Downhole Pipe & Equipment LP v. United States , 887 F. Supp. 2d 1311 ( 2012 )


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  •                          Slip Op. 12-141
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    Before: Nicholas Tsoucalas, Senior Judge
    DOWNHOLE PIPE & EQUIPMENT LP and    :
    DP-MASTER MANUFACTURING CO., LTD.   :
    :
    Plaintiffs,               :
    :
    v.                             :      Court No.: 11-00081
    :
    UNITED STATES,                      :
    :
    Defendant,                :
    :
    and                       :
    :
    VAM DRILLING USA, TEXAS STEEL       :
    CONVERSIONS, INC., ROTARY           :
    DRILLING TOOLS, TMK IPSCO, and      :
    U.S. STEEL CORP.,                   :
    :
    Defendant-Intervenors.    :
    :
    OPINION and ORDER
    Held: Plaintiffs’ Motion for Judgment on the Agency Record is
    granted in part because the final determination issued by the
    Department of Commerce was not supported by substantial evidence
    and is not in accord with the law as to drill pipe green tube and
    labor wage rate surrogate values, but is denied in all other
    respects.
    Dated: November 20, 2012
    Lehnardt & Lehnardt, LLC, (Mark B. Lehnardt); Chen Law Group,
    LLC, (Irene H. Chen) for Downhole Pipe & Equipment, LP and DP-
    Master Manufacturing Co., Ltd., Plaintiffs.
    Stuart F. Delery, Acting Assistant Attorney General; Jeanne E.
    Davidson, Director, Claudia Burke, Assistant Director, Commercial
    Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of
    Justice (Courtney S. McNamara); Office of Chief Counsel for Import
    Administration, United States Department of Commerce, Nathaniel J.
    Halvorson, Of Counsel, for the United States, Defendant.
    Schagrin Associates, (Roger B. Schagrin, John W. Bohn, and
    Michael J. Brown) for VAM Drilling USA, Texas Steel Conversions,
    Court No. 11-00081                                                 Page 2
    Inc., Rotary Drilling Tools, TMK IPSCO; Skadden Arps Slate Meagher
    & Flom, LLP, (Jeffrey D. Gerrish, Luke A. Meisner, and Robert E.
    Lighthizer) for United States Steel Corp., Defendant-Intervenors.
    TSOUCALAS, Senior Judge: Plaintiffs Downhole Pipe & Equipment,
    LP, and DP-Master Manufacturing Co., Ltd. (“Downhole” and “DP-
    Master,” respectively, and “DP,” collectively) move pursuant to
    USCIT Rule 56.2 for judgment upon the agency record challenging the
    determination of the International Trade Administration of the
    United States Department of Commerce (“Commerce”) in Drill Pipe
    From the People’s Republic of China (“PRC”), 
    76 Fed. Reg. 1,966
    (Jan. 11, 2011) (“Final Determination”).      VAM Drilling USA, Inc.,
    Rotary Drilling Tools, Texas Steel Conversions Services, Inc.,
    United States Steel Corp., (collectively, “defendant-intervenors”),
    and Commerce oppose DP’s motion.
    BACKGROUND
    On December 30, 2009, VAM Drilling USA, Inc., TMK IPSCO, Texas
    Conversion Services, Inc., Rotary Drill Tools, and United Steel,
    Paper   and   Forestry,   Rubber,    Manufacturing,     Energy,    Allied
    Industrial and Service Works International Union, AFL-CIO, CLC
    (collectively,   “petitioners”      or   “domestic    industry”)   filed
    petitions with Commerce seeking the imposition of antidumping and
    countervailing duties on drill pipe from the PRC.           Letter from
    Roger B. Schagrin to the Secretary of Commerce, Re: Petitions for
    the Imposition of Antidumping and Countervailing Duties: Drill Pipe
    Court No. 11-00081                                           Page 3
    From the PRC, Public Rec. 1 at 1–4.1    The parties do not dispute
    that drill pipe is a specialized high-strength iron alloy tube
    manufactured in three phases.      “First, seamless tubes — called
    ‘green tubes’ — are produced from raw steel.”   Pls.’ Am. Mem. Supp.
    Mot. J. Agency R. (“Pls.’ Br.”) at 3–4.     Second, a manufacturer
    uses complex and expensive processes to “upset” and heat treat
    green tube so as to thicken the ends and increase the yield
    strength to the desired American Petroleum Institute (“API”) grade.
    
    Id.
     at 3–6.   Raw green tube can be processed into “oil country
    tubular goods” (“OCTG”) — tubular products other than drill pipe,
    such as casing and finished tubing — as well, but the parties
    dispute the interchangeability of drill pipe green tube and OCTG
    green tube. See Pls.’ Br. at 32–33; Def.’s Mem. Opp’n Pls.’ Br.
    (“Def.’s Br.”) at 11–15.   Lastly, a manufacturer friction-welds a
    specialized “tool joint” to the ends of the heat-treated and upset
    tube to complete the drill pipe.    
    Id. at 3
    , 7–8.   A manufacturer
    may also apply a protective coating or other post-production
    enhancements to the drill pipe.    See Pls.’ Br. at 30–31, 35–36.
    DP-Master purchases raw green tubes that it upsets and heat-
    treats to desired API specifications. DP-Master manufactures some,
    but not all, of its tool joints in-house and friction-welds them to
    1
    Hereinafter all documents in the public record will be
    designated “PR” and all documents in the confidential record
    designated “CR” without further specification except where
    relevant.
    Court No. 11-00081                                                       Page 4
    the   upset   and   heat-treated    green    tubes.     DP-Master      uses   an
    unaffiliated third party subcontractor — referred to in these
    proceedings as a “toller” — to apply a protective phosphate coating
    to its completed drill pipes.          DP-Master sells finished drill pipe
    and other goods directly to companies in the U.S.            PR 62 at A-5 to
    A-6, A-26 to A-27, Ex. A-19; PR 107 at D-5 to D-6.
    Domestic industry proposed a broad scope for the antidumping
    and countervailing duty investigations: “[D]rill pipe . . . whether
    or not conforming to [API] or non-API specifications, whether
    finished (with or without tool joints attached) or unfinished
    (including    green   tubes),    and    without    regard   to   the   specific
    chemistry of the steel . . . [and excluding] tool joints not
    attached to drill pipe.”        PR 1 at 7.   In its comments from January
    15, 2010 and its comments from January 19, 2010, DP-Master argued
    that the proposed scope overlapped with an existing investigation
    into OCTG from China.      PR 14 at 2–5; PR 19 at 1–4.           Commerce and
    domestic industry then agreed on revised scope language, which
    among other changes included a new exception: “The scope does not
    include . . . unfinished tubes for casing or tubing covered by any
    other antidumping or countervailing duty order.”                 PR 20 at 2.
    Commerce initiated the investigation based on industry support
    calculated using the revised scope.               Drill Pipe from the PRC:
    Initiation of Antidumping Duty Investigation, 
    75 Fed. Reg. 4,531
    (Jan. 28, 2010) (“Initiation”).
    Court No. 11-00081                                                    Page 5
    During the investigation, Commerce directed parties to report
    factor of production data using “actual quantities consumed to
    produce the merchandise under investigation.”              PR 53 at D-2.    In
    the event that a party could not provide such information, it was
    to “provide a detailed explanation of all efforts undertaken to
    report the actual quantity of each [factor of production] consumed
    to produce the merchandise.” 
    Id.
     DP-Master notified Commerce that
    it   was     having   difficulty     obtaining   the   requested   factor   of
    production information from its phosphate toller. PR 107 at D-5 to
    D-6; PR 115 at 6.           Nevertheless, once it did report what limited
    factor of production data it could obtain from its toller, DP-
    Master did not reveal that it had actually provided data based on
    purchased quantities instead of actual quantities consumed.            Drill
    Pipe from the PRC: Issues and Decision Memorandum for the Final
    Determination (Jan. 3, 2011), PR 258 at 45 (“I&D Memorandum”).
    In Drill Pipe from the PRC: Preliminary Determination of Sales
    at Less than Fair Value and Affirmative Determination of Critical
    Circumstances, and Postponement of Final Determination, 
    75 Fed. Reg. 51,004
       (Aug.    18,   2010)   (“Preliminary   Determination”),2
    2
    Commerce   published   corrections  to   the   Preliminary
    Determination to address a ministerial error concerning Baoshan
    Iron and Steel Co., a respondent below not participating in the
    present action. Drill Pipe from the PRC: Notice of Correction to
    the Preliminary Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value and
    Affirmative   Determination   of   Critical   Circumstances,   and
    Postponement of Final Determination, 
    75 Fed. Reg. 51,014
     (Aug. 18,
    2010).
    Court No. 11-00081                                                 Page 6
    Commerce found that DP-Master was selling drill pipe in the U.S. at
    less than fair value.       Commerce selected India as the primary
    surrogate country, and used Indian data to calculate surrogate
    values for two key drill pipe inputs relevant to this case.       First,
    Commerce calculated a surrogate value for green tube by averaging
    listings for prices and offers for J/K-55 grade tube, a finished
    product similar to green tube, from the January and March 2009
    issues of “Metal Bulletin Research” (“MBR”).     PR 186 at 7.    Second,
    Commerce established a surrogate value for the tool joints that DP-
    Master purchased using average unit values of imports under Indian
    Harmonized Tariff Schedule (“IHTS”) category 8431.43.90.3           
    Id.
    Commerce    maintained    the   Initiation   scope   over     DP-Master’s
    objections, but, given “concerns regarding the imprecision of the
    definition of ‘green tubes suitable for drill pipe,’” Commerce
    declared that it would remove green tube from the scope unless a
    more definite physical distinction between drill pipe green tube
    and OCTG green tube emerged in future submissions.          PR 187 at 8.
    In the Preliminary Determination, Commerce also found that DP-
    Master was “unable to obtain” certain data from its phosphate
    toller.    
    Id. at 28
    .    To fill gaps in the data, DP-Master offered
    “estimated [factors of production] based on [its] knowledge of the
    3
    Commerce calculated average unit values from IHTS categories
    using the Global Trade Atlas, which is published by Global Trade
    Information Services, Inc.     Global Trade Information Services
    compiles information it receives directly from the Indian Ministry
    of Commerce. PR 186 at 2.
    Court No. 11-00081                                               Page 7
    production process,” which Commerce found to be “a reasonable proxy
    to account for the production costs associated with [DP-Master’s]
    . . . tolled merchandise.”   
    Id.
       When Commerce sought to verify the
    information DP-Master did obtain and report, however, it discovered
    “for the first time” that DP-Master did not report quantities in
    the manner Commerce requested, and that DP-Master could not provide
    records necessary for verification.      I&D Memorandum at 45–47.
    Following verification and the final comment period, Commerce
    issued the Final Determination, six aspects of which are presently
    on appeal.   First, Commerce narrowed the scope by adding three
    physical criteria to the description of subject green tube.
    Second, in   calculating   DP-Master’s   surrogate   financial   ratio,
    Commerce elected to use financial information solely from the
    Indian company Oil Country Tubular, Ltd.      Third, contrary to its
    finding in the Preliminary Determination, Commerce determined that
    the average unit value of imports under IHTS categories 7304.29 and
    7304.23 was the best available surrogate value for drill pipe green
    tube.   Fourth, at DP-Master’s urging, Commerce abandoned IHTS
    category 8431.43.90 and instead used the same surrogate value it
    chose for the tool joints DP-Master produced in-house to calculate
    the surrogate value for the tool joints DP-Master purchased.
    Without prompting from DP-Master, however, Commerce multiplied the
    in-house tool joint surrogate value by the applicable financial
    ratio to account for the selling, general and administration
    Court No. 11-00081                                                          Page 8
    expenses (“SG&A”), profit, and overhead that would be reflected in
    prices offered on the open market.        Fifth, Commerce calculated the
    surrogate value for labor by averaging rates in all countries that
    produced   subject    goods,   regardless    of   how     much      each   country
    actually   produced.      Lastly,      Commerce   found      that    DP-Master’s
    failures with respect to reporting its phosphate toller’s factor of
    production   data    warranted   the    application     of    facts    otherwise
    available and an adverse inference therefrom.                I&D Memorandum at
    10–12, 14–22, 24–32, 44–47.
    Subsequent to the filing of this action, the United States
    Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (“Federal Circuit”) held
    that the simultaneous application of nonmarket methodology and
    countervailing duty law was contrary to the Tariff Act of 1930.
    GPX Int’l Tire Corp. v. United States, 
    666 F.3d 732
     (Fed. Cir.
    2011), superseded by statute, Application of Countervailing Duty
    Provisions to Nonmarket Economy Countries, Pub. L. No. 112-99, 
    126 Stat. 265
     (effective Mar. 13, 2012).              Commerce also issued a
    countervailing duty order against DP-Master below. Drill Pipe from
    the PRC: Countervailing Duty Order, 
    76 Fed. Reg. 11,758
     (Mar. 3,
    2011) (“Countervailing Duty Order”).
    JURISDICTION and STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The court has jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (c) and section 516A(a)(2)(B)(iii) of the Tariff Act
    Court No. 11-00081                                                           Page 9
    of 1930, as amended, 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iii) (2006).4
    Additionally, the court will uphold Commerce’s determinations in
    administrative reviews unless they are “unsupported by substantial
    evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with the
    law.”       19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(I).
    DISCUSSION
    DP argues that the Final Determination is contrary to law and
    unsupported      by   the   record    with   respect    to:   scope;    surrogate
    financial ratio; surrogate values for drill pipe green tube,
    purchased tool joints, and labor; and the partial application of
    adverse       facts   available.        DP    also     challenges      the   Final
    Determination as contrary to law on the basis that it is being
    applied simultaneously with the Countervailing Duty Order. See GPX
    Int’l Tire Corp., 
    666 F.3d at 737
    . For the reasons outlined below,
    the Final Determination is affirmed in all respects except with
    regard to the surrogate values for drill pipe green tube and labor.
    I. Scope
    DP argues that “the record lacks substantial evidence to
    support Commerce’s three criteria for including green tube within
    the scope” of the Final Determination5 because some green tube
    4
    All further citations to the Tariff Act of 1930 are to the
    relevant provisions of Title 19 of the United States Code, 2006
    edition, and all applicable supplements thereto.
    5
    The scope of the Final Determination covers:
    unfinished drill collars (including all drill collar
    green tubes) and unfinished drill pipe (including drill
    Court No. 11-00081                                              Page 10
    fitting   its   criteria   are   also   subject   to   antidumping   and
    countervailing duty orders on OCTG.6       Pls.’ Br. at 32; see OCTG
    from the PRC, 
    75 Fed. Reg. 28,551
     (May 21, 2010) (antidumping duty
    order); OCTG from the PRC, 
    75 Fed. Reg. 3,203
     (Jan. 20, 2010)
    (countervailing duty order).     DP-Master does not export green tube
    to the U.S., and neither it nor any party below have requested a
    scope determination pursuant to 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.225
     (2012).
    Instead, DP requests that “this Court . . . remand to Commerce to
    exclude green tube from the scope of the orders, to recalculate
    industry support, and to revoke the AD and CVD orders if industry
    support is lacking.”   Pls.’ Br. at 33.    Because DP seeks remand to
    reassess an industry support figure calculated using the Initiation
    scope based on a purported deficiency in the Final Determination
    scope, its challenge turns on whether modifying the scope during
    the course of an antidumping investigation requires Commerce to
    pipe green tubes, which are tubes meeting the following
    description: seamless tubes with an outer diameter of
    less than or equal to 6 5/8 inches[,] . . . containing
    between 0.16 and 0.75 percent molybdenum, and containing
    between 0.75 and 1.45 percent chromium). The scope does
    not include tool joints not attached to the drill pipe,
    nor does it include unfinished tubes for casing or tubing
    covered by any other antidumping or countervailing duty
    order.
    Final Determination, 76 Fed. Reg. at 1967.
    6
    DP identifies “P-110” as a finished OCTG product made from
    green tube that is seamless, can have an outside diameter of less
    than 6 5/8 inches, and is typically (though not required to be
    under API standards) alloyed with molybdenum and chromium within
    the parameters of the Final Determination. See Pls.’ Br. at 32; CR
    103 at 33-34, 45.
    Court No. 11-00081                                                     Page 11
    recalculate industry support.
    To initiate an antidumping duty investigation, Commerce must
    “determine that the petition has been filed by or on behalf of an
    industry.”    19 U.S.C. § 1673a(c)(1)(A)(ii).              The Act requires
    Commerce to complete the industry support determination within
    twenty days of the filing of a petition. Id. § 1673a(c)(1)(A).
    Although interested parties may comment in the interim, “[i]t is
    for Commerce to determine whether those requirements have been met,
    and [it] has broad discretion in reaching its decision.”               Minebea
    Co. v. United States, 
    16 CIT 20
    , 21, 
    782 F. Supp. 117
    , 119 (1992),
    aff’d, 
    984 F.2d 1178
     (Fed. Cir. 1993); see Gulf States Tube Div. of
    Quanex Corp. v. United States, 
    21 CIT 1013
    , 1015–19, 
    981 F. Supp. 630
    , 634–38 (1997). “After [Commerce] makes a determination with
    respect to initiating an investigation, the determination regarding
    industry   support      shall    not   be   reconsidered.”     19   U.S.C.    §
    1673a(c)(4)(E).        In other words,       “Commerce is prohibited from
    reconsidering     industry       support    after   the   initiation   of    an
    investigation.”        P.T. Pindo Deli Pulp & Paper Mills v. United
    States, 36 CIT     ,     , 
    825 F. Supp. 2d 1310
    , 1323 (2012) (citing 19
    U.S.C. § 1673a(c)(4)(E)); see Yantai Xinke Steel Structure Co. v.
    United States, 36 CIT        ,    , Slip Op. 12-95, at 11 (July 18, 2012)
    (“[R]equiring [Commerce] to examine record evidence in addition to
    that contained in the petition in no way disturbs the ‘finality’ of
    its decision to initiate an investigation.”).
    Court No. 11-00081                                                   Page 12
    DP’s sole argument — that some green tube used to produce OCTG
    meet the technical specifications of the Final Determination and
    are thus subject to two antidumping orders — has little bearing on
    Commerce’s decision to initiate the investigation.               19 U.S.C. §
    1673a(c)(4)(E).      In fact, DP-Master conceded below that Initiation
    scope, “distinguishing green tube by end-use, might have remedied
    the overlap if it had been published before the OCTG investigation
    was   initiated.”7      PR   33   at   3   (emphasis   added).    The   Final
    Determination scope contains the same end-use distinction as the
    Initiation, but DP does not analyze the purported overlap in light
    of this potentially remedial exception.           See Pls.’ Br. at 32–33.
    Because Commerce is “prohibited” from reevaluating industry support
    during the course of an investigation regardless of whether the
    scope is modified, see P.T. Pindo Deli Pulp, 36 CIT at              , 
    825 F. Supp. 2d at 1323
    , and because DP does not challenge the Initiation
    scope here, DP’s request for remand to reevaluate industry support
    must be denied.
    Even if DP’s challenge were procedurally appropriate, it would
    fail on a substantive basis.           See 
    id.
     at      , 
    825 F. Supp. 2d at 1323
     (prohibition against Commerce from reconsidering industry
    7
    Commerce initiated the OCTG investigation well before it
    settled on the revised scope language to initiate the present
    investigation. See OCTG from the PRC, 
    74 Fed. Reg. 20,706
     (May 5,
    2009) (initiation notice).     DP-Master may actually have been
    referring to the publication of the countervailing duty order on
    OCTG from the PRC. Compare PR 20 at 1–2, with OCTG from the PRC,
    
    75 Fed. Reg. 3,203
     (Jan. 20, 2010) (countervailing duty order).
    Court No. 11-00081                                                            Page 13
    support    “does    not    limit”   the     court’s    power   to    review    it).
    “Commerce owes deference to the intent of the proposed scope of an
    antidumping investigation as expressed in an antidumping petition,”
    Ad Hoc Shrimp Trade Action Comm. v. United States, 33 CIT                      ,      ,
    
    637 F. Supp. 2d 1166
    ,   1174–75    (2009),    and    Commerce    properly
    identified domestic industry’s intent to investigate drill pipe
    green tube.        In the Initiation, Commerce observed that it was
    “clear throughout Petitioners’ submissions that their use of the
    term ‘drill pipe’ includes ‘green tubes’ for drill pipe production
    only,” not green tubes for OCTG production.               PR 22, Att. II at 8.
    In supplements to the petition, domestic industry described how the
    OCTG and drill string channels of distribution are distinct and
    that “the companies that process green tubes into finished drill
    pipe intimately know the few producers of the appropriate green
    tube.”     PR 7 at 5–6.      Domestic industry also provided three prior
    International      Trade     Commission      determinations         describing     why
    technical specifications and customer expectations led it to treat
    green tube for drill pipe as a “distinct like product” from green
    tube for OCTG.          
    Id.
     Ex. 1 (excerpts from OCTG from Argentina,
    Austria, Italy, Japan, Korea, Mexico, and Spain, USITC Pub. 2911,
    Inv. Nos. 701-TA-363 and 701-TA-364 and 731-TA-711-717 (1995)
    (investigation notice), OCTG from Argentina, Italy, Japan, Korea
    and Mexico, USITC Pub. 3434, Inv. Nos. 701-TA-364 and 731-TA-711
    and 731-TA-713-716(June 2001) (first sunset review), and OCTG from
    Court No. 11-00081                                                          Page 14
    Argentina, Italy, Japan, Korea, and Mexico, USITC Pub. 3923, Inv.
    Nos. 731-TA-711 and 731-TA-713-716 (June 2007) (second sunset
    review)).      Given the end-use exception and the extensive evidence
    showing   a    distinction     in   channels   of   distribution,          customer
    expectations,     and    technical    specifications,         it   would    not   be
    appropriate     for   this    court   to   usurp    Commerce’s      exercise      of
    discretion in defining the scope of the Initiation.                   See Ad Hoc
    Shrimp Trade, 33 CIT at        , 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at
    1174–75.          A thorough
    review of the record reveals that Commerce properly determined that
    the petition met the support threshold required to commence the
    investigation, CR 15 Att. 2; PR 22 Att. 2, and as such, DP’s
    request must be denied.
    II. Surrogate Values
    “Commerce ordinarily determines the normal value of subject
    merchandise of an exporter or producer from a nonmarket economy .
    . . country ‘on the basis of the value of the factors of production
    utilized in producing the merchandise.’”                     Shantou Red Garden
    Foodstuff Co. v. United States, 36 CIT                  ,     , 
    815 F. Supp. 2d 1311
    ,   1316    (2012)   (quoting     19   U.S.C.   §       1677b(c)(1)).     This
    procedure seeks “to assess the ‘price or costs’ of factors of
    production” of subject merchandise in a comparable market economy
    “in an attempt to construct a hypothetical market value of that
    product” in the nonmarket economy. Nation Ford Chem. Co. v. United
    States, 
    166 F.3d 1373
    , 1375 (Fed. Cir. 1999). Because “the process
    Court No. 11-00081                                         Page 15
    of constructing foreign market value for a producer in a nonmarket
    country is difficult and necessarily imprecise,” 
    id. at 1377
    (quoting Sigma Corp. v. United States, 
    117 F.3d 1401
    , 1407 (Fed.
    Cir. 1997)), Commerce must use the “best available information” to
    select surrogate prices for each factor of production.   19 U.S.C.
    § 1677b(c)(4).   Commerce “normally will use publically available
    information to value factors,” 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.408
    (c)(1), and it
    prefers to use information “reflect[ing] a broad market average,”
    “contemporaneous with the period of review,” “specific to the input
    in question,” and “exclusive of taxes on exports.”     Fuwei Films
    (Shandong) Co. v. United States, 36 CIT     ,    , 
    837 F. Supp. 2d 1347
    , 1350–51 (2012).
    In evaluating Commerce’s selection of the best available
    surrogate value under the substantial evidence standard, “[t]he
    Court’s role is not to make that determination anew, but rather to
    decide ‘whether a reasonable mind could conclude that Commerce
    chose the best available information.’”   China First Pencil Co. v.
    United States, 34 CIT    ,    , 721 F. Supp 2d 1369, 1375 (2010)
    (quoting QVD Food Co. v. United States, 34 CIT   ,   , 
    721 F. Supp. 2d 1311
    , 1315 (2010), aff’d, 
    658 F.3d 1318
     (Fed. Cir. 2011)).   It
    is critical that Commerce’s selection “establishes the antidumping
    margins as accurately as possible.”   Zhejiang DunAn Hetian Metal
    Co. v. United States, 
    652 F.3d 1333
    , 1341 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (quoting
    Shakeproof Assembly Components v. United States, 
    268 F.3d 1376
    ,
    Court No. 11-00081                                                        Page 16
    1382   (Fed.    Cir.    2001)).        Nevertheless,     Commerce   has    “broad
    discretion to determine the ‘best available information’ in a
    reasonable manner on a case-by-case basis.” Goldlink Indus. Co. v.
    United States, 
    30 CIT 616
    , 619, 
    431 F. Supp. 2d 1323
    , 1327 (2006)
    (quoting Timken Co. v. United States, 
    25 CIT 939
    , 944, 
    166 F. Supp. 2d 608
    , 616 (2001)).
    A. Surrogate Financial Ratio
    Commerce selected Oil Country Tubular, Ltd. (“OCTL”) as the
    only financial surrogate for DP-Master in both the Preliminary
    Determination and Final Determination.              DP argues that Commerce
    should have averaged financial statements from OCTL with those from
    Jindal Saw, another Indian producer.            DP’s challenge is twofold:
    first, DP questions OCTL’s suitability as a surrogate on the basis
    that it has a lower drill pipe production capacity, provides more
    services, and produces a wider variety of expensive goods than DP-
    Master; second, DP disputes Commerce’s finding that Jindal Saw was
    too vertically integrated to be comparable to DP-Master.                         In
    essence, DP argues that OCTL is just as poor a match for DP-
    Master’s     production      experience    as   Jindal    saw,   meaning    that
    Commerce’s decision to use only OCTL as a surrogate was unsupported
    by substantial evidence.
    To   account    for   factory    overhead,   SG&A, and profit        in    a
    nonmarket economy context, Commerce uses financial statements from
    “one or more surrogate companies.”           Fujian Lianfu Forestry Co. v.
    Court No. 11-00081                                                  Page 17
    United States, 33 CIT    ,     , 
    638 F. Supp. 2d 1325
    , 1353 (2009).
    “To serve as an adequate proxy for the respondent companies being
    reviewed, the surrogate companies selected ideally should produce
    comparable merchandise” in the surrogate country.        
    Id.
     (citing 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.408
    (c)(4)). In selecting an adequate proxy, “Commerce
    ‘narrow[s] the list of financial statements meeting this criterion
    by consider[ing] the quality and specificity of the statements,’”
    Qingdao Sea-Line Trading Co. v. United States, 36 CIT           ,    , Slip
    Op. 12-39 at 36 (Mar. 21, 2012) (citing Dorbest Ltd. v. United
    States, 
    604 F.3d 1363
    , 1374 (Fed. Cir. 2010)), including whether
    they show a comparable level of vertical integration. Mittal Steel
    Galati S.A. v. United States, 
    31 CIT 1121
    , 1139, 
    502 F. Supp. 2d 1295
    , 1311 (2007); see Air Prods. & Chems., Inc. v. United States,
    
    22 CIT 1125
    , 
    31 F. Supp. 2d 999
     (1998).             Although “Commerce
    generally finds that the greatest number of financial statements
    yields the most representative data from the relevant manufacturing
    sector,” Fujian Lianfu, 33 CIT at        , 
    638 F. Supp. 2d at 1353
    ,
    “Commerce is not justified in sacrificing quality for quantity.”
    Dorbest Ltd. v. United States, 
    30 CIT 1671
    , 1717, 
    462 F. Supp. 2d 1262
    ,   1302   (2006).   As   such,   Commerce   must   avoid   averaging
    financial statements that would have an unjustifiably distortive
    effect on the resulting surrogate financial ratio. 
    Id.
     at 1716–24,
    
    462 F. Supp. 2d at
    1301–08.
    The first prong of DP’s argument focuses on differences
    Court No. 11-00081                                                     Page 18
    between OCTL and DP-Master.         DP argues that “OCTL’s [oil tubular
    goods]    production    capacity    vastly   overshadows   its      drill   pipe
    production capacity, which itself is only 1/10 of DP-Master’s.”
    Pls.’ Br. at 30–31.      Commerce found that DP-Master and OCTL were at
    an “identical level of integration” because both “purchas[e] green
    tube that is then processed into drill pipe.”            I&D Memorandum at
    22.   As DP argues elsewhere, oil tubular goods are comparable to
    drill pipe because the production of both requires modification of
    raw green tubes.       Pls.’ Br. at 5–6, 13, 24, 32–33; CR 103 at 2-10
    & Ex. 2.    Because the processes for producing drill pipe and oil
    tubular    products    are   at    least   comparable,   see   
    19 C.F.R. § 351.408
    (c)(4), DP’s attempt to discredit OCTL’s suitability on the
    basis that it has a lower capacity to produce drill pipe is
    unpersuasive. DP also argues that “OCTL provides services, such as
    phosphating, plastic coating, reconditioning, and rethreading of
    drill pipe, and field inspection of tubulars,” whereas “DP-Master
    outsources some [of those] services . . . and does not engage in
    any reconditioning, rethreading, or field inspection,” and that
    “OCTL manufactures a much wider range of products[] than DP-
    Master,” including many advanced and expensive specialty tools.
    Commerce recognized that OCTL offers many goods and services that
    DP-Master does not and that such production experience weighs
    against its viability as a surrogate.          I&D Memorandum at 22.
    The second prong of DP’s argument is that Commerce improperly
    Court No. 11-00081                                             Page 19
    rejected Jindal Saw as a surrogate because it “does not appear to
    be as fully-integrated as Commerce believed.”   Pls.’ Br. at 32.   DP
    supports its argument with a quote from a Jindal Saw 2009-2010
    annual report: “Jindal ‘focused on value added production’ and
    reduced production of pig iron by 81.7% ‘to [a] negligible level.’”
    Pls.’ Br. at 31 (quoting PR 218 at 29, 71) (alteration in Pls.’
    Br.).     This quotation is irrelevant for two reasons.        First,
    although pig iron is an input for some steel products, there is no
    indication that Jindal Saw used its pig iron to make pipes.8       See
    PR 218 at 26-29.     Second, contrary to DP’s assertion, the annual
    report shows that Jindal Saw’s consumption of raw iron ore and iron
    fines increased by 20%   along with its production of pipes.    PR 218
    at 71. In other words, DP’s selective quotation does not undermine
    Commerce’s finding that Jindal Saw is more vertically integrated
    than DP-Master because it “begin[s] its production at the iron ore
    stage.”   I&D Memorandum at 22.
    Furthermore, the same annual report demonstrates that Jindal
    Saw produces “certain out of scope merchandise that [DP-Master]
    does not,” just like OCTL.    See I&D Memorandum at 22.   In addition
    to non-drill pipe metal tube products, Jindal Saw “provides various
    8
    The annual report lists pig iron with other finished
    products, not raw materials.     PR 218 at 71.    Furthermore, the
    quoted 81.7% reduction in pig iron appears on a table labeled
    “Company’s sales mix” alongside sales of steel plates, steel coils,
    and steel pipes. PR 218 at 29, 71. These facts imply that Jindal
    produced pig iron for sale, not as an input for green tubes.
    Court No. 11-00081                                                       Page 20
    value added products like pipe coatings, bends and connector
    castings,” PR 218 at 19, which DP does not claim to provide.
    Jindal Saw also produces and sells steel plates, steel coils, and
    pig iron, 
    id. at 29
    , products DP does not claim to produce.
    Finally, Jindal Saw’s wholly-owned subsidiary “owns and operates
    businesses in three core sectors of the Indian economy,” none of
    which bear any relation to producing drill pipe or other oil
    extraction        products:   “Water,   Waste    Water     and   Solid    Waste
    Management[;]        Domestic    Transportation       &    Logistics[;     and]
    Transportation Equipment Fabrication.”           
    Id. at 8
    , 63–64, 89–90.
    Jindal Saw reaches as wide across as it does far down the stream of
    production, and as such it is equally subject to the criticism DP
    applies to OCTL.
    Commerce’s decision to use only OCTL as a financial surrogate
    is supported by substantial evidence in the record.                  OCTL and
    Jindal Saw both produce nonsubject goods, but Jindal Saw has a high
    level of vertical integration that neither DP-Master nor OCTL
    possess.      On these facts, Commerce’s choice not to average OCTL’s
    data   with    distortive     data   from   Jindal   Saw   was   reasonable.
    Therefore, DP’s request to remand for redetermination of the
    financial surrogate ratio must be denied.
    B. Surrogate Value for Drill Pipe Green Tube
    In   the    Preliminary   Determination,      Commerce    calculated    a
    $1262.50 surrogate value for green tube by averaging prices and
    Court No. 11-00081                                                          Page 21
    offers for J/K-55 grade tube listed in the January and March 2009
    issues of MBR.        As Commerce stated, “[MBR] is a widely respected
    steel industry journal produced outside the context of this case .
    . . [and] J/K55 is the most similar in yield strength to drill pipe
    green tubes, a key characteristic in green tubes.”                  PR 186 at 7.
    In the Final Determination, however, Commerce opted instead to use
    average unit values of goods imported under IHTS categories 7304.29
    and   7304.23    to     calculate     a    $2,511.67    surrogate      value.   I&D
    Memorandum at 31–32.        One of the reasons Commerce changed its mind
    was that, in its opinion, the IHTS categories actually “capture”
    green tube, whereas the MBR issues described J/K-55 grade tube, a
    product “that is only comparable to” green tube.9                
    Id.
        DP contends
    that Infodrive India listings for IHTS categories 7304.29 and
    7304.23 show that imports under both categories were actually
    devoid     of   green    tube   and       dominated    by   high-priced    finished
    products, meaning that Commerce did not base its determination on
    substantial evidence.10         Pls.’ Br. at 15–17.
    9
    Commerce also rejected the MBR data as derived from a time
    frame “so isolated . . . as to be potentially subject to temporary
    market fluctuations” and listing mere “offers for sale,” whereas
    the IHTS categories are transaction prices “fully contemporaneous
    with the POI [representing] broad market average prices in India
    during the entire POI.” 
    Id.
     at 31–32.
    10
    DP also alleges that Commerce issued its determination
    contrary to law because “Commerce . . . based its green-tube SV
    determination on a limitation that only HTS categories could be
    considered for selection as SV.” Pls.’ Br. at 17. Nothing in the
    Final Determination suggests that Commerce rejected DP-Master’s
    proposed surrogates solely because they were not IHTS categories.
    Court No. 11-00081                                                   Page 22
    This Court has recognized Infodrive’s utility in specifying
    descriptions of products at the moment of import as a supplement to
    aggregated IHTS data.       See Dorbest Ltd., 30 CIT at 1695–98, 
    462 F. Supp. 2d at
    1284–86 (2006); Zhejiang, 
    652 F.3d at 1342
    .            Infodrive
    is not a perfect tool, Zhejiang, 
    652 F.3d at 1342
    , and so Commerce
    need not rely on Infodrive data that is incomplete or demonstrably
    inaccurate. Globe Metallurgical, Inc. v. United States, 33 CIT             ,
    , Slip Op. 09-37 at 7–8 (May 5, 2009), appeal dismissed per
    stipulation, 449 Fed. App’x 9 (Fed. Cir. 2010); Calgon Carbon Corp.
    v. United States, 35 CIT         ,   , Slip Op. 11-21 at 17 (Feb. 17,
    2011).      Nevertheless, this Court has consistently found that
    Commerce is obliged to address Infodrive data offered in rebuttal
    if it specifies a “definite and substantial percentage” of imports
    under a particular IHTS category.          Calgon Carbon, 33 CIT at        ,
    Slip Op. 11-21 at 17; see Zhengzhou Harmoni Spice Co. v. United
    States, 33 CIT      ,     , 
    617 F. Supp. 2d 1281
    , 1325 (2009); Longkou
    Haimeng Mach. Co. v. United States, 
    32 CIT 1142
    , 1162–65, 
    581 F. Supp. 2d 1344
    , 1361–64 (2008).
    In   the   Final     Determination,   Commerce    admitted    that   the
    Infodrive    data   was    substantially    complete    and   an    accurate
    DP’s confusion may be a result of Commerce’s justification for
    describing IHTS categories 7309.23 and 7309.29 as more product
    specific than other Indian HTS data.    See I&D Memorandum at 31
    (“[DP-Master] has placed no evidence on the record demonstrating
    that a different HTS category is more appropriate for green tubes
    . . . .” (emphasis added)).
    Court No. 11-00081                                             Page 23
    representation of imports under IHTS category 8431.43.90 in the
    context of explaining its selected surrogate value for tool joints.
    I&D Memorandum at 26.    When it evaluated the Infodrive data with
    respect to green tube, however, Commerce dismissed DP-Master’s
    argument in one sentence: “Infodrive data placed on the record by
    [DP-Master] definitively show entries of green tube under . . .
    categories [7309.23 and 7309.29].” I&D Memorandum at 31. Although
    DP-Master argued “that these [IHTS] categories are ‘overwhelmed’ by
    products further along in the production process than raw green
    tube,”    Commerce   found    that   they   were   not   “necessarily
    unrepresentative of the input” and were in fact “product-specific
    to the green tubes used in the production of drill pipe.”      
    Id.
       In
    response to the instant motion, Commerce reiterates its position:
    “While J/K 55 demonstrably cannot be used to make drill pipe, the
    basket categories did, in fact contain prices for the green tube at
    issue.”   Def.’s Br. at 19.   Put simply, Commerce found that because
    IHTS averages actually “captured” green tube, as demonstrated by
    the Infodrive data, it was the best available surrogate value. See
    I&D Memorandum at 31–32.
    Commerce’s description of the Infodrive data in the Final
    Determination is misleading to the point where it is impossible to
    determine whether its reliance on the IHTS data was reasonable.
    See Calgon Carbon, 33 CIT at     , Slip Op. 11-21 at 17–19.   Commerce
    determined that the IHTS data was a reasonable surrogate because
    Court No. 11-00081                                                 Page 24
    the Infodrive listings “definitively show entries of green tube,”
    I&D Memorandum at 31, but of the hundreds of entries listed on the
    Infodrive tables, only three might be properly categorized as
    “definitively” green tube: two 9/9/09 entries describing “RAW-PIPE
    SEAMLESS” and “RAW - TBG SEAMLESS” and one 9/5/09 entry describing
    “RAW-PIPESEAMLESS.” See PR 162 Ex. SV-45 (tables for imports under
    7304.23.90 at page 4).     DP argues that there are no entries for
    green tube, Pls.’ Br. at 16, and indeed these three entries are
    also described as being “WALL MATERIAL,” implying that they may be
    unsuitable for the production of drill pipe.      See PR 162 Ex. SV-45
    (tables for imports under 7304.23.90 at page 4).         Neither party
    thoroughly explains the other entries for “seamless pipe”11 at
    present, but DP-Master did submit a detailed analysis of the
    Infodrive data below tending to show that there are in fact no
    green tube entries.    See PR 162 at 7–17.      DP-Master corroborated
    its interpretation below with evidence indicating that Indian green
    tube imports would be low during the period of investigation
    because   of   “measures   taken   [in   late   2008]   by   the   Indian
    11
    The record establishes a distinction between raw seamless
    green tube on the one hand, and finished seamless tubing on the
    other. CR 98 2–9 & Att. 1; CR 103 at 2-10. Given the unspecific
    descriptions for tube entries and the absence of entries for green
    tube suitable for drill pipe, the Infodrive listings are, at a
    minimum, ambiguous as to what kinds of pipes and tubes actually
    entered India under categories 7309.23 and 7309.29. See PR 162 Ex.
    SV-45. Even the most generous interpretation of the Infodrive data
    cannot support Commerce’s explicit finding that the data
    “definitively show entries of green tube.” I&D Memorandum at 31.
    Court No. 11-00081                                                        Page 25
    government[] to restrict imports [of green tube] . . . from low-
    price producers in China.”        PR 138 Ex. 3 at 10.           Commerce did not
    address this evidence in the Final Determination.
    Defendant-intervenors argue that the IHTS data is accurate
    because the finished casing and tubes actually imported under those
    categories are comparable to drill pipe green tube.                  Intervenor-
    Def.’s Mem. Opp’n Pls.’ Br. (“Intervenor-Def.’s Br.”) at 5–8.
    Specifically, “while the [IHTS] categories selected by Commerce may
    include    products    more   fully    advanced       than   green   tube,   these
    categories also include OCTG casing and tubing that have less
    demanding performance characteristics and may be produced from less
    expensive materials using less expensive processing than green tube
    for drill pipe.”       Intervenor-Def.’s Br. at 7.              As DP correctly
    points out, Pls.’ Reply at 3 n.2, Commerce hints at this same
    argument    in   its   response       to   the    instant     motion:    “[A]fter
    identifying green tube within the Indian customs data, Commerce
    determined that the data was sufficiently product specific.”
    Def.’s Br. at 19 (emphasis added).               In the Final Determination,
    however, Commerce explicitly rejected MBR data for J/K-55 tubing
    because J/K-55 is “a product that the record demonstrates cannot be
    used to produce drill pipe.”          I&D Memorandum at 31.          Both J/K-55
    tubing and the IHTS 7309.23 and 7309.29 imports are comparable to
    drill pipe green tube, and both J/K-55 and the IHTS 7309.23 and
    7309.29    imports     cannot   be     used      to   produce    drill   pipe.
    Court No. 11-00081                                                    Page 26
    Consequently, if Commerce meant to say in the Final Determination
    that    the   IHTS   categories   were   product   specific      because   they
    captured related goods, then it did not adequately describe why it
    dismissed the MBR data.           Defendant-intervenors cannot use the
    benefit of hindsight to justify the Final Determination with an
    analysis Commerce demonstrably could not have relied upon below.
    Commerce’s    rebuttal     of   each   of   DP’s   four    alternative
    surrogates12 in response to the instant motion does not cure its
    inadequate explanation of its reliance upon the IHTS data.                  See
    Longkou Haimeng, 32 CIT at             , 
    581 F. Supp. 2d at
    1363–64.
    Although Commerce is not required to address every counterargument
    or piece of evidence before it, see Taian Ziyang Food Co. v. United
    States, 33 CIT        ,    , 
    637 F. Supp. 2d 1093
    , 1141 (2009), its
    failure here to explain evidence apparently contrary to a finding
    central to its determination leaves the court without the means
    necessary to affirm it as supported by the record.                  See Taian
    Ziyang Food Co. v. United States, 35 CIT            ,     , 
    783 F. Supp. 2d 12
    DP’s four alternatives are as follows: First, and what DP
    characterizes as “possibly the best viable alternative,” are May
    2009 MBR descriptions of “prices” and “offers” for Indian seamless
    OCTG. Second, DP offers the January and March 2009 Indian prices
    and offers for J/K-55 that Commerce used in the Preliminary
    Determination with a deflation adjustment “to account for
    [downward] global pricing trends.” Third, DP constructs a value by
    taking the cost of alloy billets and adding proprietary amounts
    representing the cost of processing billets into green tube.
    Lastly, given “that drill pipe green tube is always seamless,” DP
    suggests averaging Indian prices for seamless tube and adding a
    proprietary adjustment for chemistry. Pls.’ Br. at 19–20.
    Court No. 11-00081                                                  Page 27
    1292, 1331–32 (2011) (remand appropriate where there remained
    “serious unanswered questions” as to Commerce’s justification for
    selecting   apparently    distorted     import   statistics   as   the   best
    available surrogate).       On remand, Commerce is not barred from
    selecting the IHTS data — it need only explain why such data is
    more representative of the price for drill pipe green tube than
    other potential surrogate values in light of Infodrive data that
    appears to demonstrate that categories 7309.23 and 7309.29 do not
    actually    “capture”    green   tube   and   are   highly    distorted    by
    expensive, finished tubular goods.
    C. Surrogate Value for Purchased Tool Joints
    Commerce used average unit values of imports under IHTS
    8431.43.90 to calculate the tool joint surrogate value in the
    Preliminary   Determination.       DP-Master     objected,    offering    two
    alternatives: “petitioners’ actual experience . . . even though it
    is non-public and from the [U.S.],” and a value “that could be
    calculated from the [factors of production] information DP-Master
    submitted on the record prior to the preliminary determination . .
    . [that] would have reflected commercial reality.” PR 191 at 8–10.
    Commerce chose the latter in the Final Determination, adding
    “surrogate ratios for overhead, SG&A, and profit . . . to as
    closely as possible approximate the experience of purchasing [tool
    joints] from an unaffiliated supplier.”          I&D Memorandum at 28.     DP
    now contends that it was unreasonable for Commerce to have chosen
    Court No. 11-00081                                                   Page 28
    this surrogate valuation method because petitioners’ tool joint
    data was in fact the best available information, and because the
    chosen $10,529.40 surrogate value is much higher than the $5571.40
    value selected for tool joints DP-Master produced in-house and the
    comparably priced proprietary value of tool joints petitioners
    purchased in the U.S.       Pls.’ Reply at 9–10.
    Commerce acted reasonably when it declined to use petitioners’
    data as the best available information on the record.         See QVD Food
    Co., 34 CIT at        , 
    721 F. Supp. 2d at
    1315 (citing Goldlink, 30 CIT
    at 619, 
    431 F. Supp. 2d at 1327
    ).              DP admits that petitioners’
    prices are derived from U.S. market prices and that the U.S. market
    is not economically comparable to the PRC, Pls.’ Br. at 25–26, and
    it does not dispute that the chosen surrogate value is derived
    entirely from the primary surrogate country, India. I&D Memorandum
    at 28.      DP also admits that petitioners’ data is proprietary,
    whereas the chosen surrogate is based on public information. Pls.’
    Br. at 25–26.     DP argues at great length that petitioners’ prices
    are   a    “precise   product   match”   for   the tool   joints   DP-Master
    purchased, e.g., Pls.’ Br. at 25, but it does not contest that the
    chosen surrogate value is also product specific.13             See 
    id.
     at
    13
    The most direct argument DP makes challenging product
    specificity has no basis in the law. DP argues that “because the
    [chosen surrogate] is not a value for tool joints at all, but
    rather is based upon the sum of values of other products,” Commerce
    ignored “the statutory requirement to ‘determine the normal value
    of the subject merchandise on the basis of the factors of
    production utilized in producing the merchandise.’” Pls.’ Br. at
    Court No. 11-00081                                                      Page 29
    24–29; I&D Memorandum at 27–28.         Faced with a choice between two
    product-specific surrogate valuation methods spanning the period of
    investigation, this court cannot say that Commerce erred when it
    selected the method that was based on public data from the primary
    surrogate   country     over   proprietary    data   from    a    country   not
    economically comparable to the U.S.          See Goldlink, 30 CIT at 619,
    
    431 F. Supp. 2d at 1327
     (“[T]he Court must defer to Commerce” if
    its determination below is reasonable.).
    DP employs a false comparison of the $10,529.40 surrogate
    value with the $5571.40 constructed value for the tool joints it
    produces to raise doubts about Commerce’s choice.                 The $5571.40
    tool    joint   value    lacks    the   profit,      SG&A,       and   overhead
    considerations that would be reflected in the price of tool joints
    offered for sale in a surrogate market, and so $5571.40 is not an
    accurate representation of purchased tool joint value.                 See I&D
    Memorandum at 28.     Furthermore, given the nature of the tool joint
    market, the record shows that the chosen surrogate value is not
    aberrational when compared to the proprietary average value of tool
    joints purchased in the U.S.       The parties agree that tool joints
    are highly specialized and expensive components that are not
    29. However, this Court has held that “assigning a surrogate value
    to the factors of production going into the production of . . .
    intermediate inputs” when valuing those intermediate inputs is in
    fact consistent with the law. Anshan Iron & Steel Co. v. United
    States, 
    27 CIT 1234
    , 1238–41 (2003) (not published in the Federal
    Supplement).
    Court No. 11-00081                                                      Page 30
    comparable to other kinds of pipe fittings.          See I&D Memorandum at
    26–27. Tool joints are only produced “in a few countries,” none of
    which are market economies comparable to the PRC.               I&D Memorandum
    at 28.     Because tool joints are so specialized and because there
    are so few tool joint producers in the world, it was reasonable for
    Commerce to accept variation among potential surrogate values,
    especially    when    comparing    normalized    prices    in    a   developing
    nonmarket economy to actual prices in an advanced market economy.
    “[T]he process of constructing foreign market value for a
    producer     in   a   nonmarket    economy    country     is    difficult   and
    necessarily imprecise.”           Nation Ford Chem., 
    166 F.3d at 1377
    (quoting Sigma, 
    117 F.3d at 1407
    ).           That DP also presents a well-
    reasoned case for why Commerce could have chosen petitioners’ data
    as the best available does not change the fact that this court
    cannot usurp Commerce’s sound judgment in selecting a different
    viable surrogate.       See Peer Bearing Co. v. United States 
    25 CIT 1199
    , 1201–02, 
    182 F. Supp. 2d 1285
    , 1292 (2001).                      Because
    Commerce’s choice here was reasonable, DP’s challenge must fail.
    See Goldlink, 30 CIT at 619, 
    431 F. Supp. 2d at 1327
    .
    D. Surrogate Value for Labor
    DP argues that, when calculating the labor wage rate surrogate
    value, Commerce averaged the wage rate of thirty-one countries that
    produced comparable merchandise without distinguishing between
    producers and “significant producers” as required under 19 U.S.C.
    Court No. 11-00081                                                       Page 31
    § 1677b(c)(4)(B).          As a result, Commerce included low-producing
    countries in the surrogate wage rate average like Swaziland, even
    though it only exported $469 worth of comparable merchandise.
    Commerce concedes that it should reconsider its labor wage rate
    determination in light of Shandong Rongxin Import and Export Co. v.
    United States, 35 CIT          ,   , 
    774 F. Supp. 2d 1307
    , 1315–16 (2011).
    Accordingly, DP’s request to remand for reconsideration of the
    surrogate labor wage rate is granted.
    III. Partial Application of Adverse Facts Available
    DP   argues    that    “Commerce’s   application      of   adverse   facts
    available . . . because of an independent toller’s failure to
    report certain information regarding consumption of material inputs
    is unsupported by substantial evidence and is contrary to law.”
    Pls.’ Br. at 35.      Under 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(b), Commerce may apply an
    adverse inference when a party has “failed to cooperate by not
    acting to the best of its ability to comply with a request for
    information.”        Id.     “Failure to cooperate” is evaluated under an
    objective and subjective standard.            Nippon Steel Corp. v. United
    States, 
    337 F.3d 1373
    , 1382 (Fed. Cir. 2003). First, Commerce must
    show that “a reasonable and responsible [party] would have known
    that   the   requested       information    was   required   to    be   kept   and
    maintained under the applicable statues, rules and regulations,”
    and second, “that the respondent under investigation . . . either:
    (a) fail[ed] to keep and maintain all required records, or (b)
    Court No. 11-00081                                                          Page 32
    fail[ed] to put forth its maximum efforts to investigate and obtain
    the requested information from its records.”                   
    Id.
     at 1382–83; Ad
    Hoc Shrimp, 33 CIT at       , 637 F. Supp. 2d at 1304.
    Commerce relied on DP-Master’s failures in deciding to apply
    an adverse inference, not its toller’s poor recordkeeping.14                     I&D
    Memorandum at 47.    On April 7, 2010, Commerce instructed DP-Master
    to provide “a detailed explanation of all efforts undertaken to
    report the actual quantity of each [factor of production]” if it
    could not report its toller’s actual consumption.                  I&D Memorandum
    at 47 (citing PR 53 at G-1 to G-5 & §§ C, D).                  DP-Master provided
    information that was not based on its toller’s actual consumption,
    but it failed to offer any explanation until verification.                   PR 226
    at   2.   DP-Master       was   also    instructed        to     inform   Commerce
    “immediately”   if   it   would   not   be   able    to    assemble materials
    required for verification of its responses due to a recalcitrant
    third party.    I&D Memorandum at 47; PR 53 at G-1.                       DP-Master
    provided information but failed to notify Commerce that it was
    unable to assemble documents required for verification.                    Id.    At
    verification, DP-Master revealed “for the first time” that it
    14
    Commerce did use the toller’s inadequate recordkeeping as
    a basis to apply facts otherwise available. I&D Memorandum at 45.
    DP does not contest this aspect of Commerce’s determination. See
    Pls.’ Br. at 35–36; Pls.’ Reply at 11–13; Nippon, 
    337 F.3d at 1831
    (“The mere failure of a respondent to furnish requested
    information — for any reason — requires Commerce to resort to other
    sources of information to complete the factual record upon which it
    makes its determination.” (emphasis added)).
    Court No. 11-00081                                                      Page 33
    neither provided information in the manner requested nor assembled
    records necessary for verification of that information. Id. at 45.
    DP-Master’s actions — lulling Commerce into believing it had
    provided information in the manner requested when it in fact had
    not, and then suddenly admitting that it had not provided reliable
    information at verification — are closer to the kind of “deliberate
    concealment   or   inaccurate    reporting”    that       “surely   evince[]   a
    failure to cooperate” than to the mere “inadequate inquiries”
    sufficient for application of an adverse inference.                 See Nippon,
    
    337 F.3d at 1383
     (emphasis added).           Although DP-Master notified
    Commerce that it was having difficulty securing information from
    its toller, DP does not and cannot dispute that Commerce provided
    “extensive instructions . . . numerous times over the course of the
    investigation” to the effect that DP-Master should notify Commerce
    if it was unable to provide information in the manner requested.
    I&D Memorandum at 47; Wuhan Bee Healthy Co. v. United States, 
    31 CIT 1182
    , 1191 (2007) (not published in the Federal Supplement)
    (objective prong satisfied where “a reasonable and responsible
    respondent    would   have   brought   any    problems       surrounding     its
    supporting    documentation     to   Commerce’s   attention         before   the
    verification”). DP also does not and cannot dispute that DP-Master
    failed to provide a detailed explanation of its efforts to get
    actual-consumption data before verification as requested.                    See
    Sidenor Indus. SL v. United States, 33 CIT            ,     , 664 F. Supp. 2d
    Court No. 11-00081                                                     Page 34
    1349, 1358 (2009) (subjective prong satisfied where respondent
    failed to act as requested even though it was able to do so).
    The record belies DP’s contention that it is “not the party
    who failed to cooperate,” Pls.’ Br. at 35 (emphasis omitted), and
    so this court cannot say that the application of an adverse
    inference to DP-Master’s unverifiable submissions was unreasonable
    or contrary to law.15       Wuhan Bee, 31 CIT at 1191–93.        DP-Master’s
    inability to acquire trustworthy information cannot serve as an
    excuse for its failure to notify Commerce as requested.                   See
    Nippon,   
    337 F.3d at
      1382–83;   Wuhan   Bee,   31   CIT   at   1191–93.
    Consequently, Commerce acted reasonably and in accordance with the
    law when it applied an adverse inference to the information it
    could not verify.
    15
    DP offers two additional arguments that have no bearing on
    Commerce’s determination below. First, DP suggests that an adverse
    inference is inappropriate because it otherwise provided verifiable
    information “with only minor discrepancies.” Pls.’ Br. at 36.
    Commerce, however, applied an adverse inference “only . . . to the
    portion of [DP-Master’s] response dealing with its phosphate
    treatment toller’s factors [of production],” I&D Memorandum at 47,
    and so DP-Master’s cooperation during the rest of the investigation
    is irrelevant. Second, DP asserts in its reply that “Commerce only
    cites to its own threats regarding cooperation and [adverse facts
    available], but it does not . . . cite to any record information
    indicating how [DP-Master] was uncooperative in any way.” Pls.’
    Reply at 13. Given that Commerce found that DP-Master failed to
    provide a “detailed explanation of all efforts undertaken to report
    the actual quantity of each [factor of production]” its toller
    consumed, I&D Memorandum at 47, it is no surprise that Commerce
    would be unable to locate and cite such a document in the record.
    In any event, DP’s argument does not deter from the fact that
    Commerce explained its decision with ample citations to the record.
    See id. at 44–47; Nippon, 
    337 F.3d at
    1382–83.
    Court No. 11-00081                                                      Page 35
    IV. Simultaneous Application of Nonmarket Economy Methodology and
    Countervailing Duty Law
    DP’s motion — dated February 8, 2012 — argues for remand on
    the basis of the Federal Circuit’s decision in GPX International
    Tire Corp., 
    666 F.3d at 734
    .         That decision invalidated Commerce’s
    simultaneous application of countervailing duty law and nonmarket
    economy methodologies below, which was its usual approach under
    then-existing law. The Federal Circuit decided GPX on December 19,
    2011, almost a year after DP appealed the Final Determination to
    this court.        
    Id.
       Just over a month after DP filed the instant
    motion, Congress passed Public Law 112-99, amending the Tariff Act
    of 1930.      
    126 Stat. 265
    .          Public Law 112-99 clarifies that
    “merchandise on which countervailing duties shall be imposed . . .
    includes a class or kind of merchandise imported, or sold (or
    likely   to   be    sold)    for   importation,   into   the   [U.S.]   from   a
    nonmarket economy.”         
    19 U.S.C. § 1671
    (f)(1).      On deciding a motion
    to rehear the case, the Federal Circuit recognized that with the
    passage of Public Law 112-99, “Congress clearly sought to overrule
    . . . GPX.”    GPX Int’l Tire Corp. v. United States, 
    678 F.3d 1308
    ,
    1311 (Fed. Cir. 2012).        Accordingly, the Federal Circuit held that
    “the statute prior to the enactment of the new legislation did not
    impose a restriction on Commerce’s imposition of countervailing
    duties on goods imported by [nonmarket economy] countries to
    account for double counting.”          
    Id. at 1312
    .
    Recognizing that Public Law 112-99 “permits Commerce to apply
    Court No. 11-00081                                                Page 36
    [countervailing duties] concurrently with the [nonmarket economy]
    methodology,” DP argues for the first time in its reply that Public
    Law 112-99 is unconstitutional because it violates DP’s equal
    protection, due process, and ex post facto rights and that “the law
    may have other constitutional infirmities.” Pls.’ Reply at 14–15.
    “Arguments raised for the first time in a reply brief are not
    properly before this court,”       United States v. Ford Motor Co., 
    463 F.3d 1267
    , 1276–77 (Fed. Cir. 2006), and such arguments are usually
    deemed to be waived.    Novosteel SA v. United States, 
    284 F.3d 1261
    ,
    1273–74 (Fed. Cir. 2002); see Ford Motor Co., 
    463 F.3d at
    1276–77.
    Here, however, DP did not have an opportunity to present its
    constitutional objections before it filed its reply because Public
    Law 112-99 did not become effective until March 13, 2012 — well
    after it filed the instant motion.          DP’s good faith effort to
    preserve its objections is dissimilar from other parties’ failure
    in previous cases to present arguments available to them at the
    time    of   filing   the   main   brief,   and   therefore,   waiver   is
    inappropriate.    See Novosteel SA, 
    284 F.3d at
    1273–74; Ford Motor
    Co., 
    463 F.3d at
    1276–77.
    A more fundamental concern is that Commerce and domestic
    industry have not yet been afforded a full opportunity to be heard.
    The unique circumstances of this case may deem the application of
    waiver inappropriate, but it is impossible at present for the court
    to address the important constitutional issues briefed only in two
    Court No. 11-00081                                                           Page 37
    short paragraphs in DP’s reply.               Indeed, beyond challenging the
    substance of DP’s arguments, Commerce or domestic industry may
    justifiably raise concerns about standing, mootness or estoppel.
    Therefore, DP’s request for a remand on its due process, equal
    protection,     and    ex   post      facto   objections      is   denied    without
    prejudice      to   renew     after    Commerce     returns    with    its    remand
    determination.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the court concludes that the Final
    Determination is in accord with the law and is supported by
    substantial evidence, except with respect to Commerce’s explanation
    of its findings regarding the surrogate value for drill pipe green
    tube and to its findings regarding the surrogate labor wage rate as
    applied to DP-Master. On remand, Commerce must either select a new
    surrogate value or explain why IHTS categories 7309.23 and 7309.29
    are more representative of the price for drill pipe green tube than
    other potential surrogate values in light of Infodrive data that
    appears   to    demonstrate        that    the    categories   do     not   actually
    “capture”      green   tube     imports,      and   are   highly    distorted     by
    expensive, finished tubular goods.                  This court also reserves
    judgment on any constitutional issues until after Commerce returns
    with its remand results.
    ORDER
    In accordance with the above, it is hereby
    Court No. 11-00081                                         Page 38
    ORDERED that this case is remanded to the United States
    Department of Commerce, International Trade Administration, to
    reconsider its findings regarding drill pipe green tube and labor
    wage rate surrogate values; and it is further
    ORDERED that the Final Determination is affirmed in all other
    respects; and it is further
    ORDERED that the remand results are due within ninety (90)
    days of the date this opinion is entered.       Any responses or
    comments are due within thirty (30) days thereafter.   Any rebuttal
    comments are due within fifteen (15) days after the date responses
    or comments are due.
    /s/ NICHOLAS TSOUCALAS
    Nicholas Tsoucalas
    Senior Judge
    Dated: November 20, 2012
    New York, New York
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Slip Op. 12-141; Court No.: 11-00081

Citation Numbers: 2012 CIT 141, 887 F. Supp. 2d 1311, 34 I.T.R.D. (BNA) 2231, 2012 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 142, 2012 WL 5873434

Judges: Tsoucalas

Filed Date: 11/20/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/7/2024

Authorities (27)

sigma-corporation-city-pipe-and-foundry-inc-long-beach-iron-works-and , 117 F.3d 1401 ( 1997 )

Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. v. United States , 22 Ct. Int'l Trade 1125 ( 1998 )

Dorbest Ltd. v. United States , 30 Ct. Int'l Trade 1671 ( 2006 )

Ad Hoc Shrimp Trade Action Committee v. United States , 33 Ct. Int'l Trade 915 ( 2009 )

Timken Co. v. United States , 25 Ct. Int'l Trade 939 ( 2001 )

Qvd Food Co., Ltd. v. United States , 658 F.3d 1318 ( 2011 )

Qvd Food Co., Ltd. v. United States , 34 Ct. Int'l Trade 1166 ( 2010 )

Longkou Haimeng MacHinery Co., Ltd. v. United States , 32 Ct. Int'l Trade 1142 ( 2008 )

Taian Ziyang Food Co., Ltd. v. United States , 33 Ct. Int'l Trade 828 ( 2009 )

Mittal Steel Galati S.A. v. United States , 31 Ct. Int'l Trade 1121 ( 2007 )

Fujian Lianfu Forestry Co., Ltd. v. United States , 33 Ct. Int'l Trade 1056 ( 2009 )

Goldlink Industries Co., Ltd. v. United States , 30 Ct. Int'l Trade 616 ( 2006 )

Minebea Co., Ltd. v. United States , 16 Ct. Int'l Trade 20 ( 1992 )

Pt Pindo Deli Pulp v. United States , 825 F. Supp. 2d 1310 ( 2012 )

GPX International Tire Corp. v. United States , 678 F.3d 1308 ( 2012 )

Peer Bearing Co. v. United States , 25 Ct. Int'l Trade 1199 ( 2001 )

United States v. Ford Motor Company , 463 F.3d 1267 ( 2006 )

GPX International Tire Corp. v. United States , 666 F.3d 732 ( 2011 )

Novosteel Sa v. United States, and Bethlehem Steel ... , 284 F.3d 1261 ( 2002 )

Shakeproof Assembly Components, Division of Illinois Tool ... , 268 F.3d 1376 ( 2001 )

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