Bratsk Aluminium Smelter v. United States , 444 F.3d 1369 ( 2006 )


Menu:
  • Error: Bad annotation destination
    Error: Bad annotation destination
    United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    05-1213
    BRATSK ALUMINIUM SMELTER, RUAL TRADE LIMITED,
    and GENERAL ELECTRIC SILICONES LLC,
    Plaintiffs,
    and
    SUAL HOLDING and ZAO KREMNY,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    UNITED STATES,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    GLOBE METALLURGICAL INC. and SIMCALA, INC.,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Frederick P. Waite, Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP, of Washington, DC,
    argued for plaintiffs-appellants. With him on the brief was Kimberly R. Young.
    June B. Brown, Attorney, Office of General Counsel, United States International
    Trade Commission, of Washington, DC, argued for defendant-appellee United States.
    On the brief were James M. Lyons, General Counsel, Andrea C. Casson, Acting
    Assistant General Counsel, and Irene H. Chen, Attorney.
    William D. Kramer, DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary US LLP, of Washington, DC,
    argued for defendants-appellees Globe Metallurgical Inc. and Simcala, Inc. With him on
    the brief was Clifford E. Stevens, Jr. Of counsel was Martin Schaefermeier.
    Appealed from: United States Court of International Trade
    Senior Judge Nicholas Tsoucalas
    United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    05-1213
    BRATSK ALUMINIUM SMELTER, RUAL TRADE LIMITED,
    and GENERAL ELECTRIC SILICONES LLC,
    Plaintiffs,
    and
    SUAL HOLDING and ZAO KREMNY,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    UNITED STATES,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    GLOBE METALLURGICAL INC. and SIMCALA, INC.,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ___________________________
    DECIDED: April 10, 2006
    ___________________________
    Before GAJARSA, Circuit Judge, ARCHER, Senior Circuit Judge, and DYK, Circuit
    Judge.
    Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge DYK. Dissenting opinion filed by Senior
    Circuit Judge ARCHER.
    DYK, Circuit Judge.
    SUAL Holding and ZAO Kremny (collectively “appellants”) appeal from the
    judgment of the United States Court of International Trade affirming the International
    Trade Commission’s (“Commission”) determination that domestic industry was
    materially injured by reason of silicon metal imports from Russia that were sold at less
    than fair market value (“LTFV”). We vacate the Court of International Trade’s decision
    and remand for further proceedings.
    BACKGROUND
    In antidumping proceedings, the Commission is charged with determining
    whether an industry in the United States has suffered, or is threatened with, material
    injury by reason of imports.          19 U.S.C. § 1673d(b) (2000).        Material injury
    determinations are particularly difficult where the imports sold at LTFV compete with
    identical imports not sold at LTFV.
    The product involved here is silicon metal. Silicon metal is a commodity product,
    meaning that it is generally interchangeable regardless of its source. Therefore, price is
    the primary consideration for purchasers of silicon metal. The market for silicon metal
    consists of three segments: chemical, primary aluminum, and secondary aluminum.
    During the pertinent time period there were ten countries, other than the United States,
    which supplied silicon metal to the U.S. market: Argentina, Brazil, Canada, China,
    Korea, Norway, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, and Spain.
    On March 7, 2002, Globe Metallurgical Inc., SIMCALA Inc., and several union
    groups filed an antidumping petition with the Commission and with the United States
    Department of Commerce (“Commerce”), alleging that Russian imports of silicon metal
    at LTFV had materially injured the domestic industry.          On February 11, 2003,
    Commerce rendered its final determination that the subject imports were, or were likely
    05-1213                                  2
    to be, sold at LTFV. On March 24, 2003, the Commission determined that the domestic
    industry was materially injured by reason of the subject imports.
    The Commission relied on market data over a three-year period, 1999-2001, as
    well as data for specific periods between January-September 2001 and 2002, and, as
    required by the statute, considered subject import volume, the effect of subject imports
    on domestic prices, and the impact of subject imports on domestic producers.              
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (7)(B)(i), (C) (2000). First, the Commission found that subject import
    volume was significant and that subject import volume increased from 1999 to 2001,
    while domestic producers lost market share. The Commission also noted, however,
    that the domestic industry was able to satisfy only a portion of U.S. silicon metal
    demand.
    The Commission next considered what effect subject imports had on domestic
    prices. The Commission noted that “price is very important in purchasing decisions,
    given the commodity-like nature of the subject product.” Using purchaser price data,
    the Commission found that during the period of investigation, subject imports almost
    always undersold the domestic product in all three market segments. In response to the
    argument that all imports, not just subject imports, undersold the domestic product, the
    Commission stated that “price data for nonsubject imports shows that imports from
    Russia have been priced at lower levels than nonsubject imports,” and concluded that
    “[i]n light of subject imports’ increasing volumes and their significant underselling of, and
    high substitutability with, both domestic and nonsubject silicon metal, we find significant
    price depression by the subject imports.” The Commission further noted:
    We recognize that nonsubject imports may have had an independent price
    depressive effect on domestic silicon metal prices. However, given the
    05-1213                                   3
    significant underselling by subject imports, subject import volume surges
    during the POI, and the high degree of substitutability between subject
    imports and the domestic product, we find that subject imports themselves
    have significantly depressed domestic silicon metal prices in all three
    customer segments . . . .
    Finally, the Commission turned to the impact of subject imports on domestic
    producers and concluded that, given the significant volume and price effects of the
    subject imports, subject imports had a significant adverse effect on the domestic
    industry. The Commission considered the domestic industry’s drop in market share, as
    well as the fact that certain silicon metal furnaces had been closed or converted for
    other uses. The Commission “acknowledge[d] that domestic industry lost market share
    to nonsubject imports as well,” but concluded that “[r]egardless of the impact of
    nonsubject imports on the domestic industry, we find, in this investigation, that the
    surges in subject import volume at prices that undersold and depressed domestic silicon
    metal prices to a significant degree during the POI had a material adverse impact on the
    domestic industry.”
    Appellants1 argued that our decision in Gerald Metals, Inc. v. United States, 
    132 F.3d 716
     (Fed. Cir. 1997) required a specific determination as to whether the non-
    subject imports would simply replace the subject imports, with the same impact on
    domestic products, if the subject imports were excluded from the market.                The
    Commission made no such determination and dismissed our decision in Gerald Metals
    as being factually distinguishable.
    1
    Plaintiffs below, Bratsk Aluminium Smelter and RUAL Trade Limited, filed a
    voluntary notice of dismissal on December 6, 2004, and are thus not parties to this
    appeal. However, the remaining plaintiffs, SUAL Holding and ZAO Kremny, continued
    in the litigation and are appellants in this case.
    05-1213                                    4
    Appellants challenged several aspects of the Commission’s determination in the
    Court of International Trade, including whether the Russian imports actually caused
    injury to the domestic industry. The court made no ruling with respect to the causation
    issue but remanded the case to the Commission on an unrelated issue. The court
    noted that it would “consider the remaining issues raised by Plaintiffs upon review of the
    remand determination.” Bratsk Aluminum Smelter v. United States, No. 03-00200, 
    2004 WL 1385848
    , at *11 (Ct. Int’l Trade June 22, 2004). On remand, the Commission
    incorporated its initial decision by reference and then clarified some of its findings. On
    December 3, 2004, the Court of International Trade affirmed the Commission’s remand
    determination “in its entirety” and dismissed the case, stating that “all other issues have
    been decided . . . .”     SUAL Holding and ZAO Kremny timely appealed. We have
    jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1295
    (a)(5).
    DISCUSSION
    The sole point of contention in this appeal is whether the Commission
    established that the injury to the domestic industry was “by reason of” the subject
    imports.2
    I
    The antidumping statute states that the “Commission shall make a final
    determination of whether . . . an industry in the United States . . . is materially injured . .
    2
    “We apply anew the standard of review applied by the Court of International
    Trade in its review of the administrative record. We therefore uphold the Commission’s
    determination unless it was arbitrary and capricious or unsupported by substantial
    evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” Timken U.S. Corp. v.
    United States, 
    421 F.3d 1350
    , 1354 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (internal citation and quotation
    marks omitted); 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i) (2000).
    05-1213                                    5
    . . . by reason of imports . . . .”     19 U.S.C. § 1673d(b) (2000).     In making this
    determination, the Commission must consider:
    (I) the volume of imports of the subject merchandise,
    (II) the effect of imports of that merchandise on prices in the United
    States for domestic like products, and
    (III) the impact of imports of such merchandise on domestic producers of
    domestic like products, but only in the context of production operations
    within the United States . . . .
    
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (7)(B)(i) (2000). “An affirmative injury determination requires both (1)
    present material injury and (2) a finding that the material injury is ‘by reason of’ the
    subject imports.” Gerald Metals, Inc., 132 F.3d at 719 (emphasis added). We have
    previously explained that the “by reason of” requirement “mandates a showing of
    causal—not merely temporal—connection between the LTFV goods and the material
    injury.” Id. at 720. We have not required the Commission to employ any particular
    methodology for determining whether this causation element has been met,3 and the
    “Commission need not isolate the injury caused by other factors from injury caused by
    unfair imports . . . .” Taiwan Semiconductor Industry v. Int’l Trade Comm’n, 
    266 F.3d 1339
    , 1345 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (quoting legislative history of the Uruguay Round
    Agreements Act); see also Nippon Steel Corp. v. Int’l Trade Comm’n, 
    345 F.3d 1379
    ,
    1381 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (“‘[D]umping’ need not be the sole or principal cause of injury.”).
    However, we have made clear that causation is not shown if the subject imports
    contributed only “minimally or tangentially to the material harm.” Gerald Metals, 132
    3
    In United States Steel Group v. United States, 
    96 F.3d 1352
     (Fed. Cir. 1996),
    we noted that the Commission uses different methodologies in determining whether the
    domestic injury was “by reason of” the LTFV imports. 
    Id. at 1361-62
    . We then found
    that the antidumping statute “on its face compels no [ ] uniform methodology, and we
    are not persuaded that we should create one, even were we so empowered.” 
    Id. at 1362
    .
    05-1213                                  6
    F.3d at 722; see also Nippon Steel Corp., 
    345 F.3d at 1381
    ; U.S. Steel Group v. United
    States, 
    96 F.3d 1352
    , 1361-62 (Fed. Cir. 1996).
    The Commission, like other federal agencies, “must examine the relevant data
    and articulate a satisfactory explanation for its action . . . . Normally, an agency rule
    would be arbitrary and capricious if the agency . . . entirely fail[s] to consider an
    important aspect of the problem.” Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. State Farm Mut. Auto.
    Ins. Co., 
    463 U.S. 29
    , 43 (1983). Where commodity products are at issue and fairly
    traded, price competitive, non-subject imports are in the market, the Commission must
    explain why the elimination of subject imports would benefit the domestic industry
    instead of resulting in the non-subject imports’ replacement of the subject imports’
    market share without any beneficial impact on domestic producers.
    In Gerald Metals, the Commission determined that Ukranian imports of pure
    magnesium at LTFV injured the domestic industry. The Commission’s determination
    did not discuss whether non-subject imports, namely fairly-traded Russian imports,
    would have replaced all or a greater part of the subject imports.      Three dissenting
    commissioners found that the presence of the non-subject imports undermined the
    causation determination. Magnesium from China, Russia, and Ukraine, U.S. Int’l Trade
    Comm’n Pub. 2885, Inv. Nos. 731-TA-696-698 at 29 (Chairman Watson, dissenting),
    35-36 (Vice Chairman Nuzum, dissenting), and 48 (Comm’r Crawford, dissenting) (May
    1995) (final). The dissenters noted that non-subject imports were perfect substitutes for
    the Ukranian subject imports and frequently undersold the domestic product just as the
    Ukranian imports had.     Magnesium from China, Russia, and Ukraine at 35 (Vice
    05-1213                                 7
    Chairman Nuzum, dissenting), 45 (Comm’r Crawford, dissenting); see also Gerald
    Metals, 132 F.3d at 718-19.
    The Court of International Trade, while acknowledging that the Commission did
    not discuss the issue of substitutability, affirmed the Commission’s finding of material
    injury. Gerald Metals, Inc. v. United States, 
    937 F. Supp. 930
    , 935 n.22, 936 (Ct. Int’l
    Trade 1996).    On appeal, we vacated the court’s decision and explained that the
    Commission must “‘take[ ] into account contradictory evidence or evidence from which
    conflicting inferences could be drawn.’” 132 F.3d at 720 (quoting Universal Camera
    Corp. v. NLRB, 
    340 U.S. 474
    , 487 (1951)). Given that the fairly-traded non-subject
    imports were substitutable for the Ukranian subject imports and undersold the domestic
    product just as the subject imports had, we held that the Commission must explain, in
    its analysis of the harm caused by the subject imports, why domestic consumers would
    not have purchased the fairly traded non-subject imports. See id. at 718, 720, 721-23.4
    This court applied the reasoning of Gerald Metals in Taiwan Semiconductor.
    There, the Commission—after two remands from the Court of International Trade on the
    issue of causation—determined that Taiwanese imports of static random access
    memory chips (“SRAMs”) at LTFV had not injured the domestic industry. 
    266 F.3d at 1342
    . The Commission concluded that “the volume of subject imports, and increase in
    volume [of subject imports], are not sufficient to demonstrate that the subject imports
    themselves made a material contribution to any injury experienced by the domestic
    4
    As we explained in Taiwan Semiconductor Industry v. International Trade
    Commission, 
    266 F.3d 1339
     (Fed. Cir. 2001), “Gerald Metals applied the antidumping
    law as it existed prior to amendment effective on January 1, 1995, by the Uruguay
    Round Agreements Act (URAA) . . . . The URAA did not deviate from the pre-existing
    causation standard enunciated in Gerald Metals.” 
    Id. at 1345
    .
    05-1213                                 8
    industry.” 
    Id. at 1346
     (quoting the Commission’s Redetermination). In particular, the
    Commission found that non-subject Korean imports of SRAMs were, like the subject
    imports, priced lower than the domestic product, and were at times priced lower than
    the subject imports as well. 
    Id. at 1347
    . We affirmed the Commission’s determination,
    noting that “substantial evidence supports the fact that the United States market share
    was impacted largely by non-subject imports,” and that “[i]n Gerald Metals, as in this
    case, the record did not show that the subject imports caused the material injury in light
    of the dominant presence of non-subject imports in the marketplace.” 
    Id. at 1345-46, 1347
    .
    Thus under Gerald Metals, the increase in volume of subject imports priced
    below domestic products and the decline in the domestic market share are not in and of
    themselves sufficient to establish causation. Gerald Metals did not, of course, establish
    a per se rule barring a finding of causation where the product is a commodity product
    and there are fairly traded imports priced below the domestic product. However, under
    Gerald Metals, the Commission is required to make a specific causation determination
    and in that connection to directly address whether non-subject imports would have
    replaced the subject imports without any beneficial effect on domestic producers.
    II
    The antidumping investigation here revealed the same conditions that triggered
    the additional causation inquiry in Gerald Metals and Taiwan Semiconductor, as the
    Commission found silicon metal generally interchangeable regardless of where it is
    produced. Non-subject imports were present in the U.S. market during the period of
    investigation and were a significant factor in the U.S. market. As a percentage of total
    05-1213                                 9
    imports (by quantity), non-subject imports accounted for approximately 79.6% in 1999,
    82.6% in 2000, and 73.0% in 2001.
    Further, while the subject imports generally undersold the domestic product,
    there was evidence that non-subject imports from Brazil, Canada, Saudi Arabia, and
    South Africa generally undersold the domestic product during the period of
    investigation. These circumstances suggest that the elimination of the subject imports
    from the domestic market might simply have increased the market share of the non-
    subject imports.    Gerald Metals thus requires the Commission to explain why—
    notwithstanding the presence and significance of the non-subject imports—it concluded
    that the subject imports caused material injury to the domestic industry. While there
    may be support for the Commission’s ultimate determination of material injury in the
    record here, we find that the Commission did not sufficiently explain its decision in this
    regard.
    The failure of the agency to explain its causation analysis in accordance with
    Gerald Metals is particularly troubling in this case because of the agency’s claim that it
    is not obligated to follow this court’s precedent. The Commission sought to dismiss
    Gerald Metals as having no precedential value in other anti-dumping investigations,
    stating that “the prior Commission investigations cited by respondents are factually
    distinguishable from the instant investigation.” On appeal, the Commission continues to
    dismiss our precedent by attempting to limit Gerald Metals to its “unique facts” and
    explaining that “the instant investigation is not factually analogous either to Gerald
    Metals or Taiwan Semiconductor.”       Commission’s Br. at 33, 35.      In particular, the
    Commission stated that Gerald Metals and Taiwan Semiconductor are distinguishable
    05-1213                                 10
    because in both of those cases, non-subject import volume increased while the subject
    import volume decreased or remained the same. The Commission is obligated to follow
    the holdings of our cases, not to limit those decisions to their particular facts. The
    holding of Gerald Metals is not limited to situations in which non-subject imports
    increased during the period of review. The obligation under Gerald Metals is triggered
    whenever the antidumping investigation is centered on a commodity product, and price
    competitive non-subject imports are a significant factor in the market.
    In its decision, the Commission also attempted to support the link between
    subject imports and the domestic injury by pointing out that after subject imports were
    withdrawn from the market in 2002 following the Department of Commerce’s preliminary
    determination, silicon spot prices increased and prices for eleven domestic contracts
    increased during the fourth quarter of 2002. That spot prices may have increased after
    the Russian imports exited the market may be pertinent to the causation question, but
    that fact does not excuse the Commission’s failure to address directly the causation
    issue in detail as required by Gerald Metals. The Commission did not explain how
    much the spot prices increased, the significance of that increase, or the significance of
    the eleven contracts for the domestic market.
    Finally on appeal, among other things, the Commission argues that the appellant
    “has not demonstrated“ that “nonsubject imports were well positioned to completely fill
    any void left by the withdrawal of subject imports from the market.” Gov’t Br. at 35-36.
    Presumably, this is an argument that non-subject imports could not replace subject
    imports because producers of non-subject imports lacked the capacity to supply the
    necessary volume to the U.S. market. Such a finding would certainly be relevant to the
    05-1213                                 11
    causation analysis under Gerald Metals. However, it is the Commission’s burden, not
    the subject importer’s, to demonstrate that the subject imports themselves caused the
    domestic injury. See Gerald Metals, 132 F.3d at 722. In any event, the Commission’s
    decision made no finding on the capacity issue.
    III
    In short, the Commission’s summary finding of material injury is insufficiently
    detailed to comply with the requirements of Gerald Metals. We therefore vacate and
    remand the Court of International Trade’s decision so that it may remand the case back
    to the Commission to specifically address whether the non-subject imports would have
    replaced subject imports during the period of investigation.
    In ordering reconsideration by the Commission, we do not suggest that the mere
    existence of fairly traded commodity imports at competitive prices precludes the
    Commission from finding material injury. For example, it may well be that non-subject
    importers lack capacity to replace the subject imports or that the price of the non-subject
    imports is sufficiently above the subject imports such that the elimination of the subject
    imports would have benefited the domestic industry. The point is that the Commission
    has to explain, in a meaningful way, why the non-subject imports would not replace the
    subject imports and continue to cause injury to the domestic industry.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the decision below is vacated and remanded for
    further proceedings.
    VACATED and REMANDED
    05-1213                                 12
    COSTS
    No costs.
    05-1213          13
    United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    05-1213
    BRATSK ALUMINIUM SMELTER, RUAL TRADE LIMITED,
    and GENERAL ELECTRIC SILICONES LLC,
    Plaintiffs,
    and
    SUAL HOLDING and ZAO KREMNY,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    UNITED STATES,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    GLOBE METALLURGICAL INC. and SIMCALA, INC.,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ARCHER, Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    The majority states that Gerald Metals, 
    132 F.3d 716
     (Fed. Cir. 1997), “requires
    the Commission to explain why—notwithstanding the presence and significance of the
    non-subject imports—it concluded that the subject imports caused material injury to the
    domestic industry.” Maj. op. at 10. While acknowledging that there may be support for
    the Commission’s ultimate determination of material injury in the record here, the
    majority “find[s] that the Commission did not sufficiently explain its decision in this
    regard.” 
    Id.
     I disagree.
    In my view, the Commission adequately considered the effect of both the subject
    imports and the interchangeable nonsubject imports on the domestic industry in its
    determination and found substantial evidence in the record to support its material injury
    determination. I would, therefore, affirm the Court of International Trade’s judgment
    sustaining the Commission.
    The majority appears to take no issue with the Commission’s underlying analysis
    of whether the domestic industry was in fact harmed. The Commission performed the
    proper       analysis   and   considered   the       statutorily   enumerated   factors.   See
    
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (7)(B)(i) (2000).1 It concluded that the volume and increase in volume
    of subject imports, both in absolute terms and relative to apparent domestic
    consumption and production in the United States, supported a finding of material injury
    determination. The Commission found that 1) the quantity of subject imports increased
    overall by 35.8% from 1999 to 2001 and by 38.6% from 2000-2001 (after showing a
    slight decrease from 1999 to 2000); 2) “[t]he continued increase in subject import
    volume by 57.6 percent between the interim periods resulted in Russia being the largest
    single source of silicon metal imports in interim 2002”; and 3) from 1999 to 2001 and
    from 2000-2001 subject imports outpaced all other imports in gaining U.S. market
    share.
    1
    Section 1677(7)(B)(i) of Title 19 of the United States Code states that in
    making a material injury determination the Commission must consider the following
    factors:
    (I) the volume of imports of the subject merchandise,
    (II) the effect of imports of that merchandise on prices in the United States
    for domestic and like products, and
    (III) the impact of imports of such merchandise on domestic producers of
    domestic like products, but only in the context of production operations
    within the United States. . . .
    
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (7)(B)(i).
    05-1213                                          2
    Given that “price is a key factor in purchasing decisions [to buy silicon metal]”,
    the Commission also concluded that underselling by subject imports supported a
    material injury determination, “find[ing] that prices have been depressed to a significant
    degree by the subject imports.”        Although nonsubject goods have at times also
    undersold the domestic product, the Commission found that purchaser price data
    “show[s] that imports from Russia have been priced at lower levels than nonsubject
    imports.” Specifically, the Commission noted that imports from Russia undersold South
    African chemical grade product in all eleven purchaser price comparisons and
    undersold Brazilian chemical grade product in ten of eleven purchaser price
    comparisons.     In its price analysis, the Commission “recognize[d] that nonsubject
    imports may have had an independent price depressive effect on domestic silicon metal
    prices.” Ultimately, however, the Commission concluded that
    given the significant underselling by subject imports, subject import
    volume surges during the [period of interest], and the high degree of
    substitutability between subject imports and the domestic product, . . . the
    subject imports themselves have significantly depressed domestic silicon
    metal prices in all three customer segments (i.e., chemical, primary and
    secondary aluminum customers).
    As part of its material injury determination, the Commission specifically
    addressed the respondents’ argument “that there was no causal nexus between subject
    imports and the injury suffered by the domestic industry because of the presence of
    interchangeable and readily available nonsubject imports.” The Commission found that
    “[s]ubject imports registered a 4.8 percentage point market share gain while nonsubject
    imports lost 2.3 percentage points in market share from 2000 to 2001, the same year
    that the domestic industry suffered an operating loss for the first time during the [period
    of interest] and idled, closed, or converted many of its silicon metal production facilities.”
    05-1213                                       3
    Specifically, the Commission explained that Russian imports’ share of total imports
    increased from 7.3% in the first quarter of 2001 to 26.2%, 31.4%, and 40.1%,
    respectively, in the remaining three quarters of 2001. Similarly, Russian imports’ share
    of total imports was 31.5% in first quarter 2002 and 36.9% in second quarter 2002,
    before declining to 11.6% in third quarter 2002, following the Commission’s and the
    Department of Commerce’s preliminary determinations in this investigation.           The
    Commission also observed that by quantity, nonsubject import volume increased only
    by 25.8% from interim 2001 to interim 2002, whereas subject import volume increased
    by 57.6% during the same period.
    In view of this data, the Commission concluded that “the fact that nonsubject
    imports may have contributed to the domestic industry’s continued deterioration toward
    the end of the period, along with subject imports, does not negate our finding that
    subject imports themselves had a material adverse impact on the domestic industry.”
    This is precisely the causation analysis necessary in view of Gerald Metals. Neither the
    statute nor Gerald Metals imposes the rigidity in findings or analysis that the majority
    seems to require.    Indeed, the Gerald Metals opinion acknowledges the “unique
    circumstances” in that case. Gerald Metals, 132 F.3d at 722.
    Contrary to the majority’s assertion, the Commission here did not “claim that it is
    not obligated to follow this court’s precedent.” Maj. op. at 10. Rather, the Commission
    merely noted that Commission investigations are sui generis and, because of this, its
    prior investigations may not always form the basis for clear precedent that transcends
    different fact patterns. When explaining the factual differences between Gerald Metals
    05-1213                                    4
    (and other similar cases2) and the present case, the Commission found significant that
    in Gerald Metals subject import volume had decreased, both in absolute terms and
    relative to domestic consumption, during the last full year of the period of interest.
    These volume trends, explained the Commission, indicated that the significance of
    LTFV imports diminished during the period of interest, thus suggesting that in Gerald
    Metals any injury to domestic injury was not by reason of the subject imports. Because
    of the factual differences between Gerald Metals and the present case, the Commission
    determined that “respondents’ arguments that Gerald Metals precludes an affirmative
    determination in this investigation [were] unpersuasive.”
    As summarized above, the Commission performed a proper material injury
    analysis, including explaining why the subject imports caused material injury to the
    domestic industry despite the existence of interchangeable nonsubject imports. In fact,
    the Commission expressly acknowledged its obligation to consider the effect of
    nonsubject imports in its investigation, citing Gerald Metals and Taiwan Semiconductor:
    We have considered the evidence on nonsubject imports in this
    investigation and find, notwithstanding the presence of nonsubject
    imports, that subject imports themselves caused material injury to the
    domestic industry and did not simply contribute to the injury in a
    “tangential or minimal way.” Gerald Metals, 132 F.3d at 722; Taiwan
    2
    For example, in discussing Taiwan Semiconductor Industry Assoc. v.
    United States, 
    266 F.3d 1339
     (Fed. Cir. 2001), the Commission noted that this court
    had affirmed the Commission’s redetermination. There the Commission found that,
    throughout the period of investigation, Taiwanese Static Random Access Memory
    Semiconductor (“SRAMS”) market share, both by value and by quantity, had remained
    relatively flat. The domestic industry’s market share, by quantity, declined by about
    15% while the market share of nonsubject imports increased by almost that amount.
    During the years in which the domestic industry suffered its greatest injury, imports from
    Taiwan frequently oversold U.S. product. Thus, the Commission was simply noting the
    clear difference between the fact pattern present in Taiwan Semiconductor and the one
    before it.
    05-1213                                     5
    Semiconductor Industry Assoc. v. United States, 
    266 F.3d 1339
    , 1344
    (Fed. Cir. 2001).
    I fail to see what more the Commission should be required to do to explain its
    decision.
    05-1213                                  6