99-15997. Initiation of Antidumping Duty Investigation: Acrylonitrile Butadiene Rubber From the Republic of Korea  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 120 (Wednesday, June 23, 1999)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 33461-33463]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-15997]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    
    International Trade Administration
    [A-580-840]
    
    
    Initiation of Antidumping Duty Investigation: Acrylonitrile 
    Butadiene Rubber From the Republic of Korea
    
    AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration, 
    Department of Commerce
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: June 23, 1999.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Marian Wells, Annika O'Hara, or Ryan 
    Langan, Office One, AD/CVD Enforcement, Import Administration, 
    International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, Room 
    3099, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 
    20230; telephone: (202) 482-6309, 482-3798, and 482-1279, respectively.
    
    Initiation of Investigation
    
    The 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 as amended (``the 
    Act'') by the Uruguay Round Agreements Act (``URAA''). In addition, 
    unless otherwise indicated, all citations to the Department's 
    regulations are to the provisions codified at 19 CFR Part 351 (1998).
    
    The Petition
    
        On May 27, 1999, the Department of Commerce (``the Department'') 
    received a petition filed in proper form by Zeon Chemicals L.P. and 
    Uniroyal Chemical Company, Inc., hereinafter collectively referred to 
    as ``the petitioners.''
        In accordance with section 732(b) of the Act, the petitioners 
    allege that imports of acrylonitrile butadiene rubber from the Republic 
    of Korea (``Korea'') are being, or are likely to be, sold in the United 
    States at less than fair value within the meaning of section 731 of the 
    Act and that such imports are both materially injuring and threatening 
    material injury to an industry in the United States.
        The Department finds that the petitioners filed this petition on 
    behalf of the domestic industry because they are interested parties as 
    defined in section 771(9)(C) of the Act and because the petitioners 
    have demonstrated that they represent, at a minimum, the required 
    proportion of the United States industry (see ``Determination of 
    Industry Support for the Petition'' section, below).
    
    Scope of the Investigation
    
        The product covered by this investigation is commonly referred to 
    as acrylonitrile butadiene rubber or nitrile rubber (``NBR''). NBR is a 
    synthetic rubber produced by the copolymerization of butadiene and 
    acrylonitrile. NBR is sold in bale, slab, crumb, powder and latex form. 
    NBR in the latex form is excluded from the scope of this investigation. 
    Also excluded from the scope of this investigation is NBR containing 
    additives, NBR containing rubber processing chemicals, and NBR 
    containing other materials used for further processing beyond the 
    copolymerization process. The merchandise subject to this investigation 
    is classified in the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States 
    (``HTSUS'') at subheading 4002.59.00. Although the HTSUS subheading is 
    provided for convenience and customs purposes, the written description 
    of the merchandise under investigation is dispositive.
        During our review of the petition, we discussed the scope of the 
    investigation with the petitioners to ensure that the scope language 
    accurately reflects the product for which the domestic industry is 
    seeking relief. Moreover, as discussed in the preamble to our 
    regulations (62 FR 27323), we are setting aside a period for parties to 
    raise issues regarding product coverage. The Department encourages all 
    parties to submit such comments within 20 days of publication of this 
    notice. Comments should be addressed to Import Administration's Central 
    Records Unit at Room 1870, U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th Street and 
    Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20230. The period of scope 
    consultations is intended to provide the Department with ample 
    opportunity to consider all comments and consult with parties prior to 
    the issuance of its preliminary determination.
    
    Determination of Industry Support for the Petition
    
        Section 732(b)(1) of the Act requires that a petition be filed on 
    behalf of the domestic industry. Section 732(c)(4)(A) of the Act 
    provides that a petition meets this requirement if the domestic 
    producers or workers who support the petition account for: (1) At least 
    25 percent of the total production of the domestic like product; and 
    (2) more than 50 percent of the production of the domestic like product 
    produced by that portion of the industry expressing support for, or 
    opposition to, the petition.
        Section 771(4)(A) of the Act defines the ``industry'' as ``the 
    producers as a whole of a domestic like product.'' Thus, to determine 
    whether the petition has the requisite industry support, the statute 
    directs the Department to look to producers and workers who account for 
    production of the domestic like product. The International Trade 
    Commission (``ITC''), which is responsible for determining whether 
    ``the domestic industry'' has been injured, must also determine what 
    constitutes a domestic like product in order to define the industry. 
    While both the Department and the ITC must apply the same statutory 
    definition regarding the domestic like product, they do so for 
    different purposes and pursuant to separate and distinct authority. In 
    addition, the Department's determination is subject to limitations of 
    time and information. Although this may result in different definitions 
    of the domestic like product, such differences do not render the 
    decision of either agency contrary to the law. 1 Section 
    771(10) of the Act defines the domestic like product as ``a product 
    which is like, or in the absence of like, most similar in 
    characteristics and uses with, the article subject to an investigation 
    under this title.'' Thus, the reference point from which the analysis 
    of the domestic like product begins is ``the article subject to an 
    investigation,'' i.e., the class or kind of merchandise to be 
    investigated, which normally will be the scope as defined in the 
    petition.
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        \1\ See Algoma Steel Corp. Ltd., v. United States, 688 F. Supp. 
    639, 642-44 (CIT 1988); High Information Content Flat Panel Displays 
    and Display Glass from Japan: Final Determination; Rescission of 
    Investigation and Partial Dismissal of Petition, 56 FR 32376, 32380-
    81 (July 16, 1991).
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        The domestic like product identified in the petition is the single 
    domestic like product defined in the ``Scope of Investigation'' 
    section, above. The Department has no basis on the record to find this 
    definition of the domestic like product to be inaccurate. Therefore, 
    the Department has adopted this definition of the domestic like 
    product.
        In this case, the Department has determined that the petition 
    contains evidence of sufficient industry support. Therefore, polling 
    was not necessary. See Initiation Checklist dated June 16, 1999 (the 
    public version is on file in the Central Records Unit of the Department 
    of Commerce, Room B-099). Based on the record evidence, the producers 
    who
    
    [[Page 33462]]
    
    support the petition account for more than 50 percent of the production 
    of the domestic like product. Additionally, no person who would qualify 
    as an interested party pursuant to section 771(9)(C), (D), (E) or (F) 
    of the Act has expressed opposition on the record to the petition. 
    Accordingly, the Department determines that this petition is filed on 
    behalf of the domestic industry within the meaning of section 732(b)(1) 
    of the Act.
        On June 15, 1999, the Department received a letter from counsel for 
    the potential respondents who argued that the Department should not 
    initiate this investigation unless it determines, through polling, that 
    the petition is supported by the U.S. industry. The basis for this 
    request was the potential respondents' claim that one of the 
    petitioners, Uniroyal, will cease its production of the subject 
    merchandise in the United States in mid-1999 and move all of its 
    production to Mexico. Thereby, Uniroyal would not be a U.S. producer, 
    according to respondents. This fact was argued as outcome determinative 
    that there was no industry support.
        The Department has decided to continue to treat Uniroyal as a 
    petitioner and interested party in this investigation. First, Uniroyal 
    was producing the subject merchandise in the United States at the time 
    the petition was filed and, to the best of our knowledge, the planned 
    move to Mexico had not yet taken place at the time of this initiation 
    of the investigation. Second, if we were to exclude Uniroyal, the 
    companies supporting the petition would still exceed the required 25 
    percent of total production and more than 50 percent of the production 
    produced by that portion of the industry expressing support for, or 
    opposition to, the petition. If we were to accept the argument that 
    Uniroyal no longer is a U.S. producer, we would exclude its production 
    from both the numerator and the denominator in our calculation of 
    industry support. Thus, it would not change industry support 
    substantially and the Department's determination regarding industry 
    support, mentioned above, would stand.
    
    Export Price and Normal Value
    
        The following is a description of the allegation of sales at less 
    than fair value upon which our decision to initiate this investigation 
    is based. Should the need arise to use any of this information in our 
    preliminary or final determinations for purposes of facts available 
    under section 776 of the Act, we may re-examine the information and 
    revise the margin calculations, if appropriate.
        The petitioners identified Korea Kumho Petrochemical (``Kumho'') 
    and Hyundai Petrochemical Co., Ltd. (``Hyundai'') as producers and 
    exporters of NBR to the United States. According to the petitioners, 
    Korean producers sold NBR to unaffiliated imports/distributors in the 
    United States and, therefore, U.S. price is calculated using the export 
    price (``EP'') methodology.
        For their EP calculation, the petitioners have used multiple offers 
    for sale of the subject merchandise by unaffiliated U.S. importer/
    distributors to unaffiliated purchasers in the United States between 
    March 1998 and February 1999. In order to approximate the price paid by 
    the U.S. importers/distributors to Korean exporters, the petitioners 
    subtracted the importers/distributors' estimated profit, selling, 
    general, and administrative expenses, and imputed credit expenses. The 
    petitioners also deducted movement charges incurred in bringing the 
    merchandise to the United States.
        The Department has made several adjustments to the petitioners' 
    calculation of net U.S. price. First, only two of the several U.S. 
    prices presented by the petitioners are supported by source 
    documentation in the petition. Of these two prices, one is from the 
    anticipated period of investigation (``POI'') whereas the other price 
    dates to a period prior to the POI. Therefore Department has 
    recalculated the U.S. price based on the price which pertained to the 
    POI and for which the petitioners have submitted supporting 
    documentation. Second, based on our understanding of the distribution 
    process of the Korean product in the United States, the price paid by 
    the unaffiliated importer/distributor in the United States can be 
    computed by simply deducting the importers/distributors' markup (as 
    reported in the petition) from the price charged by the importers/
    distributors to their unaffiliated customers. Therefore, we deducted 
    this markup rather than the alleged expenses and profit of the 
    importers/distributors. In addition, we subtracted Korean inland 
    freight, ocean freight, U.S. inland freight, U.S. warehousing expenses, 
    U.S. merchandise processing fees, and U.S. harbor maintenance fees. The 
    resulting amount is the net U.S. export price which we have compared to 
    normal value. See Initiation Checklist.
        On June 16, the petitioners submitted to the Department unit import 
    values based on U.S. import statistics for January through March 1999. 
    As an alternative calculation of U.S. price, we have used the import 
    values adjusted for the movement expenses above.
        The petitioners have used quoted sales prices in the home market to 
    calculate normal value. They obtained gross unit prices and multiple 
    offers for sale in May and October of 1998 for products which were 
    either identical or similar to those sold to the United States. The 
    petitioners subtracted from the gross unit home market prices the 
    estimated transportation costs to home market customers. They made 
    adjustments for differences in circumstances of sale in the U.S. and 
    home markets (for credit and technical services), and they applied a 
    commission offset (corresponding to their deduction of importers/
    distributors' expenses and profits in calculating EP). Finally, they 
    deducted estimated home market packing costs and added estimated U.S. 
    (international) packing costs.
        The Department has also made several adjustments to the 
    petitioners' calculation of normal value. First, we converted the home 
    market prices to U.S. dollars using exchange rates contemporaneous with 
    the U.S. sales. We then computed an average home market price. Second, 
    we did not include the commission offset computed by the petitioners 
    because, as discussed above, no commission was reflected in the U.S. 
    price. Following the petitioners' methodology, we made the 
    circumstance-of-sale adjustment and adjusted for packing and freight. 
    See Initiation Checklist.
    
    Fair Value Comparison
    
        Based on the data provided by the petitioners, there is reason to 
    believe that imports of NBR from Korea are being, or are likely to be, 
    sold at less than fair value. Based on the Department's recalculations 
    of export price and normal value, the comparisons yield dumping margins 
    ranging from 83.81 percent to 102.20 percent.
    
    Allegation and Evidence of Material Injury and Causation
    
        The petition alleges that the U.S. industry producing the domestic 
    like product is being materially injured, and is threatened with 
    material injury, by reason of the imports of the subject merchandise 
    sold at less than normal value. The petitioners explained that the 
    industry's injured condition is evident in the declining trends in net 
    operating income, net sales volumes, net selling prices, and U.S., 
    production. The allegation of injury and causation are supported by 
    relevant evidence including U.S. Customs import data, lost sales, and 
    pricing information. The Department assessed the allegations and
    
    [[Page 33463]]
    
    supporting evidence regarding material injury and causation and 
    determined that these allegations are supported by accurate and 
    adequate evidence and meet the statutory requirements for initiation. 
    See Initiation Checklist.
    
    Initiation of Antidumping Investigation
    
        Based upon our examination of the petition, we have found that the 
    petition meets the requirements of section 732 of the Act. Therefore, 
    we are initiating an antidumping duty investigation to determine 
    whether imports of NBR from Korea are being, or are likely to be, sold 
    in the United States at less than fair value. Unless this deadline is 
    extended, we will make our preliminary determination by November 3, 
    1999.
    
    Distribution of Copies of the Petition
    
        In accordance with section 732(b)(3)(A) of the Act, a copy of the 
    public version of the petition has been provided to representatives of 
    the Government of Korea. We will attempt to provide a copy of the 
    public version of the petition to the Korean exporters named in the 
    petition.
    
    International Trade Commission Notification
    
        We have notified the ITC of our initiation of this investigation, 
    as required by section 732(d) of the Act.
    
    Preliminary Determination by the ITC
    
        The ITC will determine by July 12, 1999, whether there is a 
    reasonable indication that an industry in the United States is 
    materially injured, or is threatened with material injury, by reason of 
    imports of NBR from Korea. A negative ITC determination will result in 
    the investigation being terminated; otherwise, this investigation will 
    proceed according to statutory and regulatory time limits.
        This notice is published in accordance with section 777(i) of the 
    Act.
    
        Dated: June 16, 1999.
    Robert S. LaRussa,
    Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
    [FR Doc. 99-15997 Filed 6-22-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
6/23/1999
Published:
06/23/1999
Department:
International Trade Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Document Number:
99-15997
Dates:
June 23, 1999.
Pages:
33461-33463 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
A-580-840
PDF File:
99-15997.pdf