Ad Hoc Shrimp Trade Action Committee v. United States , 145 F. Supp. 3d 1349 ( 2016 )


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  •                           Slip Op. 16 - 
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    AD HOC SHRIMP TRADE ACTION
    COMMITTEE,
    Plaintiff,             Before: Donald C. Pogue,
    Senior Judge
    v.
    Court No. 13-00346
    UNITED STATES,
    Defendant.
    OPINION
    [affirming the Department of Commerce’s redetermination on
    remand]
    Dated: January 21, 2016
    Andrew W. Kentz, Jordan C. Kahn, and Roop K. Bhatti,
    Picard Kentz & Rowe LLP, of Washington, DC, for the Plaintiff.
    Joshua E. Kurland, Trial Attorney, Commercial
    Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice,
    of Washington, DC, for the Defendant. Also on the brief were
    Benjamin C. Mizer, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General,
    Jeanne E. Davidson, Director, and Patricia M. McCarthy,
    Assistant Director. Of counsel on the brief was Melissa M.
    Brewer, Attorney, Office of the Chief Counsel for Trade
    Enforcement and Compliance, U.S. Department of Commerce, of
    Washington, DC.
    Pogue, Senior Judge:    This action arises from the
    seventh administrative review by the U.S. Department of Commerce
    (“Commerce”) of the antidumping duty order (“the order”) on
    certain frozen warmwater shrimp from the People’s Republic of
    Court No. 13-00346                                              Page 2
    China (“PRC” or “China”).1    In this seventh review, Commerce
    determined to revoke the order with respect to respondent
    Zhanjiang Regal Integrated Marine Resources Company, Limited
    (“Regal”).2
    Adjudicating appeals from Plaintiff Ad Hoc Shrimp
    Trade Action Committee (“AHSTAC”) – an association of domestic
    warmwater shrimp producers that participated in this seventh
    review3 – this Court remanded Commerce’s determination to revoke
    the order as to Regal, ordering the agency to reconsider certain
    surrogate value data used to determine Regal’s normal value.4
    The agency’s Remand Results are now before the court.5
    The parties now raise two issues.   First, Commerce
    protests an aspect of the court’s holding in ordering remand in
    1 See Certain Frozen Warmwater Shrimp from the [PRC], 
    78 Fed. Reg. 56,209
     (Dep’t Commerce Sept. 12, 2013) (final results of
    administrative review; 2011-2012) (“AR7 Final Results”) and
    accompanying Issues & Decision Mem., A-570-893, ARP 11-12
    (Sept. 12, 2013) (“AR7 I&D Mem.”).
    2   AR7 Final Results, 78 Fed. Reg. at 56,209-10.
    3   See Compl., ECF No. 2, at ¶ 7.
    4 Ad Hoc Shrimp Trade Action Comm. v. United States, __ CIT __,
    
    70 F. Supp. 3d 1328
     (2015) (“AHSTAC I”). While relevant
    background is summarized below, familiarity with AHSTAC I is
    presumed.
    5 Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Ct. Remand,
    ECF No. 65 (“Remand Results”).
    Court No. 13-00346                                                              Page 3
    AHSTAC I.6                      Second, AHSTAC challenges Commerce’s selection, in
    the Remand Results, of a certain surrogate value for one of the
    factors of production used to construct Regal’s normal value.7
    The court has jurisdiction pursuant to
    Section 516A(a)(2)(B)(iii) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
    amended, 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iii) (2012),8 and 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (c) (2012).
    As explained below, Commerce’s redeterminations on
    remand are supported by a reasonable reading of the record
    evidence, and are therefore sustained.
    BACKGROUND
    Antidumping duty orders are imposed on imported
    merchandise that is sold at prices below normal value (i.e.,
    “dumped”).9                       “[N]ormal value” is usually the price at which a
    foreign producer’s like products are sold in the exporting
    country or, for merchandise originating in non-market economies
    (“NMEs”), a value calculated using appropriate surrogate market
    
    6    
    Id. at 1, 7
    .
    7 Pl. [AHSTAC]’s Comments on Final Results of Redetermination
    Pursuant to Ct. Order, ECF No. 70 (“Pl.’s Br.”).
    8 Further citations to the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, are to
    the relevant provisions of Title 19 of the U.S. Code,
    2012 edition.
    9   See 
    19 U.S.C. §§ 1673
    ; 1677(34); 1677(35)(A); 1677b.
    Court No. 13-00346                                                         Page 4
    economy data.10     Such orders are regularly administratively
    reviewed by Commerce, such that the agency determines
    producer/exporter-specific dumping margins, covering discrete
    (typically one-year) time periods, by making contemporaneous
    normal value to export price comparisons.11                Pursuant to a
    regulation in effect at the time of the administrative review at
    issue here, Commerce was authorized to revoke the order with
    respect to particular exporters/producers if Commerce found,
    inter alia, that such an exporter/producer had not “sold the
    merchandise at . . . less than normal value for a period of at
    least three consecutive years.”12          Here, Regal requested company-
    specific revocation pursuant to this regulation.13
    By the time of Commerce’s decision regarding Regal’s
    request, Regal had been individually examined in the sixth and
    
    10    See 
    id.
     at §§ 1677b(a)(1)(B)(i), 1677b(c).
    11   See id. at § 1675(a).
    
    1219 C.F.R. § 351.222
    (b)(2)(i)(A) (2012). This regulatory
    provision was subsequently revoked for administrative reviews
    initiated on or after June 20, 2012. Modification to Regulation
    Concerning the Revocation of Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
    Orders, 
    77 Fed. Reg. 29,875
    , 29,876 (Dep’t Commerce
    May 21, 2012). As the review at issue here was initiated on
    April 30, 2012, the regulation was still in effect.
    See Initiation of Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
    Administrative Reviews and Request for Revocation in Part,
    
    77 Fed. Reg. 25,401
    , 25,403 (Dep’t Commerce Apr. 30, 2012).
    13   See AR7 I&D Mem., supra note 1, cmt. 2 at 6.
    Court No. 13-00346                                           Page 5
    seventh reviews, and received zero percent dumping margins in
    both proceedings.14   Regal was not, however, individually
    examined in the fifth review;15 rather, it was assigned a zero
    
    14    Where it is not practicable to make individual weighted
    average dumping margin determinations for each known exporter
    and producer of the subject merchandise for whom review was
    requested, Commerce may limit its individualized examination to
    a smaller number of companies, 19 U.S.C. § 1677f-1(c)(2), and
    assign to the remaining respondents the “all-others” rate
    (calculated in accordance with 19 U.S.C. § 1673d(c)(5)) or,
    where appropriate, the NME countrywide rate.
    See Jiangsu Jiasheng Photovoltaic Tech. Co. v. United States,
    __ CIT __, 
    28 F. Supp. 3d 1317
    , 1339-40 n.107 (2014). Regal was
    individually examined in the sixth and seventh administrative
    reviews of this order. Certain Frozen Warmwater Shrimp from the
    [PRC], 
    77 Fed. Reg. 12,801
    , 12,801 (Dep’t Commerce Mar. 2, 2012)
    (preliminary results, partial rescission, extension of time
    limits for the final results, and intent to revoke, in part, of
    the sixth antidumping duty administrative review) (explaining
    that Commerce selected Regal for individual examination in the
    sixth review) (unchanged in 
    77 Fed. Reg. 53,856
     (Dep’t Commerce
    Sept. 4, 2012) (final results, partial rescission of sixth
    antidumping duty administrative review and determination not to
    revoke in part) and accompanying Issues & Decision Mem., A-570-
    893, ARP 10-11 (Aug. 27, 2012) (“AR6 I&D Mem.”)); Decision Mem.
    for Prelim. Results, Partial Rescission of Antidumping Duty
    Admin. Review, Certain Frozen Warmwater Shrimp from the [PRC],
    A-570-893, ARP 11-12 (Mar. 12, 2013) (“AR7 Prelim. Decision
    Mem.”) at 3 (explaining that Commerce selected Regal for
    individual examination in the seventh review) (adopted in
    
    78 Fed. Reg. 15,696
    , 15,696 n.1 (Dep’t Commerce Mar. 12, 2013)
    (preliminary results of administrative review; 2011-2012)
    (unchanged in AR7 Final Results, 
    78 Fed. Reg. 56,209
    )).
    15Certain Frozen Warmwater Shrimp from the [PRC], 
    76 Fed. Reg. 8338
    , 8341 (Dep’t Commerce Feb. 14, 2011) (preliminary results
    and preliminary partial rescission of fifth antidumping duty
    administrative review) (explaining that Commerce selected only
    one company for individual examination in the fifth review,
    which was not Regal) (unchanged in 
    76 Fed. Reg. 51,940
     (Dep’t
    Commerce Aug. 19, 2011) (final results and partial rescission of
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                               Page 6
    percent dumping margin based on its individually-calculated zero
    percent rate in the previous (fourth) review.16                                                                                     Because Regal
    was not individually examined in the fifth review, Commerce, in
    the seventh review, requested from Regal information and sales
    data from the time period covered by that fifth review,17 “to
    confirm that Regal did not dump [subject merchandise] during
    that time,”18 and hence to confirm that Regal did not dump for
    three consecutive years, as required for revocation eligibility
    under the regulation.19
    Because Commerce considers China to be a non-market
    economy, the agency generally calculates normal value for China-
    originating merchandise using “the value of the factors of
    production utilized in producing the merchandise,” including “an
    amount for general expenses and profit plus the cost of
    containers, coverings, and other expenses” (collectively, the
    “FOPs”), from a surrogate market economy country.20
    
    [fifth] antidumping duty administrative review) (“AR5 Final
    Results”)).
    16    See AR5 Final Results, 76 Fed. Reg. at 51,942.
    17The period of review for that proceeding was February 1, 2009,
    through January 31, 2010. Id. at 51,940.
    18    AR7 I&D Mem., supra note 1, cmt. 2 at 6.
    19    See 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.222
    (b)(2)(i)(A).
    20    See 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1); [Commerce’s] Post-Prelim.
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                               Page 7
    As this Court explained in AHSTAC I:
    Because Commerce’s selection of an appropriate
    surrogate market economy must be such that the chosen
    dataset provides the best available information for
    approximating the NME producers’ experience, Commerce
    chooses a primary surrogate country that is
    economically comparable to the NME country (measured
    in terms of the countries’ comparative per capita
    gross national income (‘GNI’)), is a significant
    producer of comparable merchandise, and provides
    publicly-available, reliable, and relevant data.21
    Commerce originally chose India as the appropriate
    surrogate market economy country for China during the period
    covered by the fifth review.22                                                       Although AHSTAC successfully
    
    Analysis for [Regal] and [Another Resp’t], Certain Frozen
    Warmwater Shrimp from the [PRC], A-570-893, ARP 11-12 (May 20,
    2013), reproduced in App. to Def.’s Resp. in Opp’n to Pl.’s Mot.
    for J. Upon the Agency R., ECF Nos. 55 (conf. version) & 56
    (pub. version) at Tab 7 (“Regal Post-Prelim. Mem.”) at 3
    (unchanged in the AR7 Final Results, 78 Fed. Reg. at 56,210).
    Although the statute permits Commerce to source its data from
    multiple surrogate market economies, see 19 U.S.C.
    § 1677b(c)(1), Commerce normally values all factors of
    production using reliable data from a single surrogate market
    economy country, if possible, see 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.408
    (c)(2);
    Clearon Corp. v. United States, Slip Op. 13-22, 
    2013 WL 646390
    ,
    at *6 (CIT Feb. 20, 2013) (noting that Commerce’s regulatory
    “preference for the use of a single surrogate country” is
    reasonable because, “as Commerce points out, deriving the
    surrogate data from one surrogate country limits the amount of
    distortion introduced into its calculations”) (quotation marks
    and citation omitted).
    21AHSTAC I, __ CIT at __, 70 F. Supp. 3d at 1336 (quotation
    marks and citations omitted).
    22Issues & Decision Mem., Certain Frozen Warmwater Shrimp from
    the [PRC], A-570-893, ARP 09-10 (Aug. 12, 2011) (adopted in AR5
    Final Results, 76 Fed. Reg. at 51,940) (“AR5 I&D Mem.”) cmt. 2
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                               Page 8
    challenged that choice of surrogate for the fifth review,23 the
    issue was subsequently rendered moot and accordingly was
    ultimately not revisited in that proceeding.24                                                                                   And when, in the
    context of Regal’s seventh review revocation request, Commerce
    analyzed whether Regal sold subject merchandise at less than
    normal value during the fifth review period, Commerce again –
    despite the Court’s decision in China Shrimp AR5 – used India as
    the surrogate country for its analysis of Regal’s fifth review
    data.25
    However, as this Court also explained in AHSTAC I:
    In China Shrimp AR5, this Court held that Commerce
    acted arbitrarily in the fifth review by disregarding
    the concern that India’s per capita GNI was nearly a
    third of China’s during the relevant time period,
    whereas Thailand’s per capita GNI was nearly identical
    thereto, despite the record evidence that the quality
    of the available datasets from these two potential
    surrogates was nearly indistinguishable. . . .
    Disregarding the court’s holding in China Shrimp AR5,
    Commerce did not consider or weigh the effect of the
    significant divergence between India and Thailand’s
    respective economic comparability to China when
    
    at 10.
    23See Ad Hoc Shrimp Trade Action Comm. v. United States,
    __ CIT __, 
    882 F. Supp. 2d 1366
    , 1376 (2012) (“China Shrimp
    AR5”) (holding that “Commerce’s stated reasoning regarding the
    surrogate country selection in [the fifth] review [did] not
    comport with a reasonable reading of the record”).
    24AHSTAC I, __ CIT at __, 70 F. Supp. 3d at 1333-34 (providing
    further detail in this regard).
    25    AR7 I&D Mem., supra note 1, cmt. 2 at 6.
    Court No. 13-00346                                            Page 9
    determining, based on reasoning reiterated from the
    fifth review, that while the record provided adequate
    surrogate FOP datasets from both potential surrogates,
    the Indian dataset provided the best available
    information.26
    The court therefore remanded Commerce’s seventh review
    analysis of Regal’s fifth review period sales.   By continuing to
    use Indian surrogate data to arrive at the comparison normal
    values for that period, based on reasoning reiterated from the
    original fifth review:
    [Commerce] ignore[d] this Court’s repeated holdings
    that where, as here, adequate data is available from
    more than one country that is both at a level of
    economic development comparable to the NME and a
    significant producer of comparable merchandise,
    Commerce must weigh the relative merits of such
    potential surrogates’ datasets in a way that does not
    arbitrarily discount the accuracy-enhancing value of
    sourcing surrogate data from a market economy whose
    economic development is as close as possible to that
    of the NME, and in that regard may provide the best
    available information.27
    
    26 AHSTAC I, __ CIT at __, 70 F. Supp. 3d at 1336-37 (quotation
    and alteration marks and citations omitted).
    27Id. at 1337-38 (quotation marks, footnote, and citations
    omitted); see also id. at 1338-39, 42 (“During the fifth review,
    Commerce found that both India and Thailand fell within a range
    of GNI values comparable to the per capita GNI of China, that
    both of these potential surrogates were significant producers of
    comparable merchandise, and that there existed on the record
    sufficient, publicly available surrogate factor information for
    the majority of FOPs from both India and Thailand that was of
    roughly equal specificity, and that otherwise satisfied the
    agency’s usual data-quality standards. But in deciding which of
    these two datasets would provide the best available information,
    Commerce (both in the original fifth review and in examining
    Regal’s fifth review pricing as part of its revocation analysis)
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                            Page 10
    On remand here, Commerce reconsidered its surrogate
    country choice for the fifth review period, and “determined to
    select Thailand as the primary surrogate country [in light of]
    the proximity of Thailand’s per capita GNI to the PRC’s GNI and
    because the Thai surrogate value . . . data used to value
    Regal’s [FOPs] is superior.”28                                                       With respect to one of the
    inputs, however – shrimp feed – the agency found that the Thai
    values were aberrational, and therefore unreliable, and
    accordingly determined to use alternative data from a secondary
    
    categorically and formulaically disregarded the evidence that
    the Indian data came from a country whose per capita GNI was
    barely a third of China’s, whereas the Thai data was from an
    economy whose per capita GNI was virtually identical to China’s.
    Commerce’s refusal to account for the accuracy-enhancing value
    of relative GNI proximity when evaluating the relative merits of
    alternative satisfactory datasets, to determine which set
    constitutes the best available surrogate value information, is
    arbitrary and, therefore, unreasonable. . . . Accordingly, the
    agency’s reliance in this revocation proceeding upon its
    original fifth review analysis of surrogate dataset alternatives
    is not supported by substantial evidence, and must therefore be
    remanded for reconsideration.”) (internal quotation and
    alteration marks, footnote, and citations omitted).
    28Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 1; see also id. at 7 (“[A]
    comparison of the [fifth review period] per capita GNI of India,
    $1,070, Thailand, $2,840, and the PRC[,] $2,940, indicates that
    Thailand’s per capita GNI is closer to the PRC’s per capita GNI
    than India’s per capita GNI. For this reason, and for the data
    considerations explained below, we now rely on Thai [surrogate
    value] data to value Regal’s inputs in [the fifth review
    period].”).
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                          Page 11
    surrogate country – Indonesia.29                                    AHSTAC now challenges this
    latter determination.30
    Because Commerce protests AHSTAC I,31 the court will
    first review its prior holding.32                                    Accordingly, following a brief
    statement of the relevant standard of review, this opinion will
    discuss AHSTAC I in light of the Remand Results.                                    The court will
    then address AHSTAC’s challenge to the Remand Results.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The court upholds Commerce’s antidumping
    determinations on remand if they are in accordance with law,
    consistent with the court’s remand order, and supported by
    
    29    Id. at 11-13.
    30    Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70, at 6-14.
    31See Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 1 (“[P]ursuant to
    [AHSTAC I], we have, under protest, reconsidered the information
    on record and determined to select Thailand as the primary
    surrogate country . . . .”) (citing Viraj Grp., Ltd. v. United
    States, 
    343 F.3d 1371
    , 1376 (Fed. Cir. 2003)); id. at 7
    (“[Commerce] respectfully disagrees with the Court’s holding
    that the Department must consider the relative GNI differences
    of potential surrogate countries . . . .”).
    32Cf. GPX Int’l Tire Corp. v. United States, __ CIT __,
    
    942 F. Supp. 2d 1343
    , 1348 n.2 (2013) (“The only legitimate
    purpose of registering a protest in a remand determination is to
    preserve a particular issue for appeal where the agency has been
    compelled to take a particular step that results in an outcome
    not of its choosing.”).
    Court No. 13-00346                                           Page 12
    substantial evidence.33    Substantial evidence is “such relevant
    evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to
    support a conclusion,”34 and the substantial evidence standard of
    review “can be translated roughly to mean ‘is [the
    determination] unreasonable?’”35
    DISCUSSION
    I. AHSTAC I and the Remand Results
    In making its protest, Commerce mischaracterizes the
    court’s holding in AHSTAC I.    According to Commerce, AHSTAC I
    requires the agency, in all instances, to “consider the relative
    GNI differences of potential surrogate countries that [Commerce]
    considers to be at the same level of economic comparability.”36
    Instead what the court held in AHSTAC I is that, on the
    particular record presented here – i.e., where both India and
    
    33 See 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i); Camau Frozen Seafood
    Processing Imp. Exp. Corp. v. United States, __ CIT __,
    
    968 F. Supp. 2d 1328
    , 1334 (2014).
    34Consol. Edison Co. v. NLRB, 
    305 U.S. 197
    , 229 (1938)
    (citations omitted).
    35Nippon Steel Corp. v. United States, 
    458 F.3d 1345
    , 1351 (Fed.
    Cir. 2006) (citation omitted, alteration in the original);
    On-Line Careline, Inc. v. America Online, Inc., 
    229 F.3d 1080
    ,
    1085 (Fed. Cir. 2000) (“The substantial evidence standard
    requires the reviewing court to ask whether a reasonable person
    might find that the evidentiary record supports the agency’s
    conclusion.”) (citations omitted).
    36   See Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 7.
    Court No. 13-00346                                          Page 13
    Thailand satisfied the statutory criteria of economic
    comparability to the PRC and significant production of
    comparable merchandise, and where the quality and specificity of
    the respective Indian and Thai potential surrogate datasets were
    materially indistinguishable – Commerce unreasonably concluded
    that relative per capita GNI proximity to the PRC was entirely
    irrelevant when choosing between these otherwise
    indistinguishable datasets.37
    As the court explained in AHSTAC I, Commerce’s
    conclusion “that significant ‘differences of quality of data
    sources’ adequately support the agency’s selection of Indian
    rather than Thai surrogate values” was not supported by the
    record evidence.38    Specifically, as Commerce acknowledges, “the
    record contain[ed] publicly available [fifth review period]
    surrogate factor information for the majority of FOPs from both
    India and Thailand,” and “the Indian and Thai import statistics
    did not allow [the agency] to distinguish between data from the
    two countries.”39    Nevertheless, claiming an unfounded lack of
    
    37    AHSTAC I, __ CIT at __, 70 F. Supp. 3d at 1337-42.
    38Id. at 1339 (quoting AR7 I&D Mem., supra note 1, cmt. 2
    at 10).
    39Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 8 (citing AR5 Final Results,
    
    76 Fed. Reg. 51,940
    , and accompanying AR5 I&D Mem.,
    supra note 22, cmt. 2); see also AHSTAC I, __ CIT at __,
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                            Page 14
    specificity in the Indian data, Commerce determined, in the
    original fifth review, that the Indian data provided the “best
    available information.”40                                               Commerce then adopted this fifth
    review reasoning when analyzing Regal’s fifth review sales in
    
    70 F. Supp. 3d at 1338 (“During the fifth review, Commerce found
    that both India and Thailand fell within a range of GNI values
    comparable to the per capita GNI of China, that both of these
    potential surrogates were significant producers of comparable
    merchandise, and that ‘[t]here exist[ed] on the record
    sufficient, publicly available surrogate factor information for
    the majority of FOPs from both India and Thailand’ that was ‘of
    roughly equal specificity,’ and that otherwise satisfied the
    agency’s usual data-quality standards.”) (quoting AR5 I&D Mem.,
    supra note 22, cmt. 2 at 7 (alterations in AHSTAC I)).
    Indeed the two datasets were so nearly indistinguishable
    that Commerce resorted to “minute, seemingly hair-splitting
    differences” to determine the Indian data to be superior –
    finding that the Indian data for shrimp larvae (the critical
    input used by the sole mandatory respondent in the original
    fifth review but not used at all by Regal), though also of very
    similar quality to the Thai shrimp larvae data, did not specify
    the species of shrimp to which they pertained, whereas the Thai
    data were specific to a species of shrimp that the mandatory
    respondent in the fifth review did not produce. AHSTAC I,
    __ CIT at __, 70 F. Supp. 3d at 1340.
    Commerce also attempted to distinguish the two datasets by
    determining that the Indian financial statement on record more
    closely approximated Regal’s experience, which was that of an
    integrated producer (i.e., a shrimp farmer as well as shrimp
    processor). Id. at 1341. But as the court noted in AHSTAC I,
    and as Commerce acknowledged in the Remand Results, this
    distinction between the datasets was not supported by the record
    because in fact the record contained evidence that the Thai
    financial statement was also from an integrated producer. Id.;
    Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 9-10.
    40See AHSTAC I, __ CIT at __, 70 F. Supp. 3d at 1336, 1338-40;
    19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1).
    Court No. 13-00346                                           Page 15
    the context of the seventh review revocation proceeding.41     In
    this context, the court held that Commerce acted unreasonably
    when, in choosing between otherwise essentially
    indistinguishable datasets, the agency “completely (and
    categorically) ignored the biggest difference in quality between
    the two datasets, which is that the Thai data was from a market
    economy that very nearly mirrored China’s level of economic
    development . . ., whereas the Indian data reflected values
    present in an economy whose per capita GNI was multiple orders
    of magnitude lower than China’s.”42   Thus while Commerce is
    
    41    See AHSTAC I, __ CIT at __, 70 F. Supp. 3d at 1336-37
    (“Defendant argues that, in revisiting the issue in the context
    of Regal’s revocation request, Commerce recognized that the
    Court had previously remanded Commerce’s fifth review primary
    surrogate country selection, and that Commerce therefore
    reconsidered its surrogate country selection for the limited
    purpose of evaluating Regal’s revocation request. But in fact
    the agency itself explicitly states that Commerce did not
    reconsider this matter. Specifically, Commerce explained that
    because it ultimately was not required to respond to the
    surrogate country issue, Commerce did not reexamine the issue of
    surrogate country selection and therefore continues to find
    India to be a reliable source for surrogate values for the
    calculation of normal value for the period covered by the fifth
    review.”) (emphasis in AHSTAC I) (quotation and alteration marks
    and citations omitted).
    42Id. at 1341 (emphasis in original); see also id. at 1341 n.67
    (noting Commerce’s policy that “‘the closest country to [an
    NME]’s level of economic development’ is the country whose per
    capita GNI most closely approximates that of the NME”) (quoting
    Antidumping Methodologies in Proceedings Involving Non-Market
    Economy Countries: Surrogate Country Selection and Separate
    Rates, 
    72 Fed. Reg. 13,246
    , 13,247 (Dep’t Commerce Mar. 21,
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                            Page 16
    correct that the statute does not require the agency to choose
    surrogate FOP data from a country that is most economically
    comparable to the NME43 – because the most economically
    comparable country will not necessarily always provide the best
    available information – nevertheless where the competing
    datasets are otherwise indistinguishable, Commerce acts
    unreasonably if it “arbitrarily discount[s] the accuracy-
    enhancing value of sourcing surrogate data from a market economy
    whose economic development is as close as possible to that of
    the NME, and in that regard may provide the ‘best available
    information.’”44
    In protesting (its own misinterpretation of) the
    court’s holding, Commerce emphasizes its policy of “sequential
    
    2007) (alteration in AHSTAC I)).
    43Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 5-6 (relying on 19 U.S.C.
    §§ 1677b(c)(1), (4)).
    44AHSTAC I, __ CIT at __, 70 F. Supp. 3d at 1337-38 (quoting
    19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1)) (additional citations and footnote
    omitted); see also id. at 1336 (“In China Shrimp AR5, this Court
    held that Commerce acted arbitrarily in the fifth review by
    disregarding the concern that India’s per capita GNI was nearly
    a third of China’s during the relevant time period, whereas
    Thailand’s per capita GNI was nearly identical thereto, despite
    the record evidence that the quality of the available datasets
    from these two potential surrogates was nearly
    indistinguishable.”) (quotation and alteration marks and
    citations omitted).
    Court No. 13-00346                                             Page 17
    consideration” of the surrogate country eligibility criteria.45
    Specifically, Commerce’s policy is that the agency first
    considers economic comparability, creating a list of potential
    surrogates that are all “at a level of economic development
    comparable to that of the [NME],”46 as required by statute.47
    Next, Commerce analyzes which of the countries on that list
    produce comparable merchandise to that covered by the proceeding
    in question.48    Then, the agency determines which of those
    countries are “significant” producers of such merchandise.49      And
    finally, “if more than one country has survived the selection
    process to this point,” then Commerce will choose from among the
    survivors “the country with the best [FOP] data.”50
    As applied here, Commerce Policy 4.1 directs the
    agency to categorically disregard the relative per capita GNI
    
    45 Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 5 (quoting Import Admin., U.S.
    Dep’t Commerce, Non–Market Economy Surrogate Country Selection
    Process, Policy Bulletin 04.1 (2004), available at
    enforcement.trade.gov/policy/bull04-1.html (last visited
    Jan. 15, 2016) (“Commerce Policy 4.1”)).
    46   19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(4)(A).
    47See Commerce Policy 4.1, supra note 45, at “Economic
    Comparability.”
    48   Id. at “Comparable Merchandise.”
    49   Id. at “Significant Producer”; see 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(4)(B).
    50   Id. at “Data Considerations.”
    Court No. 13-00346                                           Page 18
    differences among the potential surrogates once the initial list
    of countries satisfying the threshold economic comparability
    criterion is generated.51    In particular, this policy requires
    the agency to continue to disregard the potential surrogates’
    relative per capita GNI proximity to the per capita GNI of the
    NME even where, as in China Shrimp AR5 and AHSTAC I, not only
    did more than one country survive all of the steps of the
    policy’s sequential analysis, but the quality of those
    countries’ respective FOP datasets was materially
    indistinguishable.    In such cases, the categorical application
    of Commerce Policy 4.1 leads to the unreasonable result rejected
    by the court in AHSTAC I and China Shrimp AR5 where, forced to
    choose among two potential surrogates on the basis of data
    quality distinctions alone, “Commerce concluded that Indian data
    were superior to Thai data essentially based on a finding that a
    subset of the Indian data [was] more vague than its counterpart
    within the Thai data”52 (because, although the Indian data likely
    
    51    See id. at “Economic Comparability” (providing that once the
    agency generates the “list of potential surrogate countries that
    are at a comparable level of economic development to the NME
    country,” the countries on this list should thereafter “be
    considered equivalent in terms of economic comparability”)
    (footnotes omitted). Commerce’s sole exception to this sequence
    is not relevant here. See id. at “Exceptions to the Sequencing
    Procedure.”
    52   China Shrimp AR5, __ CIT at __, 882 F. Supp. 2d at 1376
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                            Page 19
    also pertained to a different species of shrimp than the one
    produced by the sole mandatory respondent in the original fifth
    review, the Indian data, unlike the Thai data, did not
    explicitly confirm this53), while entirely disregarding “the
    concern that India’s per capita GNI was nearly a third of
    China’s, whereas Thailand’s per capita GNI was nearly identical
    thereto.”54                      In such cases, the categorical application of
    Commerce Policy 4.1 may therefore lead the agency to a choice of
    surrogate FOP values that does not comport with a reasonable
    reading of the record evidence, which is precisely what this
    Court held in China Shrimp AR5 and AHSTAC I.                                                                                 Accordingly, in
    cases where a strict application of Commerce Policy 4.1 would
    lead to an unreasonable result – such as where more than one
    potential surrogate satisfies all threshold criteria and their
    respective FOP datasets are materially indistinguishable –
    Commerce must consider all important aspects of what constitutes
    “the best available information”55 including, where appropriate,
    
    (citation omitted).
    53    See id. at n.15.
    54    Id. at 1376 (citation omitted).
    5519 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1); cf. Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n
    v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    463 U.S. 29
    , 43 (1983)
    (stating that an agency acts arbitrarily when it fails to
    “consider an important aspect of the problem”).
    Court No. 13-00346                                              Page 20
    the potential surrogates’ relative GNI proximity to the NME.
    Despite its protest, however, on remand Commerce
    reexamined the fifth review period Indian and Thai surrogate FOP
    datasets and found that, unlike the original fifth review (where
    the datasets were compared to the production experience of the
    mandatory respondent in that proceeding), when the datasets are
    evaluated based on Regal’s production experience, the two are no
    longer materially indistinguishable, because in fact the
    available Thai data better approximate Regal’s production
    factors.56    Specifically, as the court noted in AHSTAC I, the
    critical input in Regal’s production of subject merchandise
    during the fifth review period was a different FOP than the
    input used by the mandatory respondent in the original fifth
    review analysis.57    Whereas the fifth review mandatory
    
    56    Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 8-9; see AHSTAC I, __ CIT
    at __, 70 F. Supp. 3d at 1336 (noting that Commerce did not
    initially reconsider its original fifth review surrogate country
    analysis in the context of Regal’s company-specific revocation
    proceeding); id. at 1340 (holding that “Commerce’s reasoning
    that its original analysis in the fifth review supports its
    conclusion here that the Indian data [are] superior to the Thai
    data because the former more closely match[] Regal’s own FOPs
    and production process is not supported by a reasonable reading
    of the evidence”) (citation omitted).
    57AHSTAC I, __ CIT at __, 70 F. Supp. 3d at 1340; see Remand
    Results, ECF No. 65, at 8 (“In the underlying AR5 Final Results,
    . . . [Commerce] evaluated the surrogate factor information for
    valuing shrimp larvae because shrimp larvae was the critical
    input in the production of the subject merchandise for . . . the
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                            Page 21
    respondent’s key input was shrimp larvae, for which the fifth
    review Indian and Thai data were very nearly indistinguishable,58
    Regal’s key input was broodstock, an FOP for which the only
    available data on record was from Thailand.59
    Finding that broodstock accounts for a significant
    portion of Regal’s fifth review normal value calculation, and
    that the Thai data were most specific with regard to this input,
    Commerce therefore concluded on remand that the fifth review
    Thai surrogate data offered the best available information,60
    because Thailand satisfied the threshold statutory criteria of
    economic comparability to China and significant production of
    
    sole mandatory respondent in that review. As noted by the
    Court, Regal does not purchase shrimp larvae; rather, it uses
    broodstock as its key physical input.”) (citations omitted).
    58    See AHSTAC I, __ CIT at __, 70 F. Supp. 3d at 1340.
    59See id.; Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 8 (“The only available
    [surrogate value] data on the record for broodstock is from
    Thailand.”) (citation omitted). As noted in AHSTAC I, Commerce
    also selected Thailand as the primary surrogate country for the
    following sixth and seventh reviews, __ CIT at __,
    70 F. Supp. 3d at 1340 n.60 (citations omitted), in which Regal
    was a mandatory respondent, see supra note 14 (providing
    relevant background and citations).
    60See Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 8-9 (explaining that
    “[Commerce] favors one country over another on the basis of
    surrogate value specificity where a surrogate value from one
    country representing a significant portion of normal value is
    more specific to a respondent’s input,” and choosing Thailand as
    “the appropriate surrogate country” because Regal’s “key
    physical input” was broodstock and only Thai data was available
    for that FOP) (citations omitted).
    Court No. 13-00346                                           Page 22
    comparable merchandise,61 and because “the specificity offered by
    the Thai import data with respect to Regal’s broodstock is more
    specific to the input than any other [surrogate value] data on
    the record.”62
    Accordingly, AHSTAC I’s holding – that Commerce acts
    unreasonably when, faced with two or more potential surrogate
    datasets that are otherwise materially indistinguishable, the
    agency categorically refuses to consider their relative GNI
    proximity to the NME as a criterion for choosing among them – is
    no longer implicated here, because Commerce no longer considers
    the two datasets involved here to be materially
    indistinguishable.    Commerce’s protest is therefore irrelevant.
    Moreover, because Commerce’s conclusion – that Thailand offers
    the best available surrogate FOP information for calculating
    Regal’s fifth review normal value because it satisfies the
    threshold statutory criteria and presents the most specific data
    with regard to a significant portion of Regal’s normal value –
    comports with a reasonable reading of the law and evidentiary
    record, it is sustained.
    
    61 Id. at 5 n.16, 6-7; see 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(4).
    62   Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 9.
    Court No. 13-00346                                             Page 23
    II. AHSTAC’s Challenge to the Remand Results
    AHSTAC challenges Commerce’s selection, on remand, of
    a surrogate value for shrimp feed in its calculation of Regal’s
    normal value for the fifth review period.63       With regard to this
    FOP, Commerce concluded that all available Thai values on the
    record were aberrational and thus unreliable,64 and accordingly
    determined to use alternative data from a secondary surrogate
    country – Indonesia – to value this FOP.65       AHSTAC challenges
    this determination, arguing that Commerce instead should have
    used Thai shrimp feed data from the fourth review period,
    adjusted for inflation.66
    While Commerce normally prefers to source all
    surrogate FOP values from a single (“primary”) surrogate
    country, the agency will use data from a different surrogate
    country “if data from the primary surrogate country are
    unavailable or unreliable.”67    “[W]here no suitable [surrogate
    
    63    Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70, at 6-14; see Remand Results,
    ECF No. 65, at 11.
    64   Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 11-12, 16.
    65   Id. at 13, 17.
    66   Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70, at 7-14.
    67Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 10 (quoting Jiaxing Bro.
    Fastener Co. v. United States, __ CIT __, 
    11 F. Supp. 3d 1326
    ,
    [1332-33] (2014) (quoting Issues & Decision Mem., Sodium
    Hexametaphosphate from the [PRC], A-570-908, ARP 10-11
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                            Page 24
    value] is available from the primary surrogate country,”
    Commerce uses surrogate data from “other countries that have
    been found to be significant producers of comparable merchandise
    and economically comparable to the NME country in question.”68
    Here, although the parties agree that Commerce may use secondary
    surrogate country data when a particular FOP value from the
    primary surrogate is unreliable/aberrational,69 AHSTAC claims
    
    (Sept. 19, 2012) (adopted in 
    77 Fed. Reg. 59,375
     (Dep’t Commerce
    Sept. 27, 2012) (final results of antidumping duty
    administrative review)) cmt. I at 4 (“It is [Commerce]’s well
    established practice to rely upon the primary surrogate country
    for all surrogate values, whenever possible, and to only resort
    to a secondary surrogate country if data from the primary
    surrogate country are unavailable or unreliable.”) (citations to
    prior determinations omitted))); see also Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70,
    at 6 (discussing Commerce’s preference for “[u]sing reliable
    data from the primary surrogate” to value all FOPs) (emphasis
    added) (quoting Clearon Corp., 
    2013 WL 646390
    , at *5 (quoting
    the agency’s brief in that case))).
    68Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 12 (citing Issues & Decision
    Mem., Tapered Roller Bearings and Parts Thereof, Finished and
    Unfinished, from the [PRC], A-570-601, ARP 07-08 (Dec. 28, 2009)
    (adopted in 
    75 Fed. Reg. 844
     (Dep’t Commerce Jan. 6, 2010)
    (final results of the 2007-2008 administrative review of the
    antidumping duty order)) (“TRBs from China”) cmt. 3; Issues &
    Decision Mem., Certain Cut-to-Length Carbon Steel Plate from
    Romania, A-485-803, ARP 02-03 (Mar. 7, 2005) (adopted in 
    70 Fed. Reg. 12,651
     (Dep’t Commerce Mar. 15, 2005) (notice of final
    results and final partial rescission of antidumping duty
    administrative review)) cmt. 3).
    69See Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 11 (“Although import
    statistics obtained from [the Global Trade Atlas (‘GTA’)]
    satisfy [Commerce]’s primary criteria for the suitability of
    [surrogate values] in antidumping proceedings involving NME
    countries, [Commerce] disregards GTA data for a certain factor,
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                            Page 25
    that Commerce arbitrarily departed from its established practice
    by valuing the shrimp feed surrogate FOP for Regal’s fifth
    review normal value calculation using data from Indonesia,70 and
    that Commerce’s choice of the Indonesian data was not supported
    by substantial evidence.71
    A. Commerce Reasonably Determined That The Fifth Review Thai
    Value for Shrimp Feed Was Aberrational.
    Both parties agree that Commerce’s established
    practice for determining whether a given surrogate value is
    aberrational, and therefore unreliable, is to “compare[] the
    surrogate value in question to the [Gobal Trade Atlas] average
    unit values calculated for the same period using data from the
    other potential surrogate countries [that satisfied the
    threshold statutory eligibility criteria], to the extent that
    such data are available.”72                                                  Commerce also notes that the agency
    
    either in whole or in part, where there is reason to believe
    that the prices reflected in the import data may be unreliable.
    [In such cases,] [Commerce] applies certain criteria to
    determine whether a surrogate value is aberrational.”)
    (citing TRBs from China, supra note 68, cmt. 3); Pl.’s Br.,
    ECF No. 70, at 6-7 (discussing Commerce’s practice “for testing
    the reliability of surrogate values alleged to be
    aberrational”).
    70    Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70, at 4-10.
    71   Id. at 10-14.
    72Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 11 (citing Issues & Decision
    Mem., Carbazole Violet Pigment 23 from the [PRC], A-570-892,
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                            Page 26
    has previously examined the primary surrogate’s data for the FOP
    value in question “over multiple years[,] to determine if the
    current data appear aberrational with respect to historical
    values.”73
    Here, the Thai value for shrimp feed during the period
    
    ARP 07-08 (June 21, 2010) (adopted in 
    75 Fed. Reg. 36,630
     (Dep’t
    Commerce June 28, 2010) (final results of antidumping duty
    administrative review)) (“CVP 23 from China”) cmt. 4; Certain
    Lined Paper Products from the [PRC], A-570-901, Investigation
    (Aug. 30, 2006) (adopted in 
    71 Fed. Reg. 53,079
     (Dep’t Commerce
    Sept. 8, 2006) (notice of final determination of sales at less
    than fair value, and affirmative critical circumstances, in
    part)) cmt. 5); see also Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70, at 7 (quoting
    Issues & Decision Mem., Multilayered Wood Flooring from the
    [PRC], A-570-970, ARP 11-12 (May 9, 2014) (adopted in 
    79 Fed. Reg. 26,712
     (Dep’t Commerce May 9, 2014) (final results of
    antidumping duty administrative review; 2011-2012)) (“Wood
    Flooring from China”) cmt. 6 at 42 (“‘To test the reliability of
    the surrogate values alleged to be aberrational, [Commerce]
    compare[s] the selected surrogate value for each FOP to the
    [average unit values] calculated for the same period using data
    from the other surrogate countries [Commerce] designated for
    this review, to the extent that such data are available.’”)
    (quoting Issues & Decision Mem., Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel
    Flat Products from Romania, A-485-806, ARP 02-03 (June 6, 2005)
    (adopted in 
    70 Fed. Reg. 34,448
     (Dep’t Commerce June 14, 2005)
    (final results of antidumping duty administrative review))
    (“Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel from Romania”) cmt. 2 at 19)).
    73Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 11-12 (citing Issues & Decision
    Mem., Lightweight Thermal Paper from the [PRC], A-570-920,
    Investigation (Oct. 2, 2008) (adopted in 
    73 Fed. Reg. 57,329
    (Dep’t Commerce Oct. 2, 2008) (final determination of sales at
    less than fair value)) cmt. 10; Issues & Decision Mem.,
    Saccharin from the [PRC], A-570-878, ARP 02-04 (Feb. 13, 2006)
    (adopted in 
    71 Fed. Reg. 7515
     (Dep’t Commerce Feb. 13, 2006)
    (final results and partial rescission of antidumping duty
    administrative review)) cmt. 5).
    Court No. 13-00346                                           Page 27
    covered by the fifth review was 25.50 U.S. dollars per kilogram
    (“USD/kg”).74   Of the other potential surrogate countries that
    satisfied the threshold eligibility criteria, only three
    provided usable shrimp feed data:   Indonesia, which had a value
    for shrimp feed during the period covered by the fifth review of
    1.23 USD/kg; India, which provided a fifth review value of
    1.36 USD/kg for this FOP; and the Philippines, which provided a
    fifth review value of 0.12 USD/kg for this FOP.75   Additionally,
    the historical Thai values for this FOP varied significantly;
    these values were 2.60 USD/kg (during the period covered by the
    fourth review), 14.50 USD/kg (during the period covered by the
    sixth review), and 26.83 USD/kg (during the period covered by
    the seventh review),76 such that “the Thai [average unit values]
    for shrimp feed over the periods examined ranged from 2.6[0] to
    
    74 
    Id.
     at 12 (citing Ex. 2.b to Surrogate Factor Valuations for
    the Prelim. Results, Certain Frozen Warmwater Shrimp from the
    [PRC], A-570-893, ARP 11-12 (Mar. 4, 2012), reproduced in App.
    of Docs. in Supp. of Def.’s Resp. to Pl.’s Remand Comments,
    ECF No. 76 (“Def.’s Remand App.”) at Tab 3 (“AR7 Prelim. SV
    Mem.”); [AHSTAC’s] Submission of Publicly Available Info. to
    Value Factors of Production, Certain Frozen Warmwater Shrimp
    from the [PRC], A-570-893, ARP 11-12 (Sept. 24, 2012),
    reproduced in Def.’s Remand App., ECF No. 76 at Tab 1 (“AHSTAC’s
    SV Submission”), at Attach. 2).
    75Id. at 13 (citing Ex. 2.b to AR7 Prelim. SV Mem., ECF No. 76
    at Tab 3).
    76Id. at 12 (citing Ex. 2.b to AR7 Prelim. SV Mem., ECF No. 76
    at Tab 3; AHSTAC’s SV Submission, ECF No. 76 at Tab 1,
    at Attach. 2).
    Court No. 13-00346                                           Page 28
    26.83 USD/kg, while the [average unit values] for the other
    [potential surrogates satisfying the threshold eligibility
    criteria] ranged from 0.13-0.51 USD/kg (Philippines),
    0.92-1.29 USD/kg (Indonesia)[,] [and] 1.30-1.37 USD/kg (India)
    during the same periods.”77   Comparing the Thai fifth review
    shrimp feed FOP value of 25.50 USD/kg to this historical data,
    as well as to the contemporaneous fifth review values for this
    FOP from the other potential surrogates, Commerce concluded that
    the 25.50 USD/kg Thai fifth review value for shrimp feed was
    aberrational and therefore unreliable.78
    AHSTAC does not appear to contest Commerce’s finding
    that the Thai shrimp feed value for the fifth review period was
    aberrational.   Instead, AHSTAC argues that Commerce should have
    taken AHSTAC’s suggestion to use the Thai shrimp feed value for
    the fourth review period, 2.60 USD/kg, rather than the
    contemporaneous fifth review value, and applied the aberration
    test solely to that value, in isolation from the other
    
    77    
    Id.
     at 16 (citing Ex. 2.b to AR7 Prelim. SV Mem., ECF No. 76
    at Tab 3; AHSTAC’s SV Submission, ECF No. 76 at Tab 1,
    at Attach. 2).
    78Id. at 12 (“[B]ecause the Thai import data for shrimp feed
    appears to be aberrational based on historical data and
    contrasting against imports made during the [fifth review
    period] by [the other potential surrogates], [Commerce] has
    looked to other potential sources by which to value shrimp
    feed.”).
    Court No. 13-00346                                                     Page 29
    historical Thai data showing that the Thai feed values were
    generally unreliably volatile during the relevant historical
    period - i.e., AHSTAC argues that Commerce should have compared
    the 2.60 USD/kg fourth review Thai value to the other fourth
    review values available to find that it was not aberrational,
    and then used that fourth review Thai value (adjusted for
    inflation) for the fifth review normal value calculation.79
    But although AHSTAC contends that “[t]he question
    confronted by Commerce was whether the Thai [fourth review]
    shrimp feed value was aberrational,”80 in fact the question
    before Commerce was whether the Thai fifth review value was
    aberrational and, if so, which secondary surrogate FOP data
    provide a reasonably reliable alternative.81               Here, consistent
    
    79    See Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70, at 7-10.
    80   
    Id. at 9
    .
    81See Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 11, 14-15; CVP 23 from
    China, supra note 72, cmt. 4 at 13-14 (“[19 U.S.C.
    § 1677b(c)(1)] directs [Commerce] to use the ‘best available
    information’ on the record when selecting surrogate values with
    which to value FOPs. In this regard, [Commerce]’s practice is
    to choose surrogate values that represent[, inter alia,] . . .
    prices that are contemporaneous with the [period of review]
    . . . . If [the record] presents sufficient evidence to
    demonstrate [that] a particular surrogate value is not viable,
    [Commerce] will assess all relevant price information on the
    record . . . in order to accurately value the input in
    question.”) (emphasis added); see also Wood Flooring from China,
    supra note 72, cmt. 6 (quoted in Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70, at 7) at
    40 (noting that among the “critical elements” of Commerce’s test
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                            Page 30
    with AHSTAC’s formulation of the agency’s practice in this
    regard, Commerce “compared the [Thai fifth review] surrogate
    value for [the shrimp feed] FOP to the [average unit values]
    calculated for the same period using data from the other
    surrogate countries [that Commerce] designated for this
    review.”82                     Commerce reasonably found that the 25.50 USD/kg Thai
    fifth review value was aberrational when compared with the other
    available fifth review surrogate values of 0.12, 1.23, and
    1.36 USD/kg.83                            As this finding is both reasonable and
    uncontested,84 it is sustained.                                                         The next question before the
    court, therefore, is whether Commerce’s choice of the
    alternative Indonesian surrogate data for this fifth review FOP
    was reasonable.
    B.            Commerce’s Choice of Indonesian Fifth Review Shrimp
    Feed Data Was Reasonable.
    Having found the Thai fifth review shrimp feed data to
    be unreliable, Commerce determined to value this FOP using
    
    for surrogate FOP data reliability in NME proceedings is
    “contemporane[ity] with the [period of review]”).
    82See Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70, at 7 (quoting Wood Flooring from
    China, supra note 72, cmt. 6 at 42 (quoting Hot-Rolled Carbon
    Steel from Romania, supra note 72, cmt. 2 at 19));
    Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 12-13.
    83    See Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 12-13.
    84    See supra note 79 and accompanying text.
    Court No. 13-00346                                                     Page 31
    contemporaneous data from Indonesia, which was the second
    largest producer of comparable merchandise from the six
    countries determined to be economically comparable to China, and
    which provided the median available non-aberrational fifth
    review value for this FOP.85            AHSTAC again argues that Commerce
    should have chosen the fourth review Thai data, rather than the
    contemporaneous Indonesian data, to substitute for the
    aberrational fifth review Thai value.86
    As Commerce has explained its established practice,
    however, “when a party claims that a particular surrogate is not
    appropriate to value the FOP in question, [Commerce] has
    determined that the burden is on that party to prove the
    inadequacy of said [surrogate value] or, alternatively, to show
    that another value is preferable.”87               Here, relying on Commerce’s
    regulatory preference for valuing all FOPs using data from the
    same surrogate country whenever possible,88 AHSTAC claims that
    
    85    See Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 13.
    86   See Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70, at 10-14.
    87TRBs from China, supra note 68, cmt. 2 at 17 (citations
    omitted); see also Wood Flooring from China, supra note 72,
    cmt. 6 (quoted in Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70, at 7) at 40 (“When a
    party claims that a particular [surrogate value] is not
    appropriate to value a certain FOP, the burden is on that party
    to provide evidence demonstrating the inadequacy of the
    [surrogate value].”) (citations omitted).
    88   See 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.408
    (c)(2) (“[In NME cases, Commerce]
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                            Page 32
    the fourth review Thai value for shrimp feed is preferable to
    Commerce’s chosen contemporaneous Indonesian value because all
    the other fifth review period surrogate FOP values in this case
    were from Thailand,89 and the 2.60 USD/kg fourth review shrimp
    feed value from Thailand was not aberrational,90 but “simply at
    the high end of a wide range of [contemporaneous] values for
    [the other potential surrogate] countries.”91                                                                                 Commerce, however,
    concluded that AHSTAC did not meet its burden to demonstrate
    that the fourth review Thai value was preferable to the
    
    normally will value all factors [of production] in a single
    surrogate country.”); Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70, at 5 (quoting
    Issues & Decision Mem., Certain Steel Nails from the [PRC],
    A-570-909, ARP 10-11 (Mar. 5, 2013) (adopted in 
    78 Fed. Reg. 16,651
     (Dep’t Commerce Mar. 18, 2013) (final results of third
    antidumping duty administrative review; 2010-2011)) cmt. 1.D.d
    [at 13] (“It is most accurate to rely on factor costs from a
    single surrogate country because sourcing data from a single
    country . . . enables [Commerce] to capture the complete
    interrelationship of factor costs that a producer in the primary
    surrogate country faces. [Commerce] only resorts to other
    surrogate country information if the record does not contain a
    value for a factor from the primary surrogate, or if a primary
    surrogate country value on the record is determined, based on
    record evidence, to be aberrational or unreliable.”) (citation
    omitted)).
    89See, e.g., Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70, at 10 (arguing that given
    “Commerce’s established practice and codified regulatory
    preference for a single surrogate country,” the Thai fourth
    review value was preferable because “[Commerce] selected
    Thailand as the surrogate country for purposes of calculating
    normal values during the [fifth review period] in the remand”).
    90    
    Id. at 8, 10-14
    .
    91    
    Id. at 8
    .
    Court No. 13-00346                                             Page 33
    contemporaneous non-aberrational Indonesian value selected by
    the agency, because the fourth review Thai value was (A) not
    contemporaneous with the fifth review period under
    consideration; and (B) “nested in the wider overall pattern of
    great variability” over the course of the time periods examined
    (the fourth through the seventh reviews), in stark contrast to
    “the stability exhibited in the data from the other [potential
    surrogate] countries” over the same time periods.92
    Specifically, Commerce “compared the shrimp feed
    values over the same review periods with respect to the
    potential surrogate countries relative to Thailand,”93 comparing
    the Thai fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh review data to data
    from the Philippines, India, and Indonesia (the other potential
    surrogates satisfying the threshold eligibility criteria) for
    the fourth, fifth, and sixth review periods.94   Based on this
    analysis, Commerce concluded that “Indonesia has the best import
    prices for shrimp feed during the [fifth review period] from
    among the potential surrogate countries that are at [a
    comparable] level of economic development [to] the PRC and are
    significant producers of comparable merchandise,” whereas “the
    
    92 Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 16-17.
    93   
    Id. at 15
    .
    94   
    Id.
    Court No. 13-00346                                           Page 34
    imports of shrimp feed into Thailand for the periods [of the
    fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh reviews were] aberrational
    based on extreme [average unit value] volatility.”95
    Because “the Thai [average unit values] for shrimp
    feed over the periods examined ranged from 2.6[0] to 26.83
    USD/kg, while the [average unit values] for the other [potential
    surrogates satisfying the threshold eligibility criteria] ranged
    from 0.13-0.51 USD/kg (Philippines), 0.92-1.29 USD/kg
    (Indonesia)[,] [and] 1.30-1.37 USD/kg (India) during the same
    periods,”96 Commerce determined that given this “overall pattern
    of great variability, particularly [in light of] the stability
    exhibited in the data from the other [potential surrogate]
    countries,” the “Thai import data for shrimp feed is unreliable
    as a whole.”97   On the record presented here, this conclusion was
    not unreasonable.98   While AHSTAC argues that Commerce
    
    95    
    Id.
     at 15-16 (citing Ex. 2.b to AR7 Prelim. SV Mem.,
    ECF No. 76 at Tab 3).
    96Id. at 16 (citing Ex. 2.b to AR7 Prelim. SV Mem., ECF No. 76
    at Tab 3; AHSTAC’s SV Submission, ECF No. 76 at Tab 1,
    at Attach. 2).
    97Id. (citing AR6 I&D Mem., supra note 14, cmt. 10; AR7 Prelim.
    Decision Mem., supra note 14, at 20-21 (unchanged in AR7 Final
    Results, 
    78 Fed. Reg. 56,209
    )).
    98See Consol. Edison, 
    305 U.S. at 229
     (“[Substantial evidence]
    means such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept
    as adequate to support a conclusion.”) (citations omitted);
    cf. Consolo v. Fed. Mar. Comm’n, 
    383 U.S. 607
    , 620 (1966)
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                                                                                                                            Page 35
    “diverge[d] from agency practice” by not considering the fourth
    review Thai value in isolation from this wider pattern of
    volatility relative to the other potential surrogates’ data,99 in
    fact Commerce’s practice is to consider all case-specific facts
    and the totality of the evidence in order to select the
    surrogate values presenting the best available information when
    contemporaneous values from the primary surrogate are found to
    be unreliable.100                                Commerce has done so here, and the record as a
    
    (“[Substantial evidence] is something less than the weight of
    the evidence, and the possibility of drawing two inconsistent
    conclusions from the evidence does not prevent an administrative
    agency’s finding from being supported by substantial evidence.”)
    (citations omitted).
    99    See Pl.’s Br., ECF No. 70, at 8-10, 14.
    100Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 14-15 (“When presented with
    sufficient evidence to demonstrate a particular [surrogate
    value] is aberrational, and therefore unreliable, [Commerce]
    will examine all relevant price information on the record . . .
    in order to accurately value the input in question.”) (emphasis
    added) (citing Issues & Decision Mem., Certain Frozen Fish
    Fillets from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, A-552-801,
    ARP 11-12 (Mar. 28, 2014) (adopted in 
    79 Fed. Reg. 19,053
     (Dep’t
    Commerce Apr. 7, 2014) (final results of antidumping duty
    administrate review and new shipper review; 2011-2012)) cmt. V;
    Issues & Decision Mem., Polyethylene Terephthalate Film, Sheet,
    and Strip from the [PRC], A-570-924, ARP 12-13 (June 3, 2015)
    (adopted in 
    80 Fed. Reg. 33,241
     (Dep’t Commerce June 11, 2015)
    (final results of antidumping duty administrative review and
    final determination of no shipments; 2012-2013)) cmt. 3);
    cf., e.g., Mittal Steel Galati S.A. v. United States,
    
    31 CIT 1121
    , 1124-25, 
    502 F. Supp. 2d 1295
    , 1299 (2007)
    (“Substantial evidence . . . requires weighing the totality of
    the evidence, to [make] factual findings [that] are reasonable
    when viewed in light of that complete record.”) (citing Ta Chen
    (footnote continued)
    Court No. 13-00346                                           Page 36
    whole reasonably supports the agency’s conclusion.
    Accordingly, Commerce’s determination to value the
    shrimp feed FOP for the fifth review period using surrogate data
    from Indonesia (as the agency also did with regard to that FOP
    for the sixth and seventh review periods,101 determinations that
    are not contested here) is supported by substantial evidence,
    and is therefore sustained.
    CONCLUSION
    For all of the foregoing reasons, Commerce’s Remand
    Results are sustained.    Judgment will issue accordingly.
    ___/s/ Donald C. Pogue_ __
    Donald C. Pogue, Senior Judge
    Dated: January 21, 2016
    New York, NY
    Stainless Steel Pipe, Inc. v. United States, 
    298 F.3d 1330
    , 1335
    (Fed. Cir. 2002); Nippon Steel, 
    458 F.3d at 1351
    ).
    101Remand Results, ECF No. 65, at 12 (“[Commerce also] found the
    Thai [Global Trade Atlas] values for shrimp feed to be
    aberrational in [the sixth and seventh reviews].”) (citing
    AR6 I&D Mem., supra note 14, cmt. 10; AR7 Prelim. Decision Mem.,
    supra note 14, at 20-21 (unchanged in AR7 Final Results, 
    78 Fed. Reg. 56,209
    )); 
    id. at 13
     (“[Commerce] used the Indonesian
    [surrogate value] for feed in [the sixth and seventh reviews].”)
    (citing AR6 I&D Mem., supra note 14, cmt. 10; AR7 Prelim.
    Decision Mem., supra note 14, at 20-21 (unchanged in AR7 Final
    Results, 
    78 Fed. Reg. 56,209
    )).