tax rate. The Department has previously found this
program to be countervailable. See, e.g., Citric Acid Decision
Memorandum at ``Reduced Income Tax Rates to FIEs Based on Location.''
Eastfound Material reported that it received an income tax
reduction under this program with respect to the tax return it filed
during the POI. Neither DHMP nor Eastfound Metal used this program
during the POI.
We preliminarily determine that the reduced income tax rate paid by
``productive'' FIEs under this program confers a countervailable
subsidy. The reduced rate is a financial contribution in the form of
revenue foregone by the GOC and provides a benefit to the recipient in
the amount of the tax savings within the meaning of sections
771(5)(D)(ii) and 771(5)(E) of the Act. We further preliminarily
determine that the reduction afforded by this program is limited to
enterprises located in designated geographical regions and, hence, is
specific under section 771(5A)(D)(iv) of the Act.
To calculate the benefit, we treated the income tax savings enjoyed
by Eastfound Material as a recurring benefit, consistent with 19 CFR
351.524(c)(1) and divided the company's tax savings received during the
POI by the total consolidated sales for Eastfound. To compute the
amount of the tax savings, we compared the income tax rate that
Eastfound Material would have paid in absence of the program (30
percent) with the preferential tax rate (24 percent). On this basis, we
preliminarily calculated a total net subsidy rate of 0.16 percent ad
valorem for Eastfound.
Further, respondents reported that the GOC terminated the Tax
Benefits for FIEs Based on Geographic Location program on January 1,
2008. We will continue to examine their claims that this program has
been terminated.
G. Income Tax Exemption for Investors in Designated Geographical
Regions within Liaoning
Under Article 9 of the FIE Tax Law, the provincial governments, the
autonomous regions, and the centrally governed municipalities have been
delegated the authority to provide exemptions and reductions of local
income tax for industries and projects for which foreign investment is
encouraged. As such, the local governments establish the eligibility
criteria and administer the application process for any local tax
reductions or exemptions.
To promote economic development and attract foreign investment, the
Jinzhou District of the City of Dalian, Liaoning Province exempts
industries in the Jinzhou District from local income tax for seven
years from the first profit-making year and extends that exemption for
three more years for enterprises with projects encouraged by the Dalian
Government. The Department has previously found income tax exemption
programs that are limited to certain geographical regions to be
countervailable. See, e.g., Citric Acid Decision Memorandum at
``Reduced Income Tax Rates to FIEs Based on Location.''
Eastfound Material is located in Jinzhou District and enjoyed the
exemption of local income tax rate of three percent during the POI.
Eastfound Metal and DHMP did not use this program during the POI.
We preliminarily determine that the exempted income tax rate
offered to FIEs in Jinzhou District under this program confers a
countervailable subsidy. The exempted rate is a financial contribution
in the form of revenue forgone by the GOC and it provides a benefit to
the recipient in the amount of the tax savings. See section
771(5)(D)(ii) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.509(a)(1). We further determine
preliminarily that the exemption afforded by this program is limited to
enterprises located in designated geographic regions and, hence, is
specific under section 771(5A)(D)(iv) of the Act.
To calculate the benefit, we treated the income tax savings enjoyed
by Eastfound Material as a recurring benefit, consistent with 19 CFR
351.524(c)(1), and divided the company's tax savings received during
the POI by the combined total sales of Eastfound during that period. To
compute the amount of the tax savings, we compared the income tax rate
Eastfound Material would have paid in the absence of the program (3
percent) with the rate it paid (0 percent).
On this basis, we preliminarily determine that Eastfound received a
countervailable subsidy of 0.08 percent ad valorem under this program.
H. Import Tariff and VAT Exemptions for FIEs and Certain Domestic
Enterprises Using Imported Equipment in Encouraged Industries
Enacted in 1997, the Circular of the State Council on Adjusting Tax
Policies on Imported Equipment (Guofa No. 37) (Circular 37) exempts
both FIEs and certain domestic enterprises from the VAT and tariffs on
imported equipment used in their production so long as the equipment
does not fall into prescribed lists of non-eligible items. The National
Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) and the General Administration
of Customs are the government agencies responsible for administering
this program. Qualified enterprises receive a certificate either from
the NDRC or one of its provincial branches. To receive the exemptions,
a qualified enterprise only has to present the certificate to the
customs officials upon importation of the equipment. The objective of
the program is to encourage foreign investment and to introduce foreign
advanced technology equipment and industry technology upgrades. The
Department has previously found this program to be countervailable.
See, e.g., Citric Acid Decision Memorandum at ``VAT Rebate on Purchases
by FIEs of Domestically Produced Equipment.''
Eastfound Metal, an FIE, reported receiving VAT and tariff
exemptions under this program for imported equipment. DHMP and
Eastfound Material did not use this program.
We preliminarily determine that the VAT and tariff exemptions on
imported equipment confer a countervailable subsidy. The exemptions are
a financial contribution in the form of revenue
[[Page 57643]]
forgone by the GOC and the exemptions provide a benefit to the
recipients in the amount of the VAT and tariff savings. See section
771(5)(D)(ii) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.510(a)(1). We further
preliminarily determine that the VAT and tariff exemptions under this
program are specific under section 771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of the Act
because the program is limited to certain enterprises. As described
above, only FIEs and certain domestic enterprises are eligible to
receive VAT and tariff exemptions under this program. No information
has been provided to demonstrate that the beneficiary companies are a
non-specific group. As noted above under ``Two Free/Three Half''
program, the Department finds FIEs to be a specific group under section
771(5A)(D)(i) of the Act. The additional certain enterprises requiring
approval by the NDRC does not render the program to be non-specific.
This analysis is consistent with the Department's approach in prior CVD
proceedings. See, e.g., CFS Decision Memorandum at Comment 16, and
Tires Decision Memorandum at ``VAT and Tariff Exemptions for FIEs and
Certain Domestic Enterprises Using Imported Equipment on Encouraged
Industries.''
Normally, we treat exemptions from indirect taxes and import
charges, such as the VAT and tariff exemptions, as recurring benefits,
consistent with 19 CFR 351.524(c)(1) and allocate these benefits only
in the year that they were received. However, when an indirect tax or
import charge exemption is provided for, or tied to, the capital
structure or capital assets of a firm, the Department may treat it as a
non-recurring benefit and allocate the benefit to the firm over the
AUL. See 19 CFR 351.524(c)(2)(iii) and 19 CFR 351.524(d)(2). Therefore,
we are examining the VAT and tariff exemptions that Eastfound Metal
received under the program during the POI and prior years.
To calculate the amount of import duties exempted under the
program, we multiplied the value of the imported equipment by the
import duty rate that would have been levied absent the program. To
calculate the amount of VAT exempted under the program, we multiplied
the value of the imported equipment (inclusive of import duties) by the
VAT rate that would have been levied absent the program. Our derivation
of VAT in this calculation is consistent with the Department's approach
in prior cases. See, e.g., Circular Welded Carbon Quality Steel Line
Pipe from the People's Republic of China: Final Affirmative
Countervailing Duty Determination, 73 FR 70961 (November 24, 2008)
(Line Pipe from the PRC), and accompanying Issues and Decision
Memorandum (Line Pipe Decision Memorandum) at Comment 8 (``. . . we
agree with petitioners that VAT is levied on the value of the product
inclusive of delivery charges and import duties''). Next, we summed the
amount of duty and VAT exemptions received in each year. For each year,
we then divided the total grant amount by the corresponding total sales
for the year in question. For Eastfound Metal, the total amount of the
VAT and tariff exemptions for each year approved was less than 0.5
percent for Eastfound's total sales for the respective year. Therefore,
we do not reach the issue of whether Eastfound Metal's VAT and tariff
exemptions were tied to the capital structure of capital assets of the
firm. Instead, we expense the benefit to the year in which the benefit
is received, consistent with 19 CFR 351.524(a). On this basis, we
preliminarily determine the countervailable subsidy to be 0.02 percent
ad valorem for Eastfound.
The GOC reported that pursuant to the Notice of Ministry of
Finance, General Administration of Customs and General Bureau of State
Taxation, No. 43 (2008) (Notice 43), dated December 25, 2008, the VAT
exemption linked to imported equipment under this program has been
terminated but the import tariff exemption has not been terminated. See
GOC's Initial Questionnaire Response at 59-60 and Exhibit 29 (September
10, 2009). Article 1 of Notice 43 states that as of January 1, 2009,
VAT on imported equipment for self-use in domestic and foreign
investment projects as encouraged and stipulated in Circular 37 will be
resumed and the custom duty exemption will remain in effect. Article 4
of Notice 43 provides for a transition period for the termination of
the VAT exemption. Under Article 4, for a project which has a letter of
confirmation prior to November 10, 2008, and the imported equipment has
been declared with customs before June 30, 2009, VAT and tariff can be
exempted. However, for imported equipment for which the import customs
declaration is made on or after July 1, 2009, VAT will be collected. As
such, the GOC stated the latest possible date for companies to claim or
apply for a VAT exemption under this program was June 30, 2009. The GOC
reported that there is no replacement VAT exemption program.
Under 19 CFR 351.526(a)(1) and (2), the Department may take a
program-wide change to a subsidy program into account in establishing
the cash deposit rate if it determines that subsequent to the POI, but
before the preliminary determination, a program-wide change occurred
and the Department is able to measure the change in the amount of
countervailable subsidies provided under the program in question. With
regard to this program, we preliminarily determine that a program-wide
change has not occurred and have not adjusted the cash deposit rate.
Under 351.526(d)(1), the Department will only adjust the cash deposit
rate of a terminated program if there are no residual benefits. This
program provides benefits that may be allocated over the AUL and,
therefore, residual benefits may continue to be bestowed under this
program after the termination date. We will, however, continue to
examine the GOC's claim of termination of the VAT exemption portion of
this program.
I. VAT Refunds for FIEs Purchasing Domestically-produced Equipment
As outlined in GUOSHUIFA (1999) No. 171, Notice of the State
Administration of Taxation Concerning the Trial Administrative Measures
on Purchase of Domestically Produced Equipment by FIEs, the GOC refunds
the VAT on purchases of certain domestic equipment to FIEs if the
purchases are within the enterprise's investment amount and if the
equipment falls under a tax-free category. Article 3 specifies that
this program is limited to FIEs with completed tax registrations and
with foreign investment in excess of 25 percent of the total investment
in the enterprise. Article 4 defines the type of equipment eligible for
the VAT exemption, which includes equipment falling under the
Encouraged and Restricted B categories listed in the Notice of the
State Council Concerning the Adjustment of Taxation Policies for
Imported Equipment (No. 37 (1997)) and equipment for projects listed in
the Catalogue of Key Industries, Products and Technologies Encouraged
for Development by the State. To receive the rebate, an FIE must meet
the requirements above and, prior to the equipment purchase, bring its
Registration Handbook for Purchase of Domestically Produced Equipment
by FIEs as well as additional registration documents to the taxation
administration for registration. After purchasing the equipment, FIEs
must complete a Declaration Form for Tax Refund (or Exemption) of
Exported Goods, and submit it with the registration documents to the
tax administration. The Department has previously found this program to
be countervailable. See, e.g., Citric Acid Decision Memorandum at ``VAT
Rebate on Purchases by FIEs of Domestically Produced Equipment.''
Eastfound Metal and Eastfound Material reported receiving VAT
[[Page 57644]]
refunds on its purchases of domestically-produced equipment under this
program. DHMP has not received VAT refunds under this program.
We preliminarily determine that the refund of the VAT paid on
purchases of domestically-produced equipment by FIEs confers a
countervailable subsidy. The rebates are a financial contribution in
the form of revenue forgone by the GOC and they provide a benefit to
the recipients in the amount of the tax savings. See section
771(5)(D)(ii) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.510(a)(1). We further
preliminarily determine that the VAT rebates are contingent upon the
use of domestic over imported goods and, hence, specific under section
771(5A)(C) of the Act.
Normally, we treat exemptions from indirect taxes and import
charges, such as VAT refunds, as recurring benefits, consistent with 19
CFR 351.524(c)(1), and allocate these benefits only in the year that
they were received. However, when an indirect tax or import charge
exemption is provided for, or tied to, the capital structure or capital
assets of a firm, the Department may treat it as a non-recurring
benefit and allocate the benefit to the firm over the AUL. See 19 CFR
351.524(c)(2)(iii) and 19 CFR 351.524(d)(2).
We requested that Eastfound Metal and Eastfound Material identify
the equipment for which it received VAT rebates from 2001 through the
POI. For 2005 and 2008, the total amount of the VAT rebates approved
was less than 0.5 percent of Eastfound's total sales for each year.
Therefore, we have expensed the benefit to the year in which it is
received, i.e., 2005 and 2008, respectively, which is consistent with
19 CFR 351.524(a).
For 2007, however, the total amount of VAT rebates exceeded 0.5
percent of Eastfound's total sales for that year. Based on the reported
information, the VAT rebates were for capital equipment. Accordingly,
we are treating the VAT refunds for this year as a non-recurring
benefit consistent with 19 CFR 351.524(c)(2)(iii). To calculate the
countervailable subsidy for Eastfound, we used our standard methodology
for non-recurring benefits. See 19 CFR 351.524(b) and the ``Allocation
Period'' section of this notice. Specifically, we used the discount
rate described above in the ``Benchmarks and Discount Rates'' section
to calculate the amount of the benefit for the POI.
We then summed the benefits allocated and expensed to the POI and
divided that amount by Eastfound's total consolidated sales for 2008.
On this basis, we preliminarily determine the countervailable subsidy
to be 0.13 percent ad valorem for Eastfound.
As discussed above, pursuant to 19 CFR 351.526(a)(1) and (2), the
Department may take a program-wide change to a subsidy program into
account in establishing the cash deposit rate if it determines that
subsequent to the POI, but before the preliminary determination, a
program-wide change occurred and the Department is able to measure the
change in the amount of countervailable subsidies provided under the
program in question.
The GOC reported that, pursuant to the Notice for Termination of
Tax Refund for FIE Purchasing Domestically Produced Equipment, No. 176
(CS 2008), this program has been terminated. See GOC's Initial
Questionnaire Response at 87 (September 10, 2009). The GOC stated that
Article 1 of the regulation provides that since January 1, 2009, the
policy of VAT refund for purchase of domestically-produced equipment by
FIEs is terminated. Id. at Exhibit 35. Article II(2) provides for a
transition period, provided that (1) the investment project received a
letter of confirmation that the FIE project is in conformity with state
industry policy before November 9, 2008, and it was registered with the
tax authorities, and (2) the domestically-produced equipment was
purchased and VAT invoice was issued and claims for VAT refund were
filed with the tax authorities prior to June 30, 2009.
As such, the GOC stated that the last day for companies to apply
for or claim benefits under the program is June 30, 2009, provided that
the ratification and purchase of the equipment were made prior to that
date. Id. at 87. The GOC, however, did not report the last date that a
company could receive VAT refunds under this program. Under section
351.526(d), the Department will not adjust the cash deposit rate for a
terminated program if residual benefits may continue to be bestowed
under the program. Because benefits from this program may be allocated
over the AUL, we preliminarily determine that residual benefits may
continue to be bestowed under the program. Therefore, we have not
adjusted the cash deposit rate.
J. International Market Exploration Fund (SME Fund)
The SME Fund, established under CQ(2000) No. 467, encourages the
development of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) by reducing
the risk of operation for these enterprises in the international
market. To qualify for the program, a company needs to satisfy the
criteria in CQ (2000), which provides that the SME should have export
and import rights, exports of less than $15,000,000, an accounting
system, personnel with foreign trade skills, and a plan for exploring
the international market.\29\ The GOC reported that, for the mandatory
respondents, the Dalian Foreign Economic and Trade Bureau and the
Financial Bureau of Dalian are the authorities responsible for this
program that provides one-time assistance for each approved
application. Eastfound Metal and Eastfound Material reported receiving
assistance under this program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ See GOC's fourth supplemental questionnaire response at 4
(October 5, 2009).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We preliminarily determine that the SME Fund provides
countervailable subsidies within the meaning of section 771(5) of the
Act. We preliminarily find that the grants constitute a financial
contribution and benefit under sections 771(5)(D)(i) and 771(5)(E) of
the Act, respectively. We also preliminarily determine that this
program is an export subsidy, under section 771(5A)(B) of the Act,
because the program supports the international market activities of
SMEs and is limited to enterprises that have exports of less than
$15,000,000.
According to the GOC, the SME Fund provides one-time assistance.
Therefore, consistent with 19 CFR 351.524(c)(1), we are treating the
grants received under this program as ``non-recurring.'' To measure the
benefits of each grant that are allocable to the POI, we first
conducted the ``0.5 percent test'' for each grant. See 19 CFR
351.524(b)(2). We divided the total amounts approved in each year by
the relevant sales for those years. As a result, we found that all
grants for Eastfound are less than 0.5 percent and expensed in the year
of receipt. Therefore, for the POI, we have preliminarily calculated a
total net subsidy rate of 0.01 percent ad valorem for Eastfound.
II. Programs Preliminarily Determined To Not Confer Benefits During the
POI
A. Provision of Zinc for LTAR
The Department is investigating whether producers and suppliers,
acting as Chinese government authorities, sold zinc to the mandatory
respondents for LTAR. Eastfound reported that it did not purchase zinc
during the POI. DHMP reported purchasing zinc during the POI from a
trading company. In prior CVD proceedings involving the PRC, the
Department has determined that when a respondent purchases an input
from a trading company or non-producing supplier, a subsidy is
conferred if the
[[Page 57645]]
producer of the input is an ``authority'' within the meaning of section
771(5)(B) of the Act and the input was sold to the respondent for LTAR.
See CWP Decision Memorandum at ``Hot-Rolled Steel for Less Than
Adequate Remuneration,'' Shelving Decision Memorandum at ``Provision of
Wire Rod for Less than Adequate Remuneration,'' and CWASPP Decision
Memorandum at ``Provision of SSC for LTAR.'' Therefore, in our initial
questionnaire, we requested that the respondent companies and the GOC
together identify the producers from whom the trading companies
acquired the zinc that was subsequently sold to DHMP during the POI and
to provide information that would allow the Department to determine
whether those producers were government authorities.
As explained above in the ``Application of Facts Available:
Provision of Zinc for LTAR'' section, DHMP and the GOC did not identify
the producer(s) of the zinc that was purchased by DHMP during the POI.
Because DHMP and the GOC have not supplied the requested information,
we find that the necessary information is not on the record and, as a
result, we are resorting to the use of facts available within the
meaning of sections 776(a)(1) and (2) of the Act.
In its response, the GOC provided information on the amount of zinc
produced by SOEs and private producers in the PRC. Using these data, we
derived the ratio of zinc produced by government authorities during the
POI. Thus, pursuant to sections 776(a)(1) and (2) of the Act, we have
resorted to the use of facts available with regard to zinc sold to
DHMP. Specifically, we assumed that the percentage of zinc produced by
government authorities is equal to the ratio of zinc produced by
government authorities during the POI. On this basis, we find that a
financial contribution, as described under section 771(5)(D)(iv) of the
Act, was provided with regard to DHMP's purchases of zinc during the
POI.
With respect to specificity, one of the three subsidy elements
specified under the Act, the GOC has provided information on end uses
for zinc. See GOC's Initial Questionnaire Response at 25 (September 10,
2009). The GOC further stated that the consumption of zinc occurs
across a broad range of industries (e.g., galvanized steel products,
alkaline batteries, various metal alloys, etc.). Id. While numerous
companies may comprise the listed industries, section
771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of the Act clearly directs the Department to conduct
its analysis on an industry or enterprise basis. Based on our review of
the data and consistent with our past practice, we determine that the
industries named by the GOC are limited in number and, hence, the
subsidy is specific. See section 771(5A)(D)(iii)(I) of the Act; see
also LWRP Decision Memorandum at Comment 7, and Shelving Decision
Memorandum at ``Provision of Wire Rod from Less Than Adequate
Remuneration.''
Having addressed the issue of financial contribution and
specificity, we must next analyze whether the sale of zinc to DHMP by
government authorities conferred a benefit within the meaning of
section 771(5)(iv) of the Act. The Department's regulations at 19 CFR
351.511(a)(2) set forth the basis for identifying appropriate market-
determined benchmarks for measuring the adequacy of remuneration for
government-provided goods or services. These potential benchmarks are
listed in hierarchical order by preference: (1) market prices from
actual transactions within the country under investigation (e.g.,
actual sales, actual imports or competitively run government auctions)
(tier one); (2) world market prices that would be available to
purchasers in the country under investigation (tier two); or (3) an
assessment of whether the government price is consistent with market
principles (tier three). As we explained in Softwood Lumber from
Canada, the preferred benchmark in the hierarchy is an observed market
price from actual transactions within the country under investigation
because such prices generally would be expected to reflect most closely
the prevailing market conditions of the purchaser under investigation.
See Softwood Lumber Decision Memorandum at ``Market-Based Benchmark.''
Beginning with tier-one, we must determine whether the prices from
actual sales transactions involving Chinese buyers and sellers are
significantly distorted. As explained in the CVD Preamble:
Where it is reasonable to conclude that actual transaction prices
are significantly distorted as a result of the government's involvement
in the market, we will resort to the next alternative {tier two{time}
in the hierarchy.
See CVD Preamble, 63 FR at 65377. The CVD Preamble further recognizes
that distortion can occur when the government provider constitutes a
majority or, in certain circumstances, a substantial portion of the
market. As explained above in the ``Application of Facts Available:
Provision of Zinc for LTAR'' section, based on the aggregate data
supplied by the GOC, we find for purposes of the preliminary
determination that government authorities accounted for approximately
67 percent of zinc production during the POI. Therefore, we
preliminarily determine that domestic zinc prices are not viable tier-
one prices as described under 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(i).
We next examined whether the record contained data that could be
used as a tier-two zinc benchmark under 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(ii). The
Department has on the record of the investigation prices for zinc, as
sourced from the American Metals Market (AMA). See Petitioners' Pre-
Preliminary Determination Comments on Benchmarks at Exhibit 3 (October
19, 2009) (Petitioners' Benchmark Comments). The benchmark prices are
reported on a monthly basis in U.S. dollars per metric ton (MT). No
other interested party submitted tier-two zinc prices on the record of
this investigation.
Therefore, for purposes of the preliminary determination, we find
that the data from AMA should be used to derive a tier-two, world
market price for zinc that would be available to purchasers of zinc in
the PRC. We note that the Department has relied on pricing data from
industry publications in recent CVD proceedings involving the PRC. See,
e.g., CWP Decision Memorandum at ``Hot-Rolled Steel for Less Than
Adequate Remuneration,'' and LWRP Decision Memorandum at ``Hot-Rolled
Steel for Less Than Adequate Remuneration.'' Further, we find that, for
purposes of this preliminary determination, there is no basis to
conclude that prices from the AMA are any less reliable or
representative than data from other trade industry publications used by
the Department in prior CVD proceedings involving the PRC.
To determine whether zinc suppliers, acting as government
authorities, sold zinc to DHMP for LTAR, we compared the prices DHMP
paid to its suppliers to our zinc benchmark price. We conducted our
comparison on a monthly basis. When conducting the price comparison, we
converted the benchmark to the same currency and unit of measure as
reported by the DHMP for its purchases of zinc.
Under 19 CFR 351.511(a)(2)(iv), when measuring the adequacy of
remuneration under tier-one or tier-two, the Department will adjust the
benchmark price to reflect the price that a firm actually paid or would
pay if it imported the product, including delivery charges and import
duties. Regarding delivery charges, at this time we lack information
concerning delivery charges and, therefore, have not
[[Page 57646]]
adjusted the benchmark in this regard, but will continue to seek the
relevant information. However, we have added import duties, as reported
by the GOC, and the VAT applicable to imports of zinc into the PRC.
With respect to the three percent insurance charge on imports noted by
the petitioner, consistent with Shelving from the PRC, while the
Department will consider in future determinations the propriety of
including insurance as a delivery charge, the existing record of this
investigation does not support such an adjustment. See Shelving from
the PRC Decision Memorandum at Comment 9.
Comparing the benchmark unit prices to the unit prices paid by DHMP
for zinc, we determine that zinc was not provided for LTAR and that a
benefit does not exist. See section 771(5)(E)(iv) of the Act and 19 CFR
351.511(a).
B. Export Incentive Payments Characterized as ``VAT Rebates''
The Department's regulations state that in the case of an exemption
upon export of indirect taxes, a benefit exists only to the extent that
the Department determines that the amount exempted ``exceeds the amount
levied with respect to the production and distribution of like products
when sold for domestic consumption.'' See 19 CFR 351.517(a); see also
19 CFR 351.102 (for a definition of ``indirect tax''). To determine
whether the GOC provided a benefit under this program, we compared the
VAT exemption upon export to the VAT levied with respect to the
production and distribution of like products when sold for domestic
consumption. The GOC reported that the VAT levied on wire decking sales
in the domestic market is 17 percent and that the VAT exempted upon the
export of wire decking is 5 percent. Thus, we have preliminarily
determined that the VAT exempted upon the export of wire decking did
not confer a countervailable benefit because the amount of the VAT
rebated on export is lower than the amount paid in the domestic market.
III. Programs Preliminarily Determined To Be Not Used
We preliminarily determine that DHMP and Eastfound did not apply
for or receive benefits during the POI under the programs listed below:
A. Loan Programs
1. Honorable Enterprise Program
2. Preferential Loans for Key Projects and Technologies
3. Preferential Loans as Part of the Northeast Revitalization
Program
4. Policy Loans for Firms Located in Industrial Zones in the City
of Dalian in Liaoning Province
B. Provision of Goods and Services for LTAR
1. Provision of Water for LTAR for Firms Located in Designated
Geographical Areas in the City of Dalian in Liaoning Province
C. Income and Other Direct Taxes
1. Income Tax Credits for Domestically-Owned Companies Purchasing
Domestically Produced Equipment
2. Income Tax Exemption for Investment in Domestic Technological
Renovation
3. Preferential Income Tax Policy for Enterprises in the Northeast
Region
4. Forgiveness of Tax Arrears for Enterprises in the Old Industrial
Bases of Northeast China
D. Indirect Tax and Tariff Exemptions
1. VAT Deductions on Fixed Assets
2. VAT Exemptions for Newly Purchased Equipment in the Jinzhou
District
E. Grant Programs
1. Five Points, One Line
2. Export Interest Subsidies
3. State Key Technology Project Fund
4. Subsidies for Development of Famous Export Brands and China
World Top Brands
5. Sub-Central Government Programs to Promote Famous Export Brands
and China World Top Brands
6. Exemption of Fees for Firms Located in Designated Geographical
Areas in the City of Dalian in Liaoning Province
F. Preferential Income Tax Subsidies for FIEs
1. Income Tax Exemption Program for Export-Oriented FIEs
2. Local Income Tax Exemption and Reduction Programs for Productive
FIEs
3. Preferential Tax Programs for FIEs Recognized as High or New
Technology Enterprises
Verification
In accordance with section 782(i)(1) of the Act, we intend to
verify the information submitted by DHMP, Eastfound, and the GOC prior
to making our final determination.
Suspension of Liquidation
In accordance with section 703(d)(1)(A)(i) of the Act, we have
calculated an individual rate for subject merchandise produced and
exported by the entities listed below. We preliminarily determine the
total estimated net countervailable subsidy rates to be:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Producer/Exporter Net Subsidy Ad Valorem Rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dalian Eastfound Metal Products Co., Ltd. 3.13[percnt]
(Eastfound Metal) and its affiliate
Dalian Eastfound Material Handling
Products Co., Ltd. (Eastfound Material)
(collectively, Eastfound)...............
Dalian Huameilong Metal Products Co., 2.02[percnt]
Ltd. (DHMP).............................
Aceally (Xiamen) Technology Co., Ltd..... 437.73[percnt]
Alida Wire Mesh & Wire Cloth Mfg......... 437.73[percnt]
Anping Ankai Hardware & Mesh Products 437.73[percnt]
Co., Ltd................................
Anping County Jincheng Metal Products 437.73[percnt]
Co., Ltd................................
Anping County Yuantong Hardware Net 437.73[percnt]
Industry Co., Ltd.......................
Anping Ruiqilong Wire Mesh Co., Ltd...... 437.73[percnt]
Anping Web Wire Mesh Co., Ltd............ 437.73[percnt]
Anping Yilian Metal Products Co., Ltd.... 437.73[percnt]
Aplus Industrial (HK) Ltd................ 437.73[percnt]
Beijing Jiuwei Storage Equipment Co., 437.73[percnt]
Ltd.....................................
Dalian Aipute Industry & Trade Co., Ltd.. 437.73[percnt]
Dalian Best Metal Products Co., Ltd...... 437.73[percnt]
Dalian Jianda Metal Products Co., Ltd.... 437.73[percnt]
Dalian Litainer Logistic Equipment Co., 437.73[percnt]
Ltd.....................................
Dalian Litainer Metal Products Co., Ltd.. 437.73[percnt]
Dalian Pro Metal Co., Ltd................ 437.73[percnt]
Dalian Traction Motor Co., Ltd........... 437.73[percnt]
Dalian Yutiein Storage Manufacture Co., 437.73[percnt]
Ltd.....................................
[[Page 57647]]
Dalian Zengtian Metal-Net Production Co., 437.73[percnt]
Ltd.....................................
Dandong Riqian Equipment Co., Ltd........ 437.73[percnt]
Deyoma Wire Decking Factory.............. 437.73[percnt]
Global Storage Equipment Manufacturer 437.73[percnt]
Ltd. (Huade Industries).................
Hebei Dongshengyuan Trading Co., Ltd..... 437.73[percnt]
Hebei Tengyue Trading Co., Ltd........... 437.73[percnt]
High Hope Int'l Group Jiangsu Native 437.73[percnt]
Produce Imp & Exp Corp. Ltd.............
Imex China Ltd........................... 437.73[percnt]
Jiangdong Xinguang Metal Product Co...... 437.73[percnt]
Jiangsu Nova Logistics System Co., Ltd... 437.73[percnt]
Jiangsu Sainty Shengtong Imp & Exp Co.... 437.73[percnt]
JP Metal Works Processing Factory........ 437.73[percnt]
Kule (Dalian) Co., Ltd................... 437.73[percnt]
Kunshan Maxshow Industry Trade Co., Ltd.. 437.73[percnt]
Lanxuan Metal Product Co., Ltd........... 437.73[percnt]
Longkou Forever Developed Metal Product 437.73[percnt]
Co., Ltd................................
Nanjing Better Metallic Products Co., 437.73[percnt]
Ltd.....................................
Nanjing Better Storage Equipment 437.73[percnt]
Manufacturing Co., Ltd..................
Nanjing Dongtuo Logistics Equipment Co., 437.73[percnt]
Ltd.....................................
Nanjing Ebil Metal Products Co., Ltd..... 437.73[percnt]
Nanjing Huade Storage Equipment 437.73[percnt]
Manufacture Co., Ltd....................
Nanjing Jiangrui International Logistics 437.73[percnt]
Co......................................
Nanjing Jiangrui Metal Products Co., Ltd. 437.73[percnt]
Nanjing Jiangrui Racking Manufacture Co., 437.73[percnt]
Ltd.....................................
Nanjing Youerda Logistic Equipment 437.73[percnt]
Engineering Co. Ltd.....................
Nanjing Youerda Metallic Products Co., 437.73[percnt]
Ltd.....................................
National Sourcing Co., Ltd............... 437.73[percnt]
Ningbo Beilun Songyi Storage Equipment 437.73[percnt]
Manufacturer Co., Ltd...................
Ningbo Huixing Metal Product, Co., Ltd... 437.73[percnt]
Ningbo Telingtong Metal Products Co., 437.73[percnt]
Ltd.....................................
Ningbo United Group Imp & Exp Co. Ltd.... 437.73[percnt]
Pinghu Dong Zhi Metal Products........... 437.73[percnt]
Schenker International China Ltd. (Dalian 437.73[percnt]
Branch).................................
Shanghai Boracs Logistics Equipment 437.73[percnt]
Manufacturing Co., Ltd..................
Shanghai Bright Imp & Exp Co., Ltd....... 437.73[percnt]
Shanghai Flory Industries Co., Ltd....... 437.73[percnt]
Shanghai Hesheng Hardware Products Co.... 437.73[percnt]
Shanghai Jingxing Storage Equipment 437.73[percnt]
Engineering Co., Ltd. (formerly Shanghai
Jinxing Rack Factory)...................
Shanghai Yibai Int'l Trading Co.......... 437.73[percnt]
Summit Storage Systems Ltd............... 437.73[percnt]
Suzhou (China) Sunshine Hardware 437.73[percnt]
Equipment Imp & Exp Co., Ltd............
Suzhou Jinta Metal Working Co., Ltd...... 437.73[percnt]
Suzhou Z-TAK Metal and Technology Co., 437.73[percnt]
Ltd.....................................
Tianjin Dingxing Furniture Company....... 437.73[percnt]
Tianjin Machinery Imp & Exp Corp......... 437.73[percnt]
Tianjin Mandarin Import & Export Co., 437.73[percnt]
Ltd.....................................
Tianjin Zhonglian Metals Ware Co., Ltd... 437.73[percnt]
TMC Logistic Products.................... 437.73[percnt]
Vida Logistics System Co., Ltd........... 437.73[percnt]
Wuxi Puhui Metal Products Co., Ltd....... 437.73[percnt]
Wuyi Tianchi Mechanical & Electrical 437.73[percnt]
Manufacture Co., Ltd....................
Xiamen E-Soon Machinery Co., Ltd......... 437.73[percnt]
Xiamen GaoPing Co., Ltd.................. 437.73[percnt]
Xiamen Luckyroc Industry Co., Ltd........ 437.73[percnt]
Xiangshan Ningbo General Steel Metal 437.73[percnt]
Structure Co., Ltd......................
Yuyao Sanlian Goods Shelves Manufacture 437.73[percnt]
Co., Ltd................................
All Others............................... 2.58[percnt]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sections 703(d) and 705(c)(5)(A) of the Act state that for
companies not investigated, we will determine an all others rate by
weighting the individual company subsidy rate of each of the companies
investigated by each company's exports of the subject merchandise to
the United States. The all others rate may not include zero and de
minimis net subsidy rates, or any rates based solely on the facts
available.
Notwithstanding the language of section 705(c)(5)(A)(i) of the Act,
we have not calculated the ``all others'' rate by weight averaging the
rates of DHMP and Eastfound because doing so risks disclosure of
proprietary information. Therefore, for the all others rate, we have
calculated a simple average of the two responding firms' rates.
In accordance with sections 703(d)(1)(B) and (2) of the Act, we are
directing CBP to suspend liquidation of all entries of the subject
merchandise from the PRC that are entered or withdrawn from warehouse,
for consumption on or after the date of the publication of this notice
in the Federal Register, and to require a cash deposit or bond for such
entries of the merchandise in the amounts indicated above.
[[Page 57648]]
ITC Notification
In accordance with section 703(f) of the Act, we will notify the
ITC of our determination. In addition, we are making available to the
ITC all non-privileged and non-proprietary information relating to this
investigation. We will allow the ITC access to all privileged and
business proprietary information in our files, provided the ITC
confirms that it will not disclose such information, either publicly or
under an administrative protective order, without the written consent
of the Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
In accordance with section 705(b)(2) of the Act, if our final
determination is affirmative, the ITC will make its final determination
within 45 days after the Department makes its final determination.
Disclosure and Public Comment
In accordance with 19 CFR 351.224(b), the Department will disclose
to the parties the calculations for this preliminary determination
within five days of its announcement. Case briefs for this
investigation must be submitted no later than one week after the
issuance of the last verification report. See 19 CFR 351.309(c) (for a
further discussion of case briefs). Rebuttal briefs, which must be
limited to issues raised in the case briefs, must be filed within five
days after the deadline for submission of case briefs. See 19 CFR
351.309(d). A list of authorities relied upon, a table of contents, and
an executive summary of issues should accompany any briefs submitted to
the Department. Executive summaries should be limited to five pages
total, including footnotes.
In accordance with 19 CFR 351.310(c), we will hold a public
hearing, if requested, to afford interested parties an opportunity to
comment on this preliminary determination. Individuals who wish to
request a hearing must submit a written request within 30 days of the
publication of this notice in the Federal Register to the Assistant
Secretary for Import Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, Room
1870, 14\th\ Street and Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20230.
Parties will be notified of the schedule for the hearing and parties
should confirm the time, date, and place of the hearing 48 hours before
the scheduled time. Requests for a public hearing should contain: (1)
party's name, address, and telephone number; (2) the number of
participants; and (3) to the extent practicable, an identification of
the arguments to be raised at the hearing.
This determination is issued and published pursuant to sections
703(f) and 777(i) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.221(b)(4).
Dated: November 2, 2009.
Ronald K. Lorentzen,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
[FR Doc. E9-26947 Filed 11-6-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-DS-S