99-23034. Final Results of Expedited Sunset Review: Top-of-the-Stove Stainless Steel Cookware From Taiwan  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 171 (Friday, September 3, 1999)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 48372-48374]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-23034]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    
    International Trade Administration
    
    
    Final Results of Expedited Sunset Review: Top-of-the-Stove 
    Stainless Steel Cookware From Taiwan
    
    [C-583-604]
    AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration, 
    Department of Commerce.
    
    ACTION: Notice of Final Results of Expedited Sunset Review: Top-of-the-
    Stove Stainless Steel Cookware from Taiwan.
    
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    SUMMARY: On February 1, 1999, the Department of Commerce (``the 
    Department'') initiated a sunset review of the countervailing duty 
    order on top-of-the-stove stainless steel cookware from Taiwan (64 FR 
    4840) pursuant to section 751(c) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended 
    (``the Act''). On the basis of a notice of intent to participate and an 
    adequate substantive response filed on behalf of domestic interested 
    parties and an inadequate response (in this case, no response) from 
    respondent interested parties, the Department determined to conduct an 
    expedited review. As a result of this review, the Department finds that 
    revocation of the countervailing duty order would be likely to lead to 
    continuation or recurrence of a countervailable subsidy. The net 
    countervailable subsidy and the nature of the subsidy are identified in 
    the Final Results of Review section of to this notice.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Darla D. Brown or Melissa G. Skinner, 
    Office of Policy for Import Administration, International Trade 
    Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th Street & Constitution 
    Ave., NW., Washington, D.C. 20230; telephone: (202) 482-3207 or (202) 
    482-1560, respectively.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: September 3, 1999.
    
    Statute and Regulations:
    
        This review was conducted pursuant to sections 751(c) and 752 of 
    the Act. The Department's procedures for the conduct of sunset reviews 
    are set forth in Procedures for Conducting Five-year (``Sunset'') 
    Reviews of Antidumping and Countervailing Duty Orders, 63 FR 13516 
    (March 20, 1998) (``Sunset Regulations''). Guidance on methodological 
    or analytical issues relevant to the Department's conduct of sunset 
    reviews is set forth in the Department's Policy Bulletin 98:3--Policies 
    Regarding the Conduct of Five-year (``Sunset'') Reviews of Antidumping 
    and Countervailing Duty Orders; Policy Bulletin, 63 FR 18871 (April 16, 
    1998) (``Sunset Policy Bulletin'').
    
    Scope
    
        The merchandise subject to this countervailing duty order is top-
    of-the-stove stainless steel cookware (``cookware'') from Taiwan. The 
    subject merchandise is all non-electric cooking ware of stainless steel 
    which may have one or more layers of aluminum, copper or carbon steel 
    for more even heat distribution. The subject merchandise includes 
    skillets, frying pans, omelette pans, saucepans, double boilers, stock 
    pots, dutch ovens, casseroles, steamers, and other stainless steel 
    vessels, all for cooking on stove top burners, except tea kettles and 
    fish poachers.
        Excluded from the scope of the orders are stainless steel oven ware 
    and stainless steel kitchen ware. ``Universal pan lids'' are not within 
    the scope of the order (57 FR 57420, December 4, 1992).
        Cookware is currently classifiable under Harmonized Tariff Schedule 
    (HTS) item numbers 7323.93.00 and 9604.00.00. The HTS item numbers are 
    provided for convenience and Customs purposes only. The written 
    description remains dispositive.
    
    History of the Order
    
        The countervailing duty order on cookware from Taiwan was published 
    in the Federal Register on January 20, 1987 (52 FR 2141).
        In the original investigation of cookware from Taiwan, the 
    Department determined the following four programs conferred 
    countervailable export subsidies:
        (1) Export Loss Reserve--0.001 percent ad valorem;
        (2) 25 Percent Income Tax Ceiling for Big Trading Companies--0.010 
    percent ad valorem;
        (3) Over-Rebate of Duty Drawback on Imported Materials Physically 
    Incorporated in Export Merchandise--2.128 percent ad valorem; and
        (4) Rebate of Import Duties and Indirect Taxes on Imported 
    Materials Not Physically Incorporated in Export Merchandise--0.002 
    percent ad valorem.\1\
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        \1\ Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination: Certain 
    Stainless Steel Cooking Ware from Taiwan, 51 FR 42891(November 26, 
    1986).
    
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    [[Page 48373]]
    
        The Department determined that these four programs conferred a 
    bounty or grant, the net amount of which was calculated to be 2.14 
    percent ad valorem for all Taiwanese exporters/producers of cookware.
        Since the original investigation, the Department has conducted no 
    administrative reviews of the order. The order, therefore, remains in 
    effect for all known manufacturers and exporters of the subject 
    merchandise from Taiwan.
    
    Background
    
        On February 1, 1999, the Department initiated a sunset review of 
    the countervailing duty order on cookware from Taiwan (64 FR 4840), 
    pursuant to section 751(c) of the Act. The Department received a Notice 
    of Intent to Participate on behalf of the Stainless Steel Cookware 
    Committee, whose current members are Regal Ware, Inc., All-Clad 
    Metalcrafters, Inc., and Vita Craft Corp. (collectively, the 
    ``Committee''), on February 16, 1999, within the deadline specified in 
    section 351.218(d)(1)(i) of the Sunset Regulations. Pursuant to section 
    771(9)(E) of the Act, the Committee claimed interested party status as 
    an association of U.S. manufacturers of a domestic like product. In 
    addition, the Committee's individual members claimed domestic 
    interested party status pursuant to section 771(9)(C) of the Act, as 
    domestic producers of a like product. The Department received a 
    complete substantive response from the Committee on March 3, 1999, 
    within the 30-day deadline specified in the Sunset Regulations under 
    section 351.218(d)(3)(i). We did not receive a substantive response 
    from any respondent interested party. As a result, pursuant to 19 CFR 
    351.218(e)(1)(ii)(C), the Department determined to conduct an 
    expedited, 120-day, review of this order.
        The Department determined that the sunset review of the 
    countervailing duty order on cookware from Taiwan is extraordinarily 
    complicated. In accordance with section 751(c)(5)(C)(v) of the Act, the 
    Department may treat a review as extraordinarily complicated if it is a 
    review of a transition order (i.e., an order in effect on January 1, 
    1995). (See section 751(c)(6)(C) of the Act.) Therefore, on June 7, 
    1999, the Department extended the time limit for completion of the 
    final results of this review until not later than August 30, 1999, in 
    accordance with section 751(c)(5)(B) of the Act.\2\
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        \2\ See Porcelain-on-Steel Cooking Ware From the People's 
    Republic of China, et al.: Extension of Time Limit for Final Results 
    of Five-Year Reviews, 64 FR 30305 (June 7, 1999).
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    Determination
    
        In accordance with section 751(c)(1) of the Act, the Department 
    conducted this review to determine whether revocation of the 
    countervailing duty order would be likely to lead to continuation or 
    recurrence of countervailable subsidies. Section 752(b) of the Act 
    provides that, in making this determination, the Department shall 
    consider the net countervailable subsidy determined in the 
    investigation and subsequent reviews, and whether any change in the 
    program which gave rise to the net countervailable subsidy has occurred 
    that is likely to affect that net countervailable subsidy. Pursuant to 
    section 752(b)(3) of the Act, the Department shall provide to the 
    International Trade Commission (``the Commission'') the net 
    countervailable subsidy likely to prevail if the order is revoked. In 
    addition, consistent with section 752(a)(6), the Department shall 
    provide the Commission information concerning the nature of each 
    subsidy and whether the subsidy is a subsidy described in Article 3 or 
    Article 6.1 of the 1994 WTO Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing 
    Measures (``Subsidies Agreement'').
        The Department's determinations concerning continuation or 
    recurrence of a countervailable subsidy, the net countervailable 
    subsidy likely to prevail if the order is revoked, and nature of the 
    subsidy are discussed below. In addition, the Committee's comments with 
    respect to each of these issues are addressed within the respective 
    sections below.
    
    Continuation or Recurrence of a Countervailable Subsidy
    
        Drawing on the guidance provided in the legislative history 
    accompanying the Uruguay Round Agreements Act (``URAA''), specifically 
    the Statement of Administrative Action (``the SAA''), H.R. Doc. No. 
    103-316, vol. 1 (1994), the House Report, H.R. Rep. No. 103-826, pt.1 
    (1994), and the Senate Report, S. Rep. No. 103-412 (1994), the 
    Department issued its Sunset Policy Bulletin providing guidance on 
    methodological and analytical issues, including the basis for 
    likelihood determinations. The Department clarified that determinations 
    of likelihood will be made on an order-wide basis (see section III.A.2 
    of the Sunset Policy Bulletin). Additionally, the Department normally 
    will determine that revocation of a countervailing duty order is likely 
    to lead to continuation or recurrence of a countervailable subsidy 
    where (a) a subsidy program continues, (b) a subsidy program has been 
    only temporarily suspended, or (c) a subsidy program has been only 
    partially terminated (see section III.A.3.a of the Sunset Policy 
    Bulletin). Exceptions to this policy are provided where a company has a 
    long record of not using a program (see section III.A.3.b of the Sunset 
    Policy Bulletin).
        In addition to considering the guidance on likelihood cited above, 
    section 751(c)(4)(B) of the Act provides that the Department shall 
    determine that revocation of the order would be likely to lead to 
    continuation or recurrence of a countervailable subsidy where a 
    respondent interested party waives its participation in the sunset 
    review. Moreover, according to the guidance provided by the SAA, at 
    881, in a review of a countervailing duty order, when the foreign 
    government has waived participation, the Department shall conclude that 
    revocation of the order would be likely to lead to continuation or 
    recurrence of a countervailable subsidy for all respondent interested 
    parties.\3\ In the instant review, the Department did not receive a 
    substantive response from the foreign government or from any other 
    respondent interested party. Pursuant to section 351.218(d)(2)(iii) of 
    the Sunset Regulations, this constitutes a waiver of participation.
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        \3\ See 19 CFR 351.218(d)(2)(iv).
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        The Committee asserted in its substantive response that Taiwanese 
    producers/exporters of cookware continue to receive countervailable 
    benefits from four programs administered by the GOT and found by the 
    Department in the original investigation to confer countervailable 
    subsidies. Although no administrative reviews have been conducted since 
    the imposition of the original countervailing duty order, the Committee 
    argued that it is not aware of any other Department determinations in 
    which these programs were found not countervailable. Therefore, the 
    Committee maintained that the Department should determine that 
    revocation of the countervailing duty order on cookware from Taiwan 
    would likely result in the continuation of a countervailable subsidy.
        We agree with the Committee that the Taiwanese programs remain in 
    place. As noted above, in our final determination, the Department 
    determined that the programs in question conferred subsidies, the net 
    amount of which was calculated to be 2.14 percent ad valorem for 
    Taiwanese exporters/producers of cookware. The Department has
    
    [[Page 48374]]
    
    conducted no administrative reviews of this outstanding countervailing 
    duty order.
        Given that the programs found to provide countervailable subsidies 
    continue to exist, the foreign government and other respondent parties 
    waived their right to participate in this review before the Department, 
    and absent argument and evidence to the contrary, the Department 
    determines that it is likely that a countervailable subsidy will 
    continue if the order is revoked.
    
    Net Countervailable Subsidy
    
        In the Sunset Policy Bulletin, the Department stated that, 
    consistent with the SAA and House Report, the Department normally will 
    select a rate from the investigation as the net countervailable subsidy 
    likely to prevail if the order is revoked because that is the only 
    calculated rate that reflects the behavior of exporters and foreign 
    governments without the discipline of an order or suspension agreement 
    in place. The Department noted that this rate may not be the most 
    appropriate rate if, for example, the rate was derived from subsidy 
    programs which were found in subsequent reviews to be terminated, if 
    there has been a program-wide change, or if the rate ignores a program 
    found to be countervailable in a subsequent administrative review. (See 
    section III.B.3 of the Sunset Policy Bulletin.) Additionally, where the 
    Department determined company-specific countervailing duty rates in the 
    original investigation, the Department normally will report to the 
    Commission company-specific rates from the original investigation; 
    where no company-specific rate was determined for a company, the 
    Department normally will provide to the Commission the country-wide or 
    ``all others'' rate. (See section III.B.2 of the Sunset Policy 
    Bulletin.)
        In their substantive response, the Committee argued that the net 
    countervailable subsidy likely to prevail if the order on cookware from 
    Taiwan is revoked is the net subsidy determined in the original 
    investigation. Specifically, the Committee argued that the rate likely 
    to prevail if the order were revoked is 2.14 percent ad valorem. The 
    Committee pointed out that, because the rate determined in the original 
    investigation is the only calculated rate which reflects the behavior 
    of exporters without the discipline of the order in place, the 
    Department's policy provides that it normally will select this rate to 
    provide to the Commission.
        As discussed in the Sunset Policy Bulletin, the Department normally 
    will report to the Commission an original subsidy rate, as adjusted, to 
    take into account terminated programs, program-wide changes, and 
    programs found to be countervailable in subsequent reviews. We agree 
    with the Committee that the programs found to provide countervailable 
    subsidies continue to exist. Absent evidence or argument that there 
    have been any changes to the programs found to be countervailable in 
    the original investigation that would affect the net countervailable 
    subsidy, consistent with the Sunset Policy Bulletin, the Department 
    determines that the net countervailable subsidy likely to prevail if 
    the order were revoked is 2.14 percent.
    
    Nature of the Subsidy
    
        In the Sunset Policy Bulletin, the Department stated that, 
    consistent with section 752(a)(6) of the Act, the Department will 
    provide information to the Commission concerning the nature of the 
    subsidy and whether it is a subsidy described in Article 3 or Article 
    6.1 of the Subsidies Agreement. The Committee did not specifically 
    address this issue in their substantive response.
        Because, in the original investigation, we found receipt of 
    benefits under each of the four programs to be contingent upon exports, 
    these programs fall within the definition of an export subsidy under 
    Article 3.1(a) of the Subsidies Agreement.
    
    Final Results of Review
    
        As a result of this review, the Department finds that revocation of 
    the countervailing duty order would be likely to lead to continuation 
    or recurrence of a countervailable subsidy. The net countervailable 
    subsidy likely to prevail if the order were revoked is 2.14 percent ad 
    valorem.
        This notice serves as the only 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 351.305 of the Department's regulations. 
    Timely 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 five-year (``sunset'') review and notice are in accordance 
    with sections 751(c), 752, and 777(i)(1) of the Act.
    
        Dated: August 30, 1999.
    Robert S. LaRussa,
    Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
    [FR Doc. 99-23034 Filed 9-2-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
9/3/1999
Published:
09/03/1999
Department:
International Trade Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of Final Results of Expedited Sunset Review: Top-of-the- Stove Stainless Steel Cookware from Taiwan.
Document Number:
99-23034
Dates:
September 3, 1999.
Pages:
48372-48374 (3 pages)
PDF File:
99-23034.pdf