95-18136. Elemental Sulphur From Canada; Preliminary Results of Antidumping Finding Administrative Review  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 141 (Monday, July 24, 1995)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 37872-37875]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-18136]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    International Trade Administration
    [A-122-047]
    
    
    Elemental Sulphur From Canada; Preliminary Results of Antidumping 
    Finding Administrative Review
    
    AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration, 
    Department of Commerce.
    
    ACTION: Notice of Preliminary Results of Antidumping Finding 
    Administrative Review.
    
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    SUMMARY: In response to a request by a U.S. producer, the Department of 
    Commerce (the Department) is conducting an administrative review of the 
    antidumping finding on elemental sulphur from Canada. The review covers 
    15 manufacturers/exporters of the subject merchandise to the United 
    States and the period December 1, 1991 through November 30, 1992.
        As a result of the review, we have preliminarily determined that 
    dumping margins exist for certain of these respondents. If these 
    preliminary results are adopted in our final results of administrative 
    review, we will instruct U.S. Customs to assess antidumping duties at 
    the prescribed rates.
        Interested parties are invited to comment on these preliminary 
    results.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: July 24, 1995.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Thomas O. Barlow, Office of 
    Antidumping Compliance, Import Administration, International Trade 
    Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th Street and 
    Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20230, telephone: (202) 482-
    0410.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        On December 17, 1973, the Department of the Treasury published in 
    the Federal Register (38 FR 34655) an antidumping finding with respect 
    to elemental sulphur from Canada. On December 4, 1992, the Department 
    published a notice of ``Opportunity to Request an Administrative 
    Review'' of this antidumping finding for the period December 1, 1991 
    through November 30, 1992 (57 FR 57419). We received a timely request 
    from Pennzoil Sulphur Company (Pennzoil), a domestic producer of 
    elemental sulphur, for review of the finding with respect to Alberta 
    Energy Co., Ltd. (Alberta), Allied Corporation (Allied), Brimstone 
    Export (Brimstone), Burza Resources (Burza), Canamex, Delta Marketing 
    (Delta), Drummond Oil & Gas, Ltd. (Drummond), Fanchem, Husky Oil, Ltd. 
    (Husky), Mobil Oil Canada, Ltd. (Mobil), Norcen Energy Resources 
    (Norcen), Petrosul International (Petrosul), Real International (Real), 
    Saratoga Processing Co., Ltd. (Saratoga), and Sulbow Minerals (Sulbow). 
    Pennzoil is a producer of elemental sulphur, and, thus, an ``interested 
    party'' as defined by 771(9)(C) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended 
    (the Act) and Sec. 353.2(k)(3) of the Department's regulations. This 
    review was initiated on February 23, 1993 (58 FR 11026) with respect to 
    all 15 of the companies listed above. On March 25, 1993, the Department 
    issued antidumping sales questionnaires to respondents. On June 23, 
    1993, Pennzoil filed allegations of sales below the cost of production 
    (COP) against Mobil, Husky, and Petrosul. On December 3, 1993, the 
    Department initiated cost investigations of these three respondents and 
    issued COP questionnaires on December 6, 1993. The Department is 
    conducting this review in accordance with section 751 of the Act.
    
    Scope of the Review
    
        The period of review (POR) is December 1, 1991 through November 30, 
    1992. Imports covered by this review are shipments of elemental sulphur 
    from Canada. This merchandise is classifiable under Harmonized Tariff 
    Schedule (HTS) subheadings 2503.10.00, 2503.90.00, and 2802.00.00.
        The HTS subheading is provided for convenience and for U.S. Customs 
    purposes. The written description of the scope of this order remains 
    dispositive as to product coverage.
    Applicable Statute and Regulations
    
        Unless otherwise indicated, all citations to the statute and to the 
    Department's regulations are references to the provisions as they 
    existed on December 31, 1994.
    
    United States Price (USP)
    
        The Department has calculated a dumping margin only for Husky. (see 
    explanations below for analyses of remaining firms.)
        In calculating USP for Husky, the Department used purchase price as 
    defined in section 772(b) of the Act, because the merchandise was sold 
    to unrelated U.S. purchasers prior to importation. Husky sold primarily 
    liquid sulphur to the United States during the POR but also had sales 
    of bagged and powdered elemental sulphur.
        We calculated purchase price based on an ex-factory f.o.b. Canadian 
    plant, or customer's specific delivery point bases. We made 
    adjustments, where applicable, for discounts and movement expenses in 
    accordance with section 772(d)(2) of the Act.
    
    Foreign Market Value (FMV)
    
        Husky did not have a viable home market during the POR. Therefore, 
    Husky reported third-country sales of formed (e.g., prilled) elemental 
    sulphur. Section 773(a)(4)(C) of the Act provides that a difference-in-
    merchandise (DIFMER) allowance may be made when a product on which FMV 
    is based is not identical to that exported to the United States. 
    Section 353.57 of the Department's regulations provides that the 
    allowance will normally be based on differences in cost of production, 
    but may be based on differences in market value. The Department makes 
    DIFMER adjustments on the basis of precise physical differences. In 
    addition, the cost differences which form the adjustment must be 
    related to those physical differences and not to 
    
    [[Page 37873]]
    extraneous factors. Further, when the DIFMER is greater than twenty 
    percent of the U.S. product's total cost of manufacture (COM), the 
    Department resorts to constructed value (CV) to establish FMV. See 
    Differences in Merchandise; 20% Rule, Import Administration Policy 
    Bulletin: Number 92.2, July 29, 1992 (``Policy Bulletin No. 92.2''). 
    For purposes of these preliminary results, we determined that variable 
    manufacturing cost differences of formed elemental sulphur exceeded 
    twenty percent of the total average cost of manufacture, on a model-
    specific basis, of the product exported to the United States (liquid, 
    powdered and bagged). Therefore, in accordance with Department policy 
    and section 773(a)(2) of the Act, we calculated FMV based on the CV of 
    the merchandise sold in the United States.
        In accordance with section 773(e) of the Act, CV includes the costs 
    of materials and fabrication, general expenses, profit, and, where 
    relevant, packing for shipment to the United States. We adjusted 
    Husky's reported COM by disallowing the offset of processing income 
    against operating costs and increasing depreciation by basing it on a 
    cost basis allocation methodology as opposed to a net-realizable value 
    allocation methodology (See COP and CV Calculation Adjustment Memo for 
    the Preliminary Determination of Elemental Sulphur From Canada--Husky 
    Oil Ltd., July 7, 1995). We used Husky's third-country selling expenses 
    pursuant to section 773(e)(1)(B) of the Act. We used Husky's actual 
    general expenses as they were greater than the statutory minimum of ten 
    percent of COM but applied the statutory eight percent for profit to 
    COP.
        We made circumstance-of-sale adjustments for differences in credit 
    and royalty expenses.
        No other adjustments were claimed or allowed.
    
    Non-Shippers
    
        Based on the information on the record, the Department has 
    determined that Allied, Alberta, and Norcen had no shipments to the 
    United States during the POR. Because these firms have never been 
    subject to a review and, therefore, do not have their own rates in 
    place, entries of their merchandise will continue to enter under the 
    ``All Others'' category.
    
    Best Information Available
    
        As a result of our review, we have preliminarily determined to 
    apply best information available (BIA) to various firms. (See company 
    specific descriptions below.)
        Section 776(c) of the Act requires the Department to use BIA 
    ``whenever a party or any other person refuses or is unable to produce 
    information requested in a timely manner or in the form required, or 
    otherwise significantly impedes an investigation.''
        Department regulations provide that ``[t]he Secretary will use the 
    best information available whenever the Secretary (1) [d]oes not 
    receive a complete, accurate, and timely response to the Secretary's 
    request for factual information; or (2) [i]s unable to verify, within 
    the time specified, the accuracy and completeness of the factual 
    information submitted.'' 19 CFR 353.37(a).
        In deciding what to use as BIA, the Department's regulations 
    provide that the Department may take into account whether a party 
    refuses to provide requested information. 19 CFR 353.37(b). Prior 
    Department practice has been to determine, on a case-by-case basis, 
    what constitutes BIA. This can be a decision to apply total BIA to a 
    respondent or partial BIA (the selective use of individual pieces of 
    data to substitute for missing or unreliable data in a dumping 
    analysis).
        In Allied-Signal Aerospace Co. v. United States, 996 F.2d 1185, 
    1191-92 (Fed. Cir. 1993), the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit 
    held that it is within the Department's discretion to decide what 
    constitutes BIA in a particular case and that this decision must be 
    afforded considerable deference. In exercising this discretion, the 
    Department has established two tiers of BIA in situations where it is 
    unable to use a company's response for purposes of determining that 
    company's dumping margin and applies each tier based on whether the 
    respondent cooperated or failed to cooperate in the proceeding.
         For first-tier BIA, applied when a company refuses to 
    cooperate with the Department or significantly impedes the proceeding, 
    the Department has used as BIA the higher of (1) the highest of the 
    rates found for any firm for the same class or kind of merchandise in 
    the same country of origin in the less than fair value (LTFV) 
    investigation or prior administrative reviews, or (2) the highest rate 
    found in this review for any firm for the same class or kind of 
    merchandise in the same country of origin.
         For second-tier BIA, applied when a company substantially 
    cooperates with the Department's requests for information but fails to 
    provide the information requested in a timely manner or in the form 
    required, or the Department is unable to verify the accuracy and 
    completeness of the information submitted, the Department has used as 
    BIA the higher of (1) the highest rate (including the ``All Others'' 
    rate) ever applicable to the firm for the same class or kind of 
    merchandise from either the LTFV investigation or a prior 
    administrative review, or (2) the highest calculated rate in this 
    review for the class or kind of merchandise for any firm from the same 
    country of origin.
        The Department's two-tiered BIA methodology also was upheld by the 
    court in Allied-Signal. Id.
    
    Mobil
    
        Mobil did not have a viable home market during the POR. Therefore, 
    Mobil reported third-country sales of formed (e.g., prilled) elemental 
    sulphur. During this administrative review, Mobil cooperated with the 
    Department's requests for information, including participating in 
    verification of its responses. However, during verification at Mobil, 
    the Department discovered significant discrepancies in Mobil's 
    submissions to the Department and company records, which are outlined 
    in detail in the sales verification report. See Verification of Sales 
    Questionnaire Response of Mobil Oil Canada Ltd., November 22, 1994 
    (Verification Report) (see also Memorandum to Joseph A. Spetrini, from 
    Holly A. Kuga, re: Use of Best Information Available for Mobil Oil 
    Canada, Ltd., in 1991-92 Administrative Review of Antidumping Finding 
    on Elemental Sulphur from Canada (May 10, 1995)). Therefore, because we 
    were unable to verify Mobil's response as required by 776(b) of the 
    Act, the Department determined that the use of total BIA is 
    appropriate. However, because Mobil substantially cooperated in this 
    segment of the proceeding by responding to the Department's requests 
    for information and participating in verification, the Department 
    determined that the second tier of BIA as described above should be 
    applied to Mobil for the preliminary results of review. The highest 
    rate previously applicable to Mobil is 5.56 percent. Therefore, the 
    rate calculated for Husky, the highest calculated rate in this review, 
    shall apply to Mobil as this rate is higher than the rate previously 
    applicable to Mobil.
    
    Petrosul
    
        Petrosul, a reseller of elemental sulphur, had a viable home market 
    during the POR and had home-market and U.S. sales of liquid sulphur.
        Pennzoil alleged that Petrosul made home market sales at prices 
    below the cost of producing the elemental sulphur. Based on this 
    allegation, the Department found reasonable grounds to believe or 
    
    [[Page 37874]]
    suspect that Petrosul's sales were below cost and initiated a cost 
    investigation pursuant to 772(b) of the Act. The statute is concerned 
    specifically with the cost of production of the merchandise, and 
    Petrosul does not itself produce the elemental sulphur it sells. 
    Department practice in such situations is to compare the production 
    costs of the producer (Petrosul's supplier/producers), plus the 
    producer's SG&A, plus the SG&A of the seller (Petrosul), to the 
    seller's home market sales to determine whether home market sales were 
    made below the COP. See Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair 
    Value: Fresh and Chilled Atlantic Salmon from Norway 56 FR 7661 
    (February 25, 1991); Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative 
    Reviews: Oil Country Tubular Goods from Canada 56 FR 38408 (August 13, 
    1991). Therefore, on May 3, 1994, the Department requested cost of 
    production information from the producers of the merchandise sold by 
    Petrosul. However, these producers refused to supply that information. 
    Because Petrosul's suppliers did not provide their production costs, 
    the only cost data on the record is Petrosul's SG&A. Because the 
    Department could not identify any other source of data that would 
    provide a reasonable surrogate for the missing supplier-producers' cost 
    of producing elemental sulphur, the only alternative open to the 
    Department is to apply total BIA to Petrosul. See Memorandum to Joseph 
    A. Spetrini, from Holly A. Kuga, re: 1991-92 Antidumping Administrative 
    Review of the Antidumping Finding on Elemental Sulphur from Canada: Use 
    of Best Information Available for Petrosul International Due to Lack of 
    Any Useable Cost of Production Information (July 11, 1995).
        However, during this administrative review, Petrosul responded to 
    the Department's requests for information, including the initial and 
    supplementary sales questionnaires, as well as the request for limited 
    COP data. Given Petrosul's attempts to fully cooperate in this review, 
    the Department determined that second tier of BIA as described above be 
    applied to Petrosul for the preliminary results of review. The rate 
    previously applicable to Petrosul is zero percent. Therefore, the rate 
    calculated for Husky, the highest calculated rate in this review, shall 
    apply to Petrosul as this is higher than the rate previously applicable 
    to Petrosul.
    Non-Responders/Untimely Responders
    
        Based on a failure to respond or an untimely response to the 
    Department's questionnaire, we have determined that Brimstone, Burza, 
    Sulbow, Canamex, Delta, Drummond, Real, Fanchem, and Saratoga failed to 
    cooperate in this proceeding and, therefore, we have been assigned them 
    margins based on BIA. Furthermore, consistent with the Department's 
    two-tiered BIA methodology, the Department has determined that first-
    tier BIA, as described above, applies to each of these companies. The 
    highest rate applicable to a firm is 28.9 percent. Therefore, this rate 
    shall apply to each of these respondents.
    
    Preliminary Results of the Review
    
        As a result of our review, we preliminarily determine that the 
    following margins exist for the period December 1, 1991, through 
    November 30, 1992:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    Percent 
                        Manufacturer/exporter                        margin 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Husky Oil Ltd................................................       5.66
    Mobil Oil Canada, Ltd........................................      (\1\)
                                                                        5.66
    Petrosul.....................................................      (\1\)
                                                                        5.66
    Alberta......................................................      (\2\)
    Allied.......................................................      (\2\)
    Norcen.......................................................      (\2\)
    Brimstone....................................................      (\3\)
                                                                        28.9
    Burza........................................................      (\3\)
                                                                        28.9
    Canamex......................................................      (\3\)
                                                                        28.9
    Delta........................................................      (\3\)
                                                                        28.9
    Drummond.....................................................      (\3\)
                                                                        28.9
    Fanchem......................................................      (\3\)
                                                                        28.9
    Real.........................................................      (\3\)
                                                                        28.9
    Saratoga.....................................................      (\3\)
                                                                        28.9
    Sulbow.......................................................      (\3\)
                                                                        28.9
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Cooperative BIA rate.                                               
    \2\ No shipments or sales subject to this review. The firm has no       
      individual rate from any segment of this proceeding.                  
    \3\ Non-cooperative BIA rate.                                           
    
        Interested parties may request disclosure within 5 days of the date 
    of publication of this notice and may request a hearing within 10 ten 
    days of the date of publication. Any hearing, if requested, will be 
    held as early as convenient for the parties but not later than 44 days 
    after the date of publication or the first work day thereafter. Case 
    briefs and/or other written comments from interested parties may be 
    submitted not later than 30 days after the date of publication of this 
    notice. Rebuttal briefs and rebuttals to written comments, limited to 
    issues raised in case briefs and written comments, may be filed not 
    later than 37 days after the date of publication of this notice. The 
    Department will publish the final results of this administrative 
    review, including the results of its analysis of issues raised in any 
    such written comments.
        The Department shall determine, and the Customs Service shall 
    assess, antidumping duties on all appropriate entries. Individual 
    differences between USP and FMV may vary from the percentages stated 
    above. Upon completion of the review, the Department will issue 
    appraisement instructions on each exporter directly to the U.S. Customs 
    Service.
        Furthermore, the following deposit requirements will be effective 
    for all shipments of elemental sulphur, entered or withdrawn from 
    warehouse, for consumption on or after the publication date of the 
    final results of this administrative review, as provided by section 
    751(a)(1) of the Act: (1) The cash deposit rate for the reviewed 
    companies will be those rates established in the final results of this 
    review; (2) for previously reviewed or investigated companies not 
    listed above, the cash deposit rate will continue to be the company-
    specific rate published for the most recent period; (3) if the exporter 
    is not a firm covered in this review, a prior review, or the original 
    less-than-fair-value (LTFV) investigation, but the manufacturer is, the 
    cash deposit rate will be the rate established for the most recent 
    period for the manufacturer of the merchandise; and (4) if neither the 
    exporter nor the manufacturer is a firm covered in this or any previous 
    review, or the less-than-fair-value (LTFV) investigation, the cash 
    deposit rate will be the ``new shipper'' rate established in the first 
    review conducted by the Department in which a ``new shipper'' rate was 
    established, as discussed below.
        On May 25, 1993, the Court of International Trade (CIT) in Floral 
    Trade Council v. United States, 822 F.Supp. 766 (CIT 1993) and Federal-
    Mogul Corporation and The Torrington Company v. United States, 822 
    F.Supp. 782 (CIT 1993) decided that once an ``All Others'' rate is 
    established for a company it can only be changed through an 
    administrative review. The Department has determined that in order to 
    implement these decisions, it is appropriate to reinstate the ``All 
    Others'' rate from the LTFV investigation (or that rate as amended for 
    correction or clerical errors as a result of litigation) in proceedings 
    governed by antidumping duty orders. In proceedings governed by 
    antidumping findings, unless we are able to ascertain the ``All 
    Others'' rate from the Treasury LTFV investigation, the Department has 
    determined that it is appropriate to adopt the ``new shipper'' rate 
    established in the first final results of administrative review 
    published by the Department (or that rate as amended for correction or 
    clerical errors as a result of litigation) as the ``All Others'' rate 
    for the purposes of establishing 
    
    [[Page 37875]]
    cash deposits in all current and future administrative reviews.
        Because this proceeding is governed by an antidumping finding, and 
    we are unable to ascertain the ``All Others'' rate from the Treasury 
    LTFV investigation, the ``All Others'' rate for the purposes of this 
    review would normally be the ``new shipper'' rate established in the 
    first notice of final results of administrative review published by the 
    Department. However, a ``new shipper'' rate was not established or 
    ascertainable in that notice. Therefore, for the purposes of this 
    review, we have drawn the ``All Others'' rate of 5.56 percent from the 
    final results of administrative review of this finding conducted by the 
    Department generally for the period December 1, 1980 through November 
    30, 1982. See Elemental Sulphur from Canada; Final Results of 
    Administrative Review of Antidumping Finding, 48 FR 53592 (November 28, 
    1983).
        These deposit requirements, when imposed, shall remain in effect 
    until publication of the final results of the next administrative 
    review.
        This notice also serves as a preliminary reminder to importers of 
    their responsibility under 19 CFR 353.26 to file a certificate 
    regarding the reimbursement of antidumping duties prior to liquidation 
    of the relevant entries during this review period. Failure to comply 
    with this requirement could result in the Secretary's presumption that 
    reimbursement of antidumping duties occurred and the subsequent 
    assessment of double antidumping duties.
        This administrative review and notice are in accordance with 
    section 751(a)(1) of the Act (19 U.S.C. 1675(a)(1)) and 19 CFR 353.22.
    
        Dated: July 17, 1995.
    Susan G. Esserman,
    Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
    [FR Doc. 95-18136 Filed 7-21-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
7/24/1995
Published:
07/24/1995
Department:
International Trade Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of Preliminary Results of Antidumping Finding Administrative Review.
Document Number:
95-18136
Dates:
July 24, 1995.
Pages:
37872-37875 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
A-122-047
PDF File:
95-18136.pdf