97-30144. Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review of Solid Urea From the Former German Democratic Republic  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 221 (Monday, November 17, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 61271-61276]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-30144]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    
    International Trade Administration
    [A-429-601]
    
    
    Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review of Solid 
    Urea From the Former German Democratic Republic
    
    AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration, 
    Department of Commerce
    
    ACTION: Notice of final results of antidumping duty administrative 
    review
    
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    SUMMARY: On July 8, 1997, the Department of Commerce (the Department) 
    published the preliminary results of its administrative review of the 
    antidumping duty order on solid urea from the Former German Democratic 
    Republic (GDR). The review covers one manufacturer/exporter, SKW 
    Stickstoffwerke Piesteritz GmbH (SKWP), and the period July 1, 1995 
    through June 30, 1996. We gave interested parties an opportunity to 
    comment on our preliminary results.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: November 17, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Nithya Nagarajan or Steven Presing, 
    Office VII, Import Administration, International Trade Administration, 
    U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue, N.W., 
    Washington, DC 20230; telephone (202) 482-3793.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Applicable Statute and Regulations
    
        Unless otherwise indicated, all citations to the statute are 
    references to the provisions effective January 1, 1995, the effective 
    date of the amendments made to the Tariff Act of 1930 (the Act) by the 
    Uruguay Round Agreements Act (URAA). In addition, unless indicated, all 
    citations to the Department's regulations are to the regulations, as 
    codified at 19 C.F.R. part 353 (1996).
    
    Background
    
        On July 8, 1996, the Department published in the Federal Register 
    (61 FR 35712) a notice of ``Opportunity to Request Administrative 
    Review'' for the July 1, 1995 through June 30, 1996, period of review 
    (POR) of the antidumping duty order on solid urea from the former GDR. 
    In accordance with 19 CFR 353.22, the Ad Hoc Committee of Domestic 
    Nitrogen Producers (petitioners) requested a review for the 
    aforementioned period. On August 15, 1996, the Department published a 
    notice of initiation of antidumping review (61 FR 42416, 42417). The 
    Department is conducting a review of this respondent pursuant to 
    section 751 of the Act.
        On July 8, 1997, the Department published the preliminary results 
    of review ( 62 FR 36492). The Department has now completed the review 
    in accordance with section 751 of the Act.
    
    Scope of Review
    
        Imports covered by this review are those of solid urea. At the time 
    of the publication of the antidumping duty order, such merchandise was 
    classifiable under item 480.30 of the Tariff Schedules of the United 
    States Annotated (TSUSA). This merchandise is currently classified 
    under the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS) item 
    number 3102.10.00. These TSUSA and HTS item numbers are provided for 
    convenience and Customs purposes only. The Department's written 
    description of the scope remains dispositive for purposes of the order.
    
    Analysis of Comments Received
    
        Comment 1: Affiliation. Petitioners argue that the Department must 
    adjust SKWP's cost of production to reflect an appropriate amount for 
    depreciation of production equipment transferred to SKWP by 
    Stickstoffwerke AG Wittenberg-Piesteritz (STAG). Petitioners contend 
    that STAG is under the ``control'' of SKWP and that in accordance with 
    section 771(33) of the Act, the Department must find SKWP and STAG to 
    be ``affiliated'' persons. According to petitioners, the Department is 
    required by sections 773(f)(2) and (3) of the Act to disregard STAG's 
    ``transfer'' price to SKWP of the production equipment and substitute, 
    in
    
    [[Page 61272]]
    
    its place, the higher of market value or cost.
        Respondent insists that there is no evidence of affiliation between 
    SKWP and STAG. Respondent maintains that the production equipment was 
    purchased at a market price and that the Department verified SKWP's 
    reported depreciation expense. Respondent adds that the purchase 
    transaction between SKWP and STAG was scrutinized by the German 
    government and independent auditors, and found to be properly valued 
    through arm's-length negotiations.
        Department's Position: We disagree with petitioners' contention 
    that the purchase of the production equipment was a transaction between 
    affiliated persons. Consequently, for the final results of this review, 
    we have not adjusted SKWP's reported depreciation expense pursuant to 
    sections 773(f)(2) and (3) of the Act.
        In 1993, SKWP and STAG concluded an agreement whereby SKWP 
    purchased certain assets from STAG. These assets consisted largely of 
    the accounts receivable, inventories, and production equipment from a 
    nitrogen production facility owned by STAG. As part of this contractual 
    arrangement, SKWP also assumed responsibility for certain debts and 
    other obligations of STAG's nitrogen facility, including accounts 
    payable and costs associated with old, environmentally hazardous sites 
    formerly owned by STAG. In accordance with German generally accepted 
    accounting principles (GAAP), the total purchase price paid by SKWP 
    determined the cost of the assets acquired by the company. Because the 
    degree of convertibility to cash was taken into consideration in 
    allocating the purchase price, much of that price was allocated to 
    accounts receivable and other liquid assets with very little of the 
    price allocated to the capital equipment acquired in the transaction.
        In addition to the nitrogen facilities, SKWP also acquired from 
    STAG as part of the purchase transaction, a five percent interest in 
    VCE Vertriebsgesellschaft fur Chemische Erzeugnisse Piesteritz GmbH 
    (VCE), a distributor of STAG's (now SKWP's) urea products. STAG 
    continued to hold the remaining 95 percent of VCE's shares. At the same 
    time, SKWP and STAG entered into a five-year agreement under which VCE 
    became the exclusive distributor of SKWP's urea products and each 
    company agreed to share in the profits or losses of VCE in accordance 
    with their respective interests in the distributor. As part of this 
    contractual arrangement, STAG also agreed that SKWP would assume 
    complete operational control over VCE, providing all management and 
    sales personnel as well as accounting, management and support staff. 
    Further, SKWP assumed absolute control over all pricing and production 
    decisions at VCE. Thus, STAG has, by contract, given up whatever 
    control over VCE it would otherwise have by virtue of its ownership 
    interest.
        Petitioners cite, as evidence of affiliation between SKWP and STAG, 
    the profit and loss sharing arrangement and SKWP's operational control 
    over VCE. Indeed, petitioners assert, ``STAG is wholly `reliant' upon 
    SKWP for income (through VCE), and STAG's pricing of assets sold to 
    SKWP have affected the cost of the subject merchandise, as well as 
    future income, to STAG.''
        For the following reasons, we cannot agree with petitioners. First, 
    the temporary profit and loss agreement between SKWP and STAG is part 
    of a larger asset purchase arrangement between two companies. It is 
    part of the consideration that STAG received from SKWP for the assets. 
    Therefore, as discussed in greater detail in response to Comment 2, 
    below, we consider any profits accruing to STAG under the agreement to 
    be part of the arm's-length purchase price paid by SKWP for the assets 
    it acquired.
        Second, petitioners do not allege (and nothing in the record 
    suggests) that SKWP and STAG were affiliated at the time of the sale of 
    the assets. STAG may be dependent upon SKWP to act in good faith and to 
    pay whatever additional monies are owed for the assets, but that does 
    not mean STAG and SKWP are ``affiliated'' within the meaning of the 
    statute. STAG did not have to sell its equipment and other assets to 
    SKWP. SKWP was not in a position to dictate the terms of the sale. 
    Rather, each company was pursuing its own economic interests and those 
    interests were in no way mutual. STAG's interest was to obtain the 
    highest price possible for its assets at the time of the sale. Of its 
    own choosing, it accepted an initial payment and the potential of 
    additional payments over a five-year period. Nothing about this 
    transaction put SKWP in a position to ``legally or operationally * * * 
    exercise restraint or direction'' over STAG when it came to the price 
    paid for the production equipment.
        Third, there is no evidence on the record to suggest, as 
    petitioners contend, that STAG would understate the value of the 
    capital equipment that it sold SKWP in the hopes that SKWP, which 
    controls the price and volume of urea products sold through VCE, would 
    obtain greater profits on sales made by VCE. In fact, contrary to 
    petitioners' assertions, STAG's pricing of the assets sold to SKWP does 
    not affect directly the level of VCE's profits since VCE's costs (and 
    thus its' profits) are determined based on the price SKWP charges VCE 
    for urea and not on SKWP's production costs.
        Petitioners also rely on two other points to advance their argument 
    that SKWP and STAG are affiliated persons. First, petitioners note that 
    VCE's financial results are consolidated with those of SKWP. According 
    to petitioners, this would only be possible if STAG's 95 percent 
    interest was indistinguishable from SKWP's interest. Second, 
    petitioners consider STAG's agreement to absorb certain personnel costs 
    associated with the purchase of its assets to be an indication of 
    affiliation between STAG and SKWP.
        In response to the first point, the consolidation of financial 
    statements is done for accounting purposes when a parent company 
    controls the operations of a subsidiary entity. In the present case, 
    the consolidation of VCE's financial statements into SKWP's is merely 
    an indication that SKWP controls VCE, not that SKWP controls STAG (or 
    that both companies control VCE). As explained above, STAG contracted 
    away its right to control VCE as part of the five-year distribution 
    agreement.
        In response to the second point, STAG's commitment to absorb 
    certain personnel costs resulted from the arm's-length negotiations 
    that took place between the parties. Stated differently, absorption of 
    these costs was part of the quid pro quo that enabled STAG to obtain 
    the highest price possible for its assets at the time of sale.
        In conclusion, the Department finds no evidence to consider STAG 
    and SKWP to be affiliated within the meaning of section 771(33) of the 
    Act, and for purposes of these final results, will continue to treat 
    them as parties to an arm's-length transaction in relation to the sale 
    and acquisition of SKWP's production equipment.
        Comment 2: Profit Adjustment. Petitioners argue that even if the 
    Department were to find STAG and SKWP unaffiliated, we should account 
    for STAG's share of VCE's profit or loss as compensation for the assets 
    transferred to SKWP, and add the value of these profits and losses to 
    the reported costs of production.
        Respondents counter that there is no statutory authority to add 
    profit to a COP calculation, and these profits and losses are properly 
    excluded from the reported costs.
    
    [[Page 61273]]
    
        Department Position: We agree, in principle, with petitioners that 
    any profits that accrue to STAG under its profit and loss sharing 
    arrangement with SKWP should be considered part of the purchase price 
    of the assets acquired by SKWP from STAG. As discussed in our response 
    to comment 1, above, the five-year arrangement between STAG and SKWP to 
    share in the profits and losses of VCE, a distributor of SKWP's urea 
    products, was concluded as an integral part of the asset purchase 
    agreement between the two companies. Under the arrangement, SKWP agreed 
    to forego its share of VCE's earnings from urea sales as part of the 
    compensation it paid to STAG for the assets acquired. As such, any 
    profits paid to STAG under the arrangement can reasonably be viewed as 
    part of the purchase price for the assets.
        We note, however, that evidence on the record shows that from 1993 
    to 1996 (the first three years of the arrangement), VCE incurred only 
    losses on its sales of SKWP's urea products. Thus, as of the POR, STAG 
    has not received any additional compensation for the assets it sold 
    beyond that paid by SKWP at the time the agreement was concluded. In 
    addition, we note that, were VCE to earn profits in the final two years 
    of the agreement, such profits would first be netted against VCE's 
    accumulated losses (in accordance with the arrangement) before 
    distribution to STAG.
        Finally, as a theoretical matter, we disagree with petitioners that 
    all profits paid to STAG under the arrangement should go to increase 
    the value of the production equipment purchased by SKWP. Rather, 
    consistent with SKWP's GAAP accounting for all of the assets it 
    acquired from STAG, any additional compensation in the form of VCE 
    profits paid to STAG would first be applied to other, more liquid 
    assets to reduce any remaining difference between their value at the 
    time of purchase and the amount of the purchase price allocated to 
    them.
        Comment 3: Renovation Project. Petitioners argue that the 
    Department should increase SKWP's cost of production to account for 
    amounts received from the German government to offset expenses 
    associated with an ongoing renovation project at its nitrogen facility. 
    According to petitioners, the Department routinely considers renovation 
    costs to be part of the cost of production. In this regard, petitioners 
    highlight the fact that SKWP has accounted for costs associated with 
    the project as part of the company's operating costs. Citing Certain 
    Iron Metal Castings from India, 46 FR 28463 (1981), petitioners contend 
    that it is the Department's long-standing practice not to reduce costs 
    to reflect the benefits received from government subsidies.
        SKWP argues that, because it did not incur the renovation costs for 
    which the subsidies were granted, these costs could not be part of the 
    company's cost of production.
        Department's Position: We disagree with petitioners. Costs 
    associated with the renovation of SKWP's production facility were not 
    incurred by SKWP. The costs in question were funded by the German 
    government through reimbursement which was recorded in the audited 
    financial statements of SKWP.
        Contrary to petitioners' apparent belief, the Department's long-
    standing practice is to base COP upon a producer's actual costs and not 
    to restate such costs to exclude government payments, linked to 
    specific costs. See, e.g., Red Raspberries from Canada; Final 
    Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value, 50 FR 19768 (1985); 
    Certain Iron Construction Castings from India; Final Determination of 
    Sales at Less Than Fair Value, 51 FR 9486, 9488 (1986). This practice 
    has been upheld by the courts on many occasions. See, e.g., United 
    States v. European Trading Company, 27 CCPA 289, C.A.D. 103 (1940); 
    Washington Red. Raspberry Comm. v. United States, 657 F. Supp. 537 (CIT 
    1987); Alhambra Foundry Co., Ltd. v. United States, 685 F. Supp. 1252 
    (CIT 1988). Indeed, in the one case cited by petitioners, the very 
    practice at issue was upheld by the court. See Al Tech Specialty Steel 
    Corp. v. United States, 10 CIT 743, 751, 651 F. Supp. 1421 (1986) 
    (court refused to overturn calculation of ``fixed costs merely because 
    the adjustment is based on subsidies'').
        Comment 4: Special Depreciation. Petitioners argue that the 
    Department should increase SKWP's reported depreciation expense to 
    account for ``special'' depreciation excluded from COP and CV by the 
    company. Petitioners maintain that the Department has a consistent 
    practice of including special depreciation items in its calculation of 
    respondent's costs and there is no justification for departing from 
    that practice in this instance.
        SKWP insists that it properly excluded special depreciation from 
    the COP and CV figures it submitted to the Department. SKWP notes that 
    the special depreciation in question relates to tax-basis depreciation 
    granted by the German government to companies operating in the former 
    GDR and, thus, represents no real additional cost to the company and 
    should not be included in the cost of production. SKWP adds that actual 
    depreciation (i.e., not tax-related depreciation) is included in SKWP's 
    fully-absorbed cost of production.
        Department's Position: We disagree with SKWP in that, for purpose 
    of computing COP and CV, we cannot simply ignore the amount that the 
    company recorded as ``special'' depreciation expense during the POR. 
    Each year in its accounting books and records, SKWP recognizes what it 
    maintains is ``normal'' depreciation expense for the year. In addition, 
    because SKWP operates in the former GDR, German tax law allows the 
    company to recognize a ``special'' depreciation expense in the year in 
    which an asset is purchased. Like normal depreciation, the amount of 
    the special depreciation taken during the year of acquisition reduces 
    the depreciable basis of the assets. Thus, while the special tax 
    depreciation may be stated on an accelerated basis which may or may not 
    reflect the underlying economic useful lives of the assets purchased by 
    SKWP, to ignore the expense altogether, as SKWP suggests, fails to 
    recognize as a cost that portion of each asset's depreciable basis that 
    is written off as special depreciation in the year of acquisition. SKWP 
    has not provided us with any alternative method of recognizing an 
    appropriate amount for depreciation expense that is based on the 
    economic useful lives of the assets purchased by the company. Rather, 
    SKWP's position is that the Department must exclude special 
    depreciation costs from COP and CV because the amounts at issue do not 
    reflect what it calls ``real'' costs. However, as described above, the 
    special depreciation expense amounts recorded by SKWP do reflect actual 
    depreciation costs on an accelerated basis. Therefore, absent any other 
    information on the record from which to derive an alternative measure 
    of depreciation expense, we have included SKWP's special depreciation 
    expense in the company's COP and CV.
        Comment 5: Other Expenses Excluded from SKWP's Submitted Costs. 
    Petitioners claim that the Department should include in SKWP's COP and 
    CV figures certain costs reported by the company in its financial 
    statements. Specifically, petitioners contend that the Department 
    should increase SKWP's reported costs for three expense items: amounts 
    incurred by the company for environmental damages relating to SKWP's 
    100% owned affiliate, Agrochemie Handelsgesellschaft GmbH (Agrochemie); 
    amounts incurred for the demolition of certain plant facilities;
    
    [[Page 61274]]
    
    and, costs relating to worker severance pay.
        SKWP argues that the amounts reported in its financial statements 
    for environmental damages and demolition costs were properly excluded 
    from the costs reported to the Department. According to SKWP, expenses 
    relating to environmental damages caused by Agrochemie were paid for by 
    the German government and, therefore, no costs were actually incurred 
    by the company. With respect to amounts reported for plant demolition, 
    SKWP contends that the facilities at issue were not involved in the 
    production of urea and that these amounts, too, were paid for by the 
    German government.
        Department's Position: We agree with petitioners and have adjusted 
    SKWP's reported COP and CV figures to include amounts for Agrochemie's 
    environmental damages, demolition of certain SKWP facilities, and 
    worker severance pay as reported in the company's financial statements. 
    As part of our cost verification, we reconciled the total amount of 
    costs reported by SKWP in response to our antidumping questionnaire to 
    the costs reported in the company's audited financial statements. Our 
    reconciliation showed that SKWP had excluded from its COP and CV 
    figures specific income statement items relating to reserves 
    established for each of the three expense items described above. 
    Although the record of this case shows that SKWP received funds from 
    the German government to offset costs incurred by the company for 
    certain plant renovations and for environmental clean-up at its 
    nitrogen facility, SKWP failed to show that the receipt of these funds 
    was specifically related to either the environmental damages caused by 
    Agrochemie or to the demolition costs at issue. As petitioners note in 
    their briefs, in past cases, the Department has accounted for expenses 
    associated with environmental clean-up by respondents as part of the 
    cost of production where, as in this case, such expenses are included 
    in respondent's financial statements and reflect costs incurred during 
    the period of investigation or review. See Final Determination of Sales 
    at Less Than Fair Value: Stainless Steel Wire Rod from France, 58 FR 
    68865 (1993). With respect to SKWP's argument that the demolition costs 
    relate to non-urea facilities, our understanding based on the evidence 
    in the record is that the amounts incurred relate to the destruction of 
    factory assets for discontinued operations. As such, we consider these 
    costs to be related to SKWP's general operations and have therefore 
    included them in COP and CV.
        Comment 6: Reported Costs. Petitioners contend that SKWP has 
    reported the costs for only one type of urea product and that a second, 
    more costly type of urea referred to as ``konf.'' in the verification 
    exhibits, was manufactured by SKWP during the POR. Petitioners maintain 
    that cost verification exhibits do not support SKWP's contention that 
    ``konf.'' urea is actually bagged urea since these exhibits show an 
    amount for packing costs in the cost center report for what SKWP claims 
    is bulk urea. Petitioners argue that the Department must increase 
    SKWP's reported COP and CV to reflect the weighted-average cost for the 
    two types of urea produced by the company.
        SKWP maintains that ``konf.'' urea is, in fact, bagged urea, and 
    that the Department verified packing costs associated with bagged urea 
    as part of its sales verification. SKWP adds that the Department has 
    factored the company's reported packing costs for bagged urea into its 
    COP analysis.
        Department's Position: We disagree with petitioners that SKWP 
    failed to report the costs of a second type of urea that it produced 
    during the POR. SKWP manufactures and sells urea in both bulk form, 
    called ``lager lose,'' and in bagged form, or ``konf.'' In response to 
    the Department's cost questionnaire, SKWP reported the cost of urea in 
    bulk form only. The company reported the additional packing costs it 
    incurred for bagged urea on a transaction-specific basis in response to 
    the Department's sales questionnaire. In performing our COP test of 
    SKWP's home market sales, we adjusted for the packing costs associated 
    with bagged urea by deducting the reported amount from the home market 
    sales price before comparing that price to the COP for bulk urea. Thus, 
    to compute a single weighted-average cost for both bulk and bagged 
    urea, as petitioners advocate, would result in an overstatement of 
    costs.
        With respect to petitioners observation that SKWP's cost center 
    report for bulk urea shows an amount for packing costs, we note the 
    fact that these amounts represent insignificant costs of less than one 
    DEM per metric ton that are associated with packing bulk urea for sale. 
    SKWP included these costs in its reported COP and CV amounts for bulk 
    urea.
        Comment 7: Labor Costs. Petitioners contend that a substantial 
    portion of costs associated with SKWP's labor force are unaccounted for 
    in the company's reported COP. In support of their claim, petitioners 
    point to an agreement by SKWP to employ a minimum number of the workers 
    formerly employed by STAG. Petitioners note the fact that, during the 
    POR, the actual number of workers employed by SKWP exceeded the 
    company's commitment level. According to petitioners, because SKWP 
    developed its accounting systems subsequent to the date of the 
    antidumping duty order, the company may have inappropriately assigned 
    (or absorbed) excess personnel costs in areas responsible for producing 
    non-subject merchandise, thereby artificially understating labor costs 
    for urea.
        As further evidence of their claim that SKWP may have understated 
    its labor costs for the subject merchandise, petitioners assert that 
    ammonia production reports obtained by the Department during its cost 
    verification show what petitioners believe is a small percentage of the 
    company's total workforce assigned to production of the input, and that 
    there is no other evidence on the record to show the number of urea 
    production workers.
        SKWP argues that the Department thoroughly verified the company's 
    cost centers and found that all labor costs had been appropriately 
    allocated and accounted for. SKWP maintains that it is puzzled by 
    petitioners' claim with respect to the number of workers in its ammonia 
    production facility, noting that such facilities are not labor-
    intensive operations. SKWP also points out petitioners' own admission 
    that personnel expenses are also accounted for through factory overhead 
    and general and administrative (G&A) expenses.
        Department's Position: We disagree with petitioners assertion that 
    the analysis contained in their brief provides any basis for us to 
    believe that SKWP may have understated its labor costs for urea. 
    Rather, based on the results of our verification, we find that SKWP 
    properly accounted for all labor costs incurred to produce the subject 
    merchandise. Thus, for the final results of this review, we have not 
    adjusted SKWP's labor costs as argued by petitioners. In a pre-
    verification letter to the Department dated April 2, 1997, petitioners 
    expressed their concern that, in light of SKWP's commitment to employ a 
    minimum number of former STAG employees, the variable overhead figure 
    reported by SKWP appeared low. Based on this, petitioners requested 
    that, as part of verification, ``SKWP should explain how it has 
    accounted for all labor costs.'' During verification, SKWP did, in 
    fact, provide a full explanation of the methodology it used in its 
    normal books and records to account for labor costs incurred to produce 
    both subject and non-subject
    
    [[Page 61275]]
    
    merchandise. Moreover, SKWP personnel demonstrated how that methodology 
    was used to calculate the COP and CV data submitted to the Department. 
    As described in SKWP's cost response and in the Department's cost 
    verification report, SKWP charges labor costs, as well as other 
    production costs, to a series of cost centers by cost type. The amounts 
    charged to each ``cost type-cost center'' are then distributed in a 
    multi-stage allocation to ``process-cost centers'' maintained by SKWP 
    for both subject and non-subject merchandise. As explained in the 
    Department's cost verification report, Department verifiers examined 
    how production costs incurred within each of the various cost type-cost 
    centers were allocated to the various process-cost centers under SKWP's 
    accounting system. See Cost Verification Report at page 21.
        In their case brief, petitioners cite to a list of participants at 
    the cost verification as evidence that the Department verifiers 
    examined only the labor costs incurred by SKWP in the production of 
    ammonia and urea, and neglected to review the labor allocations to non-
    subject merchandise. Moreover, petitioners argue that verification 
    exhibits collected by the Department show only the number of workers 
    employed by SKWP at its ammonia production facility. While we do not 
    believe that the participants list cited by petitioners provides any 
    indication of the testing performed during verification, the 
    Department's cost verification report does explain that the verifiers 
    examined carefully amounts charged to, and allocated from, the various 
    cost type-cost centers, including amounts incurred for labor costs. 
    With respect to the ammonia production reports cited by petitioners, 
    the verification report makes clear that these documents represent 
    examples of the supporting documentation reviewed by the verifiers as 
    part of their testing of SKWP's cost type-cost centers. As stated in 
    the report, although the Department verifiers reviewed costs recorded 
    in, and charged from, each category of cost type-cost center (including 
    those in which SKWP recorded its labor costs), they did not collect as 
    verification exhibits copies of all cost center reports. In fact, to 
    have collected copies of all documents examined during verification 
    would have placed an extreme and unnecessary burden on the respondent 
    in this case.
        Comment 8: Factory Overhead. Petitioners note that SKWP's reported 
    factory overhead costs contain an adjustment that reduces a portion of 
    those costs. Petitioners contend that there is no evidence on the 
    record concerning the nature of this adjustment. According to 
    petitioners, if, upon re-examining the record of this case, the 
    Department finds that the amount of the adjustment is not justified, it 
    should increase SKWP's factory overhead costs accordingly.
        SKWP asserts that petitioners are overreaching when they request 
    that the Department adjust the company's factory overhead costs for an 
    offset that is included among thousands of other numbers contained in 
    the record of this case. SKWP argues that its factory overhead costs 
    should be accepted as reported since those amounts were verified by the 
    Department.
        Department's Position: For the final results of this review, we 
    have not adjusted SKWP's factory overhead costs for the offset. The 
    offset represents miscellaneous income earned by SKWP's Cunnersdorf 
    research facility for projects conducted on behalf of outside parties. 
    We did not describe the offset in our cost verification report simply 
    because, relative to the production costs at issue in this case and the 
    complexity of SKWP's cost accounting system, it is insignificant. 
    Technically, because the work conducted was not so significant as to 
    represent a separate line of business (and, thus, be excluded from COP 
    and CV altogether), both the revenues from the projects and the 
    associated R&D costs would more appropriately be considered part of G&A 
    expense. However, in this instance, reclassification of these amounts 
    would have little, if any, effect on SKWP's submitted costs. Thus, as 
    noted above, we have not made any adjustments to SKWP's reported 
    factory overhead costs.
        Comment 9: Sales Reporting. Petitioners argue that SKWP only 
    provided sales information on certain types of urea without consulting 
    the Department. Petitioners insist that the Department should affirm in 
    the final determination the inappropriateness of this unilateral 
    modification.
        Respondent argues that they reported all home market sales of 
    identical merchandise rather than sales of the foreign like product. 
    They claim that they did this in accordance with the statute at Section 
    773(a)(1) and Section 771(16)(A). Respondent also argues that the 
    Department implicitly acknowledged this requirement when it advised 
    SKWP that its omission of sales of non-identical merchandise may result 
    in the use of facts available. Due to the fact that the Department's 
    analysis indicates that only sales of identical merchandise were 
    necessary for comparison purposes, petitioners' concerns are not 
    justified.
        Department's Position: During the review, SKWP only provided home 
    market sales information of identical merchandise. In an October 30, 
    1996, letter to the respondent, the Department notified SKWP that 
    failure to report the entire universe of the foreign like product may 
    result in the Department using facts available, particularly if the 
    Department determined after further analysis and verification of all 
    relevant data that the omitted sales were necessary for comparison 
    purposes. As evidenced by the preliminary results of review, the 
    reported home market sales database of identical merchandise was 
    adequate for making comparisons to the U.S. sales database and the 
    omitted sales were not necessary for comparison purposes.
        Comment 10: Model Match. Petitioners argue that SKWP 
    inappropriately added a product characteristic in the model matching 
    section and has not justified this modification. Petitioners argue that 
    although there is no difference in the material costs of the two 
    products, there is a difference in selling price. Additionally, 
    petitioners argue that due to the fact that the U.S. sale is of one 
    particular type of urea, SKWP's reporting methodology would cause the 
    Department to select only certain home market sales for comparison 
    purposes. Therefore, the Department should reject SKWP's reporting 
    methodology. Alternatively, petitioners argue that if the Department 
    accepts this SKWP's reporting methodology then it should adjust the 
    cost for the second type of urea to ensure that all costs for all 
    models are properly accounted for.
        Respondent rebuts petitioners' argument by stating that the 
    Department's questionnaire allows for the modification of the product 
    characteristics if necessary. Respondent also objects to petitioners 
    claim that the modification of the physical characteristics resulted in 
    the comparison of U.S. sales to home market sales of similar 
    merchandise. Respondent argues that due to the fact the record 
    demonstrates that both types of urea are physically different products, 
    comparison of one with the other is inappropriate.
        Department's Position: The Department agrees with respondent. The 
    Department's model match allows for respondent to report additional 
    product characteristics if necessary. As evidenced by the preliminary 
    results of review, the Department was able to compare the U.S. sale to 
    the most comparable home market sale(s) and ensure that there were no 
    distortions in the analysis. Based on the fact that there
    
    [[Page 61276]]
    
    is no evidence on the record to show that the product characteristics 
    reported resulted in a distortive comparison, the Department has 
    continued to use the model matching criteria set forth in the 
    preliminary results of review.
        Comment 11: Downstream Sales. Petitioners argue that sales from 
    Agrochemie were not reported to the Department. Petitioners contend 
    that SKWP has not indicated that it is otherwise justified in its 
    reporting methodology, therefore, there exists the strong possibility 
    for SKWP to avoid reporting less favorable home market sales to end-
    users by manipulating the transfer price to Agrochemie. Petitioners 
    argue that the Department must increase normal value to reflect 
    Agrochemie's profits on the resale of urea through its reseller. 
    Because there is no evidence of Agrochemie's sales prices on the 
    record, petitioners argue that the Department should use facts 
    available regarding VCE's profit level to determine the selling price 
    to Agrochemie's final customer.
        Respondent argues that petitioners' request is without merit. 
    Respondent asserts that the purpose of the arm's length test is to 
    determine if the prices for sales between affiliated parties may have 
    been manipulated to lower normal value. However, due to the fact that 
    the Department found that sales to Agrochemie were at arm's length it 
    would be inappropriate to penalize SKWP for avoiding the burden of 
    reporting downstream sales that the Department did not require for its 
    analysis.
        Department's Position:. The Department agrees with respondent. 
    During the review, SKWP did not report sales made from Agrochemie to 
    unaffiliated customers in the home market. In an October 30, 1996, 
    letter to the respondent, the Department notified SKWP that failure to 
    report the Agrochemie sales to the first unaffiliated party may result 
    in the Department using facts available, particularly if the Department 
    determined after further analysis and verification of all relevant 
    data, that these omitted sales were necessary for comparison purposes. 
    As evidenced by the preliminary results of review, the Department found 
    that SKWP's sales to Agrochemie were at arm's length and these omitted 
    sales were not necessary for comparison purposes.
    
    Final Results of Review
    
        As a result of our review, we determine that the following 
    weighted-average margin exists:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    Margin  
                       Manufacturer/exporter                      (percent) 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    SKW Piesteritz.............................................         0.00
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Department shall determine, and the Customs Service shall 
    assess, antidumping duties on all appropriate entries. Individual 
    differences between export price and normal value may vary from the 
    percentage stated above. The Department will issue appraisment 
    instructions on each exporter directly to the Customs Service.
        Furthermore, the following deposit requirements will be effective 
    upon publication of this notice of final results of review for all 
    shipments of subject merchandise entered, or withdrawn from warehouse, 
    for consumption on or after the publication date, as provided by 
    section 751 (a)(1) of the Act: (1) The cash deposit rate for the 
    reviewed company will be the rate listed above; (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 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) 
    for all other producers and/or exporters, as indicated in the 
    preliminary results of this review, the cash deposit rate shall be 
    44.80 percent, the ``all others'' rate established in the LTFV 
    investigation (53 FR 2636). These deposit requirements shall remain in 
    effect until publication of the final results of the next 
    administrative review. In addition, we are terminating suspension of 
    liquidation for shipments of solid urea produced by other firms in 
    Germany.
        This notice serves as a final 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 subsequent assessment 
    of double antidumping duties.
    
    Notification to Interested Parties
    
        This notice also serves as a reminder to parties subject to 
    administrative protective order (APO) of their responsibility 
    concerning the disposition of proprietary information disclosed under 
    APO in accordance with 19 CFR 353.34(d). Timely written notification of 
    return/destruction of APO materials or conversion to judicial 
    protective order is hereby requested. Failure to comply with the 
    regulations and the terms of an APO is a sanctionable violation.
        This administrative review and notice are in accordance with 
    section 751(a)(1) of the Act (19 USC 1675(a)(1)) and 19 CFR 353.22.
    
        Dated: November 5, 1997.
    Robert S. LaRussa,
    Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
    [FR Doc. 97-30144 Filed 11-14-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
11/17/1997
Published:
11/17/1997
Department:
International Trade Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of final results of antidumping duty administrative review
Document Number:
97-30144
Dates:
November 17, 1997.
Pages:
61271-61276 (6 pages)
Docket Numbers:
A-429-601
PDF File:
97-30144.pdf