Shenzhen Xinboda Industrial Co., Ltd. v. United States , 2017 CIT 166 ( 2017 )


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  •                                           Slip Op. 17-
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    SHENZHEN XINBODA INDUSTRIAL CO., LTD., :
    Plaintiff,               :
    v.                                     :
    UNITED STATES,                                        :
    Defendant,               :       Court No. 11-00267
    and                                    :
    FRESH GARLIC PRODUCERS ASSOCIATION,                   :
    CHRISTOPHER RANCH, L.L.C., THE
    GARLIC COMPANY, VALLEY GARLIC,                        :
    and VESSEY AND COMPANY, INC.,
    :
    Defendant-Intervenors.
    [Remanding on surrogate value for garlic and selection of financial statements; sustaining on labor
    wage rate and zeroing]
    Dated: December 15, 2017
    Gregory S. Menegaz, deKieffer & Horgan, PLLC, of Washington, D.C., argued for Plaintiff.
    With him on the briefs were J. Kevin Horgan and Alexandra H. Salzman.
    Richard P. Schroeder, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department of
    Justice, of Washington D.C., argued for Defendant. With him on the briefs were Joyce R. Branda,
    Acting Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division, and Jeanne E. Davidson, Director, and Reginald
    T. Blades, Jr., Assistant Director, Commercial Litigation Branch. Of counsel on the briefs were
    Justin R. Becker and Khalil Gharbieh, Office of the Chief Counsel for Import Administration, U.S.
    Department of Commerce, of Washington, D.C.
    Michael J. Coursey, Kelley Drye & Warren LLP, of Washington D.C., argued for Defendant-
    Intervenors. With him on the brief was John M. Herrmann.
    OPINION
    RIDGWAY, Judge:
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                            Page 2
    Plaintiff Shenzhen Xinboda Industrial Co., Ltd. (“Xinboda”)     a Chinese exporter of fresh
    garlic       commenced this action to contest the Final Determination in the U.S. Department of
    Commerce’s fifteenth administrative review of the antidumping duty order covering fresh garlic
    from the People’s Republic of China. The period of review is November 1, 2008 through October
    31, 2009. See Fresh Garlic from the People’s Republic of China: Final Results and Final Rescission,
    in Part, of the 2008-2009 Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 76 Fed. Reg. 37,321 (Dep’t
    Commerce June 27, 2011) (“Final Determination”); Issues and Decision Memorandum for the Final
    Results of the 15th Administrative Review of Fresh Garlic from the People’s Republic of China
    (June 20, 2011) (AR Pub. Doc. No. 176) (“Issues & Decision Memorandum”); see generally
    Shenzhen Xinboda Industrial Co. v. United States, 38 CIT ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d 1333
    (2014)
    (“Shenzhen Xinboda I”).1
    1
    Because this action has been remanded to Commerce, two administrative records have been
    filed with the court the initial administrative record (comprised of the information on which the
    agency’s Final Determination was based) (“AR”) and the supplemental administrative record
    compiled during the course of the remand (“SAR”).
    Each of the two administrative records includes confidential (i.e., business proprietary)
    information. Therefore, two versions of each of the records a public version and a confidential
    version were filed with the court. The public versions of the administrative record and the
    supplemental administrative record consist of copies of all public documents in the record, and
    public versions of confidential documents with all confidential information redacted. The
    confidential versions consist of complete, un-redacted copies of documents on the record that include
    confidential information. The number of the public version of a document is different than the
    number of the confidential version of the same document.
    All citations to the administrative record and the supplemental administrative record herein
    are to the public versions. Citations to public documents in the administrative record and the
    supplemental record are cited as “AR Pub. Doc. No. ____” and “SAR Pub. Doc. No. ____,”
    respectively.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                               Page 3
    In its Complaint, Xinboda challenged Commerce’s decisions in its Final Determination as
    to the surrogate financial statements used to derive surrogate financial ratios, the surrogate value for
    labor (i.e., the surrogate wage rate), and the surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs, as well as
    the agency’s application of its “zeroing” methodology in calculating Xinboda’s dumping margin.
    See generally Complaint; see also Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1345-46.
    Ruling on Xinboda’s Motion for Judgment on the Agency Record, Shenzhen Xinboda I
    remanded this matter to Commerce for further consideration of all four issues, including a voluntary
    remand on the surrogate value for labor. See generally Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, ____,
    
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1338, 1388. Now pending are Commerce’s Remand Results, filed pursuant to
    Shenzhen Xinboda I. See generally Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Remand (SAR
    Pub. Doc. No. 7) (“Remand Results”).
    Xinboda is satisfied with Commerce’s Remand Results as to the surrogate value for labor,
    as well as Commerce’s exclusion of certain transportation expenses in determining the surrogate
    value for whole raw garlic bulbs. See Remand Results at 3, 29, 57 (surrogate value for labor); 
    id. at 3,
    8-9, 47-48 (surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs); Plaintiff’s Comments on Remand
    Redetermination (“Pl.’s Brief”) at 1 n.1. However, Xinboda contends that the Remand Results are
    flawed in all other respects. See generally Pl.’s Brief; Plaintiff’s Reply to Response Comments on
    Remand Redetermination (“Pl.’s Reply Brief”).2
    2
    In the Remand Results, Commerce made a minor adjustment to its surrogate financial ratio
    calculations. See Remand Results at 3, 23-24 & nn.64-66, 57. Xinboda has not taken a position on
    that adjustment. However, more generally, Xinboda continues to oppose the use of the surrogate
    financial statements that Commerce selected.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 4
    In contrast, the Government and the Defendant-Intervenors          the Fresh Garlic Producers
    Association, Christopher Ranch, L.L.C., The Garlic Company, Valley Garlic, and Vessey and
    Company, Inc. (collectively, the “Domestic Producers”) assert that the Remand Results are both
    supported by substantial evidence and in accordance with law. The Government and the Domestic
    Producers maintain that the Remand Results therefore should be sustained.               See generally
    Defendant’s Response to Comments Regarding the Remand Redetermination (“Def.’s Brief”);
    Defendant-Intervenors’ Response to Plaintiff’s Comments on Remand Redetermination (“Def.-Ints.’
    Brief”).
    Jurisdiction lies under 28 U.S.C. § 1581(c) (2006).3 For the reasons set forth below, the
    Remand Results are sustained as to the surrogate value for labor and Commerce’s application of
    zeroing in this administrative review. The surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs and the
    selection of surrogate financial statements are again remanded, for Commerce’s further
    consideration.
    I. Background
    Shenzhen Xinboda I laid out the relevant statutory scheme, including citations to the statute
    and other pertinent authorities. That explanation, together with other relevant background, is
    summarized below, in the interests of convenience and completeness.
    As Shenzhen Xinboda I explained, dumping occurs when goods are imported into the United
    3
    All citations to statutes herein are to the 2006 edition of the United States Code. Similarly,
    all references to regulations are to the 2008 edition of the Code of Federal Regulations. The
    pertinent text of the statutes and regulations cited remained the same at all times relevant herein.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                                Page 5
    States and sold at a price lower than their “normal value,” resulting in material injury (or the threat
    of material injury) to the U.S. industry. The difference between the normal value of the goods and
    the U.S. price is the “dumping margin.” When normal value is compared to the U.S. price and
    dumping is found, antidumping duties equal to the dumping margin are imposed to offset the
    dumping. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1338 (and authorities cited
    there).
    When the exporting country is a market economy country, normal value generally is
    calculated using either the price in the exporting market (i.e., the price in the “home market” where
    the goods are produced) or the cost of production of the goods.4 However, where            as here   the
    exporting country has a non-market economy, there is often concern that the factors of production
    (inputs) that are consumed in producing the goods at issue are under state control, and that home
    market sales therefore may not be reliable indicators of normal value. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38
    CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1338 (and authorities cited there).
    In such cases, Commerce identifies one or more market economy countries to serve as a
    “surrogate” and then “determine[s] the normal value of the subject merchandise on the basis of the
    value of the factors of production” (i.e., the value of the inputs) in the relevant surrogate country or
    countries, including “an amount for general expenses and profit plus the cost of containers,
    coverings, and other expenses.” This surrogate value analysis is designed to determine a producer’s
    costs of production as if the producer operated in a hypothetical market economy country. See
    4
    In addition, in certain market economy cases, Commerce may calculate normal value using
    the price in a third country (i.e., a country other than the exporting country or the United States). See
    Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____ 
    n.3, 976 F. Supp. 2d at 1338
    n.3 (and authorities cited there).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 6
    Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1338-39 (and authorities cited there).
    Under the statute, factors of production “include, but are not limited to (A) hours of labor
    required, (B) quantities of raw materials employed, (C) amounts of energy and other utilities
    consumed, and (D) representative capital cost, including depreciation.” See Shenzhen Xinboda I,
    38 CIT at ____ 
    n.4, 976 F. Supp. 2d at 1338
    n.4; 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(3). However, valuing the
    factors of production (inputs) consumed in producing goods does not capture (1)
    manufacturing/factory overhead, (2) selling, general, and administrative expenses (“SG&A”), and
    (3) profit. Commerce calculates those surrogate values using ratios known as “surrogate financial
    ratios” that the agency derives from the financial statements of one or more surrogate companies
    that produce identical (or at least comparable) merchandise in the relevant surrogate market economy
    country. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1343-44 (and authorities cited
    there). As discussed in greater detail below, Commerce’s selection of surrogate financial statements
    continues to be at issue here.
    In certain circumstances, where Commerce finds that the available information on the value
    of factors of production is not adequate for purposes of determining the normal value of the goods
    at issue pursuant to the agency’s standard “factors of production” methodology (described above),
    Commerce determines the surrogate value of an “intermediate input” instead. Under Commerce’s
    so-called “intermediate input methodology,” rather than valuing the various individual “upstream”
    factors of production that are used to produce an intermediate input, Commerce directly values the
    “downstream” intermediate input itself. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1339 (and authorities cited there). As discussed in greater detail below, Commerce has used its
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                               Page 7
    intermediate input methodology to determine the surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs here.
    That value continues to be contested.
    The underlying antidumping order in this case, which dates back to 1994, covers imports of
    fresh garlic from China, including whole garlic bulbs and peeled garlic cloves (the products exported
    by Xinboda). As noted above, this action involves the fifteenth administrative review of that
    antidumping order, covering the period November 1, 2008 through October 31, 2009. See Shenzhen
    Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1340. Commerce selected India as the primary
    surrogate country for purposes of this review (as in prior reviews), and used data from India to
    calculate the surrogate values for all factors of production, with the sole exception of labor. See 
    id., CIT at
    ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1340 (and authorities cited there).
    Surrogate Value for Whole Raw Garlic Bulbs. In the course of the administrative review,
    Commerce compiled voluminous information concerning Xinboda and its operations, particularly
    the company’s exports of whole garlic bulbs and peeled garlic cloves to the U.S. from China.
    Commerce similarly compiled detailed information on Zhenzhou Dadi Garlic Industry Co., Ltd.
    (“Dadi”), the affiliated processor/producer that supplied Xinboda with garlic products produced from
    the whole raw garlic bulbs that Dadi purchased from local Chinese garlic farmers. Dadi processed
    the whole raw garlic bulbs that it purchased which had diameters of between 50 mm and 65 mm
    into whole garlic bulbs and peeled garlic cloves for Xinboda, using relatively simple procedures
    involving principally manual labor. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at
    1340-41 (and authorities cited there).
    To produce whole fresh garlic, Chinese garlic farmers deliver to Dadi whole raw garlic bulbs,
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                               Page 8
    sorted by size, in large mesh bags. Dadi workers sitting at tables in a simple warehouse then rub off
    the outer skins of the whole raw garlic bulbs (to give the garlic bulb a clean white appearance), cut
    or trim the roots and stems, place the bulbs into small mesh bags (typically holding three to five
    bulbs, depending on the customer), and affix the customer’s labels to seal the bags. Bags are then
    packed into cartons, ready for shipping. Like its process for production of whole fresh garlic, Dadi’s
    process for the production of peeled garlic cloves is also relatively simple and involves mostly
    manual labor. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1341 (and authorities
    cited there).
    Xinboda’s administrative operations are similarly modest, and its sales process is also basic
    and straightforward. Xinboda does not develop or market its own brands and sells only a handful
    of products (i.e., garlic, onion shoots, and ginger) to its established customer base. Its advertising
    and selling expenses are minimal. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1341
    (and authorities cited there).
    Early in the course of the instant administrative review, Commerce concluded (as it had since
    the tenth review) that Chinese garlic farmers generally do not track the actual labor hours expended
    in growing and harvesting garlic, and, thus, do not maintain the records that Commerce would need
    to verify data reported for the expenses that Chinese farmers incur in growing and harvesting whole
    raw garlic bulbs. Commerce therefore used its intermediate input methodology to value “growing”
    and “harvesting” factors of production, as it had since the tenth review. As such, in lieu of separately
    valuing each of the various individual growing and harvesting factors of production consumed in
    growing and harvesting a whole raw garlic bulb (i.e., the leased land, garlic seed, water, pesticides,
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 9
    herbicides, fertilizer, plastic film, labor, and other “inputs” or commodities), Commerce instead
    sought to capture those factors of production by determining the value of the “intermediate input”
    i.e., a whole raw garlic bulb. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1341-
    42 (and authorities cited there).
    In valuing the whole raw garlic bulb input (i.e., the intermediate input) , Commerce based
    its calculations on size-specific prices for garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC Market (located
    near Delhi and operated by the Azadpur Agricultural Produce Marketing Committee (“APMC”)),
    as published in the Azadpur APMC’s Market Information Bulletin. Commerce rejected the other
    potential sources of data on the record, including the prices favored by Xinboda    i.e., the prices for
    whole raw garlic bulbs included in the financial statements of Garlico Industries Limited (“Garlico”),
    an Indian purchaser, processor, and trader of garlic, onions, and other vegetables and related products
    based on Commerce’s determination that those other sources of data do not specify the physical
    characteristics of the garlic bulbs that were priced. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1342-43 (citing Issues & Decision Memorandum at 12-13).5
    To value the whole raw garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi that had a diameter of greater than 55
    mm, Commerce relied on non-contemporaneous Azadpur Market prices for garlic bulbs classified
    5
    In addition to the Azadpur Market prices and the Garlico prices, other potential sources of
    data on the record which Commerce considered for use in calculating a surrogate value for whole
    raw garlic bulbs include Indian World Trade Atlas (“WTA”) import statistics, Indian export
    statistics, Indian domestic market data from government sources (including data from India’s
    National Horticultural Board and data from the Indian Spices Board), and data from the Indian
    Agricultural Marketing Information Network (“AGMARKNET”), a database maintained by India’s
    Ministry of Agriculture. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____ 
    n.14, 976 F. Supp. 2d at 1347
    n.14.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                         Page 10
    as “grade S.A.” (or “Super-A”), which Commerce then indexed (inflated) to be contemporaneous
    with the dates of the period of review. Commerce used non-contemporaneous prices to value this
    larger-bulbed garlic because the Azadpur Market ceased use of the “S.A.”-grade classification in
    February 2008 (before the period of review). See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1343 (and authorities cited there, including Preliminary Surrogate Value Memorandum at 4
    (AR Pub. Doc. No. 121) and Issues & Decision Memorandum at 13).
    To value the whole raw garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi that were somewhat smaller (with a
    diameter of between 50 mm and 55 mm), Commerce averaged the non-contemporaneous but
    indexed Azadpur Market prices for grade “S.A.” garlic (described above) together with
    contemporaneous Azadpur Market prices for grade “A” garlic (i.e., prices for “A”-grade garlic from
    within the period of review). See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1343
    (citing, inter alia, Final Surrogate Value Memorandum at 1 (AR Pub. Doc. No. 177)).6
    Surrogate Value for Labor (i.e., Surrogate Wage Rate). To calculate the surrogate value for
    post-harvest labor costs for purposes of the Final Determination, Commerce averaged industry-
    specific data on wages and earnings from a group of eight countries that Commerce deemed to be
    both “significant producers” of comparable merchandise and “economically comparable” to China,
    6
    To value garlic with a bulb diameter of between 50 and 55 mm, Commerce combined
    Azadpur Market prices for grades “A” and “S.A.” garlic bulbs, due to the seeming overlap in the
    physical characteristics of the two grades i.e., because, depending on traits other than bulb size,
    garlic bulbs with a diameter of between 40 and 55 mm could be classified as either grade “A” or
    grade “S.A.” (at least during the period from May 2006 to February 2008, when the Azadpur APMC
    Market was using both of those grades). See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____ n.12, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1343 n.12 (citing Preliminary Surrogate Value Memorandum at 4); see also Remand Results
    at 13 n.34.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 11
    and which had also reported data under one particular revision of an international standard.
    However, that group of eight countries did not include India, because       although India reported
    contemporaneous data under the prior revision of the international standard India’s reporting had
    not used the particular revision on which Commerce relied. Citing “concerns that the industry
    definitions may lack consistency between different . . . revisions” of the standard, Commerce
    declined to include the Indian data in its calculations in the Final Determination. See Shenzhen
    Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1343 (citing and quoting Issues & Decision
    Memorandum at 25, 27-28).
    Surrogate Financial Statements/Surrogate Financial Ratios. As noted above, valuing the
    various direct inputs that are used to produce goods does not capture certain costs that must also be
    factored into prices       specifically, manufacturing/factory overhead, selling, general and
    administrative expenses (“SG&A”), and profit. Commerce calculates surrogate values for those
    three items using surrogate financial ratios that it derives from the financial statements of one or
    more companies that produce the same or comparable merchandise in the surrogate market economy
    country. In its Final Determination here, Commerce derived Xinboda’s surrogate financial ratios
    from the unconsolidated financial statements of Tata Global Beverages Limited (specifically, Tata
    Tea”), an Indian company that grows, processes, and sells coffee and tea products. See Shenzhen
    Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1343-44.
    Commerce cited two reasons for selecting the financial statements of Tata Tea over the five
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                            Page 12
    other sets of financial statements on the record.7 First, Commerce concluded, based on its review
    of the other companies’ financial statements, that all but one of the five had received subsidies that
    the agency had previously determined to be countervailable. Based on its policy of disregarding a
    surrogate company’s financial statements where the agency has “reason to believe or suspect” that
    the company has received actionable subsidies (i.e., subsidies that Commerce has previously found
    to be countervailable in a formal agency countervailing duty investigation), Commerce disregarded
    the financial statements of four of the five companies. Commerce rejected Xinboda’s claim that
    there is evidence on the record that gives “reason to believe or suspect” that Tata Teas “may” have
    received subsidies. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1344 (quoting
    Issues & Decision Memorandum at 20-22).
    Xinboda favors use of the financial statements of the remaining company, i.e., the Indian
    garlic processor and trader Garlico. However, Commerce concluded that Garlico’s operations were
    not comparable to those of Xinboda, based on the agency’s determination that “[Garlico’s] primary
    production is of downstream food products,” which “are described as ‘dehydrated’ or ‘powder,’” as
    well as the agency’s determination that Garlico “act[ed] as a trading company (rather than a food
    processor) on nearly one quarter of its sales.” Commerce declined to rely on a combination of the
    financial statements of Tata Tea and Garlico, even though the agency has a stated preference for the
    use of multiple financial statements. The Final Determination thus relied exclusively on the financial
    7
    In addition to the financial statements of Tata Global/Tata Tea, other financial statements
    on the record include the financial statements of Indian garlic processor and trader Garlico, Limtex
    (India) Limited, LT Foods Ltd., ADF Foods Ltd., and REI Agro Limited. See Shenzhen Xinboda
    I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1369 n.41 (citing Issues & Decision Memorandum at 18 &
    n.58).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                         Page 13
    statements of a tea company, Tata Tea, rather than Garlico (which, Xinboda emphasizes, purchased
    and processed garlic). See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1344, 1385;
    Issues & Decision Memorandum at 20-22.8
    Application of “Zeroing” Methodology. Lastly, in its Final Determination, Commerce
    calculated Xinboda’s dumping margin using the agency’s “zeroing” methodology, which was the
    subject of extensive litigation. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1344
    (and authorities cited there, including Issues & Decision Memorandum at 31-33). Thus, in
    calculating Xinboda’s dumping margin, Commerce assigned negative dumping margins (i.e.,
    margins of sales of merchandise found to have been sold at non-dumped prices) a value of zero, and
    only positive dumping margins (i.e., margins for sales of merchandise sold at dumped prices) were
    aggregated. In other words, sales that were not found to have involved dumping were not used to
    offset sales that were found to have involved dumping. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____,
    
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1344.
    Issuance of Final Determination and Subsequent Proceedings. Based on the methodologies,
    analyses, calculations, and data summarized above, Commerce assigned Xinboda a weighted-average
    dumping margin of $0.06 per kilogram in the Final Determination. See Final Determination, 76 Fed.
    Reg. at 37,326; Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1344-45 .
    Xinboda appealed, challenging four aspects of Commerce’s Final Determination. The first
    8
    See also Remand Results at 55 (acknowledging that Commerce “continues to maintain a
    policy of favoring multiple financial statements”); Issues &Decision Memorandum at 20 (noting
    “[Commerce’s] preference to use financial data from more than one surrogate producer to reflect the
    broader experience of the surrogate industry”).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 14
    count of Xinboda’s Complaint disputes Commerce’s selection of financial statements for use in
    deriving the surrogate financial ratios used in calculating Xinboda’s dumping margin. See
    Complaint ¶¶ 10, 15-16 (Count I). Xinboda argues that Commerce’s justification for choosing the
    financial statements of Tata Teas is flawed and that Commerce’s rejection of Garlico’s financial
    statements which Xinboda favors is groundless. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1367-85 (discussing Xinboda’s surrogate financial statements claim as set forth in
    greater detail in its Motion for Judgment on Agency Record).
    Xinboda’s Complaint next challenges Commerce’s calculation of the surrogate wage rate.
    See Complaint ¶¶ 11, 17-18 (Count II). Specifically, Xinboda contended that Commerce erred in
    using labor data from multiple countries in the Final Determination and that Commerce should have
    relied on Indian data alone. Xinboda further argued that even if it was permissible for Commerce
    to use data from multiple countries Commerce failed to limit its “basket” of countries to those that
    were “significant producers” of comparable merchandise and also improperly excluded India based
    on the manner in which the country reported its data. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1356-67 (discussing Xinboda’s surrogate wage rate claim as set forth in greater detail
    in its Motion for Judgment on Agency Record).
    The third count of Xinboda’s Complaint contests Commerce’s calculation of the surrogate
    value for whole raw garlic bulbs. See Complaint ¶¶ 12, 19-20 (Count III). Xinboda contends that
    the Azadpur APMC Market prices (which are the basis for Commerce’s calculations) do not reflect
    prices for the “intermediate input” whole raw garlic bulbs that Commerce is supposed to value.
    According to Xinboda, the Azadpur Market prices are for garlic bulbs at a more advanced, higher
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 15
    level of trade i.e., garlic bulbs that have been subject to additional processing and handling, above
    and beyond the whole raw garlic bulbs purchased by and delivered to Dadi, Xinboda’s affiliated
    processor/producer. Xinboda also maintains that the Azadpur Market prices include significant sums
    paid to “middlemen” and “intermediaries.” In addition, Xinboda objects to Commerce’s use of non-
    contemporaneous Azadpur Market prices for “S.A.”-grade garlic bulbs in calculating the surrogate
    value for whole raw garlic bulbs. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1346-
    56 (discussing Xinboda’s claim concerning the surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs as set forth
    in greater detail in its Motion for Judgment on Agency Record).
    The fourth and final count of Xinboda’s Complaint protests Commerce’s application of the
    agency’s “zeroing” methodology in calculating Xinboda’s dumping margin. See Complaint, ¶¶ 13,
    21-22 (Count IV); Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1385-88 (discussing
    Xinboda’s zeroing claim as set forth in greater detail in its Motion for Judgment on Agency Record).
    Ruling on Xinboda’s Motion for Judgment on the Agency Record, Shenzhen Xinboda I
    remanded this matter to Commerce for further consideration of all four issues, including a voluntary
    remand on the surrogate value for labor (i.e., the surrogate wage rate) at Commerce’s request. See
    generally Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1338, 1388; see also 
    id., 38 CIT
    at ____, ____, ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1353, 1356, 1388 (surrogate value for whole raw
    garlic bulbs); 
    id., 38 CIT
    at ____, ____, ____, ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1363-64, 1365, 1367, 1388
    (surrogate wage rate for labor); 
    id., 38 CIT
    at ____, ____, ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1375-76, 1384-
    85, 1388 (surrogate financial statements used to derive surrogate financial ratios); 
    id., 38 CIT
    at
    ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1387-88 (application of “zeroing” methodology).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 16
    On remand, Commerce revised the surrogate value for labor to be consistent with the
    agency’s Revised Labor Methodology and based that value exclusively on labor data for India. See
    Remand Results at 3, 29, 57. In addition, although the Remand Results continue to rely on Azadpur
    APMC Market prices in calculating the surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs, Commerce
    adjusted its calculations to deduct freight costs for transportation of garlic from Indian farms to the
    Azadpur APMC Market. See 
    id. at 3,
    8-9, 47-48, 57.9 Similarly, the Remand Results continue to
    use the financial statements of Tata Tea to derive surrogate financial ratios, with a minor adjustment
    for the costs associated with tea leaf grown by Tata Tea for its own consumption. See 
    id. at 3,
    23-24,
    57.10 Lastly, on remand, Commerce has elucidated the bases for its “zeroing” methodology, but
    continues to apply that methodology in calculating Xinboda’s dumping margin for purposes of the
    Remand Results. See 
    id. at 2,
    29-44, 55-57.
    9
    Commerce acknowledged in the Remand Results that the Azadpur Market prices likely
    already reflect the costs of transporting raw garlic from the farms where it is grown to garlic
    processing facilities. Accordingly, Commerce’s inclusion of such transportation costs elsewhere in
    its surrogate value calculations resulted in the “double-counting” of those costs. Commerce
    addressed the issue in the Remand Results by excluding the costs of inland freight for the
    transportation of garlic from the Indian farmers to the Azadpur Market, which lowered the surrogate
    value for whole raw garlic bulbs. See Remand Results at 3, 8-9, 47-48.
    10
    The Remand Results reflect an adjustment to the surrogate financial ratios that Commerce
    derived from the financial statements of Tata Tea, the Indian company on which Commerce relies
    as a surrogate in determining financial ratios for Xinboda. Specifically, to account for tea leaf grown
    on Tata Tea’s own estate for its own consumption, Commerce excluded the costs of “self-produced
    and consumed” tea leaf from the numerator of the agency’s surrogate financial ratio for “overhead”
    (and from the ratio calculations entirely), and recalculated the overhead and SG&A ratios for the
    Remand Results. See Remand Results at 3, 23-24 & nn.64-66, 57. Commerce characterizes this
    adjustment as “conservative” and “the most favorable adjustment from Xinboda’s perspective,”
    noting that “[b]ecause the SG&A ratio is applied to the recalculated overhead ratio, there is a
    cascading effect by which the SG&A ratio is lowered as well.” See 
    id. at 24
    & n.66.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                            Page 17
    As a result of Commerce’s actions on remand, Xinboda’s weighted-average dumping margin
    dropped from $0.06 per kilogram (in the Final Determination) to $0.02 per kilogram (in the Remand
    Results). See Remand Results at 1, 3.
    II. Standard of Review
    In reviewing a remand determination in an action challenging an antidumping determination
    by Commerce, the agency’s determination must be upheld except to the extent that it is found to be
    “unsupported by substantial evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 19
    U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i); see also NMB Singapore Ltd. v. United States, 
    557 F.3d 1316
    , 1319
    (Fed. Cir. 2009). Substantial evidence is “more than a mere scintilla”; rather, it is “such relevant
    evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” Universal Camera
    Corp. v. Nat’l Labor Relations Bd., 
    340 U.S. 474
    , 477 (1951) (quoting Consol. Edison Co. v. Nat’l
    Labor Relations Bd., 
    305 U.S. 197
    , 229 (1938)); see also Dongtai Peak Honey Industry Co. v. United
    States, 
    777 F.3d 1343
    , 1349 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (same).
    Moreover, any evaluation of the substantiality of the evidence “must take into account
    whatever in the record fairly detracts from its weight,” including “contradictory evidence or evidence
    from which conflicting inferences could be drawn.” Suramerica de Aleaciones Laminadas, C.A. v.
    United States, 
    44 F.3d 978
    , 985 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (quoting Universal Camera 
    Corp., 340 U.S. at 487
    -
    88); see also CS Wind Vietnam Co. v. United States, 
    832 F.3d 1367
    , 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (same).
    That said, the mere fact that it may be possible to draw two inconsistent conclusions from the record
    does not prevent Commerce’s determination from being supported by substantial evidence. Dongtai
    Peak Honey Industry 
    Co., 777 F.3d at 1349
    (citing Consolo v. Federal Maritime Comm’n, 383 U.S.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 18
    607, 620 (1966)).
    In addition, a remand determination is reviewed for compliance with the court’s remand
    instructions. Yantai Xinke Steel Structure Co. v. United States, 38 CIT ____, ____, 
    2014 WL 13875259
    * 2 (2014) (quoting Xinjiamei Furniture (Zhangzou) Co. v. United States, 38 CIT ____,
    ____, 
    968 F. Supp. 2d 1255
    , 1259 (2014) (internal quotation marks omitted)); Since Hardware
    (Guangzhou) Co. v. United States, 39 CIT ____, ____, 
    49 F. Supp. 3d 1268
    , 1272 (2015) (same);
    see also Changzhou Wujin Fine Chemical Factory Co. v. United States, 
    701 F.3d 1367
    , 1374 (Fed.
    Cir. 2012) (analyzing on review whether Commerce’s remand results were “within the scope of the
    Court of International Trade’s remand order” and sustaining the Court of International Trade’s
    conclusion on that point).
    Further, while Commerce must explain the bases for its decisions, “its explanations do not
    have to be perfect.” NMB 
    Singapore, 557 F.3d at 1319-20
    . Commerce’s rationale nevertheless must
    address the parties’ principal arguments; and, more generally, “the path of Commerce’s decision
    must be reasonably discernable,” in order to support judicial review. 
    Id. (citing Motor
    Vehicle Mfrs.
    Ass’n of the U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    463 U.S. 29
    , 43 (1983)); see generally 19
    U.S.C. § 1677f(i)(3)(A) (requiring Commerce to “include in a final determination . . . an explanation
    of the basis for its determination that addresses relevant arguments, made by interested parties”); CS
    Wind Vietnam 
    Co., 832 F.3d at 1375-81
    (highlighting, and analyzing in depth and detail, agency’s
    “obligation to set forth a comprehensible and satisfactory justification for its [determination] . . . .
    as a reasonable implementation of statutory directives supported by substantial evidence”); Amerijet
    Int’l, Inc. v. Pistole, 
    753 F.3d 1343
    , 1350-52 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (underscoring importance of agency’s
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                            Page 19
    obligation to “articulate an explanation for its action,” stating that “a ‘fundamental requirement of
    administrative law is that an agency set forth its reasons for decision; an agency’s failure to do so
    constitutes arbitrary and capricious agency action”) (citation omitted).11
    Lastly, “an agency’s action must be upheld, if at all, on the basis articulated by the agency
    itself.” State 
    Farm, 463 U.S. at 50
    . An agency’s determination thus cannot be sustained on the basis
    of a rationale supplied after the fact whether by the agency’s litigation counsel, by another party,
    or by the court. See Burlington Truck Lines, Inc. v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 156
    , 168-69 (1962).
    III. Analysis
    In commencing this action, Xinboda contested four aspects of Commerce’s calculation of
    Xinboda’s dumping margin in the agency’s Final Determination          i.e., Commerce’s selection of
    surrogate financial statements used to derive surrogate financial ratios, Commerce’s calculation of
    the surrogate value for labor (i.e., the surrogate wage rate), and Commerce’s calculation of the
    surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs, as well as Commerce’s application of its “zeroing”
    methodology in calculating Xinboda’s dumping margin. See generally Complaint; see also
    Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1345-46.
    All four issues were remanded to Commerce in Shenzhen Xinboda I, including a voluntary
    11
    See also Amerijet Int’l, 
    Inc., 753 F.3d at 1350-52
    (observing that requirement that an
    agency adequately explain its decision is a “basic principle” that is “indispensable to sound judicial
    review”; emphasizing that “conclusory statements will not do; an ‘agency’s statement must be one
    of reasoning’” (quoting Butte County, Col. v. Hogen, 
    613 F.3d 190
    , 194 (D.C. Cir. 2010)) (emphasis
    in Amerijet); and remanding matter to agency where agency’s determination failed to “address the
    main thrust” of a party’s argument, such that court could not “discern if [the agency] considered the
    substance of [the party’s] request, and, if so, what reasons it had for denying it”).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                          Page 20
    remand on the surrogate value for labor. See generally Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, ____,
    
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1338, 1388. In the pending Remand Results, Commerce further explained its
    decisions in the Final Determinations and revised its calculations in several respects.
    Xinboda advises that it is satisfied with the Remand Results as to the surrogate value for
    labor (i.e., the surrogate wage rate), which Commerce has revised to be consistent with its Revised
    Labor Methodology and which is now based solely on data from India. See Remand Results at 3,
    29, 57; Pl.’s Brief at 1 n.1. The Domestic Producers do not object. See Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 2; see
    also Def.’s Brief at 3. The Remand Results on the surrogate value for labor are also generally in
    accord with the remand instructions in Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1356-67, 1388. Accordingly, Commerce’s Remand Results on the surrogate value for labor (i.e.,
    the surrogate wage rate) are sustained. There is no need for further consideration of the issue.
    Xinboda similarly approves of Commerce’s decision on remand to exclude the costs of inland
    freight for the transportation of garlic from Indian farms to the Azadpur APMC Market, in order to
    eliminate    from the surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs         any “double-counting.” See
    Remand Results at 3, 8-9, 47-48, 57; Pl.’s Brief at 1 n.1. Once again, the Domestic Producers do
    not object. See Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 3 n.2; see also Def.’s Brief at 3, 13.
    In all other respects, however, including other aspects of the surrogate value for whole raw
    garlic bulbs, Xinboda maintains that the Remand Results are not supported by substantial evidence
    and/or are not in accordance with law. Xinboda contends that the Remand Results therefore cannot
    be sustained. See Pl.’s Brief at 1; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 1.
    Each of Xinboda’s arguments         challenging Commerce’s determinations concerning the
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                            Page 21
    surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs, the selection of surrogate financial statements for use in
    calculating surrogate financial ratios, and the application of Commerce’s “zeroing” methodology
    is addressed in turn below.
    A. Surrogate Value for Whole Raw Garlic Bulbs
    In calculating the surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs, the Remand Results continue
    to rely on prices for garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC Market. See generally Remand Results
    at 3-14, 44-48. In choosing the Azadpur Market prices over the other potential sources of data on
    the record of this review (including the Garlico prices that Xinboda favors), Commerce has stated
    that, compared to the other data sources, the Azadpur Market prices are “much more similar to the
    inputs being valued.” In addition, Commerce emphasizes that the Azadpur Market prices are size-
    specific, breaking out prices based on grades of garlic bulbs, including grades Super-A (“S.A.”) and
    “A.” See Issues & Decision Memorandum at 12-13; Remand Results at 14.
    According to the record in this administrative review, “garlic bulb sizes that range from 55
    mm and above are Grade Super-A, and garlic bulb sizes that range between 40 mm and 55 mm are
    Grade A and Grade Super-A.” Preliminary Surrogate Value Memorandum at 4. The Azadpur
    APMC’s Market Information Bulletin published prices for grade A garlic bulbs for the period of
    review at issue here. However, the Bulletin ceased reporting prices for grade S.A. garlic bulbs in
    early February 2008 approximately nine months before the beginning of the period of review. See
    Issues & Decision Memorandum at 12-13.
    The whole raw garlic bulbs that Dadi (Xinboda’s processor/producer) purchased for its
    production of whole garlic bulbs for Xinboda ranged from 50 to 65 mm in diameter, and from 50
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 22
    to 55 mm for Dadi’s production of peeled garlic. To value garlic bulbs with a diameter of 55 mm
    or more, Commerce relied on non-contemporaneous Azadpur Market prices for S.A.-grade garlic
    for the period February 2007 through January 2008, which Commerce then indexed (inflated) to the
    dates of the period of review using a garlic-specific wholesale price index. See Preliminary
    Surrogate Value Memorandum at 4; Issues & Decision Memorandum at 12. To value garlic bulbs
    with a diameter of between 50 mm and 55 mm, Commerce averaged the Azadpur Market prices for
    grade S.A. garlic bulbs (as described above) together with contemporaneous Azadpur Market prices
    for grade A bulbs (i.e., prices for “A”-grade garlic from within the period of review). See Final
    Surrogate Value Memorandum at 1.
    Xinboda challenges Commerce’s calculation of the surrogate value for whole raw garlic
    bulbs on three grounds. Xinboda first argues that the Azadpur Market prices reflect garlic bulbs that
    are more advanced (are at a higher “level of trade”) compared to the whole raw garlic bulbs that
    farmers deliver to Dadi, which is the “intermediate input” that Commerce assertedly seeks to value.
    In addition, Xinboda maintains that the Azadpur Market prices include substantial “intermediary
    expenses” that Dadi did not incur. Lastly, Xinboda contests Commerce’s use of indexed non-
    contemporaneous Azadpur Market prices for S.A.-grade garlic bulbs, arguing that garlic bulbs of the
    size and quality previously designated as grade S.A. were subsumed into grade A garlic bulbs as of
    early February 2008, before the period of review. In other words, Xinboda contends that the
    contemporaneous Azadpur Market prices for A-grade garlic bulbs that Commerce is using already
    reflect prices for garlic bulbs that previously would have been classified as grade S.A. Xinboda thus
    concludes that Commerce’s use of prices for grade S.A. garlic bulbs from outside the period of
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 23
    review improperly inflates Commerce’s calculated surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs.
    Xinboda argues that, in lieu of the Azadpur Market prices, Commerce should calculate the
    surrogate value for the whole raw garlic bulbs that farmers delivered to Dadi using averaged garlic
    price data from the financial statements of the Indian garlic processor and trader Garlico, which
    Xinboda placed on the administrative record. Xinboda contends that Garlico’s experience more
    closely matches Xinboda’s experience in the purchase of garlic.
    Alternatively, if Commerce is permitted to continue to rely on Azadpur Market prices in
    calculating the surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs, Xinboda argues that Commerce must
    make an appropriate level of trade adjustment (to account for the fact that the garlic bulbs delivered
    to Dadi are less processed and handled than the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur Market) and must
    make any related adjustments to preclude “double-counting”; that Commerce must deduct 70% from
    the Azadpur Market prices to account for expenses attributable to intermediaries which are reflected
    in those prices and which Dadi did not incur; and that Commerce must use only the
    contemporaneous prices for grade A garlic bulbs, excluding the prices for grade S.A.
    1. The Respective Conditions of
    Dadi’s Garlic Bulbs and Garlic Bulbs Sold at the Azadpur APMC Market
    & Xinboda’s Claim of “Double-Counting”
    As it did in the Final Determination, Commerce continues to (in effect) equate the condition
    of the whole raw garlic bulbs that farmers delivered to Dadi with the condition of the garlic bulbs
    sold at the Azadpur APMC Market. See, e.g., Remand Results at 11-12 (stating that, on remand,
    Commerce “continues to find . . . [that] the Azadpur [Market] garlic prices . . . are reasonably
    reflective of the raw garlic inputs [that were delivered to Dadi]”); 
    id. at 11
    (arguing that the Azadpur
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                               Page 24
    Market prices and the prices that Dadi paid to farmers “are reasonably similar in nature”); 
    id. (asserting that
    there is no evidence that “the prices paid by [Dadi] and the Azadpur [Market] net
    prices . . . are fundamentally different”); see generally Def.’s Brief at 10, 15; Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 5-
    6.12 But Commerce’s determination is squarely at odds with the existing record.
    12
    As discussed above, Commerce’s calculation of the surrogate value for whole raw garlic
    bulbs is based on its conclusion that the condition of the garlic bulbs purchased by and delivered to
    Dadi and the condition of garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC Market are essentially the same.
    However, at several points in the Remand Results, Commerce candidly admits that it actually does
    not know important specifics concerning the condition of the garlic bulbs at the Azadpur Market,
    much less the condition of the garlic bulbs that Dadi purchased. For example, the Remand Results
    assert that, “in many cases, such as this one, [Commerce] does not have reliable information
    describing in detail the physical characteristics of the surrogate product [i.e., here, the garlic bulbs
    sold at the Azadpur Market]. Thus, [Commerce] cannot know exactly how the actual input [i.e., the
    garlic bulbs purchased by Dadi] and the surrogate input [i.e., the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur
    Market] differ. In this case, [Commerce] finds that both the actual input and the surrogate input for
    raw garlic are processed beyond the ‘farm gate’ to some extent: . . . . As for the garlic produced by
    Indian farmers captured in the Azadpur data, we do not know what, if any, additional processing is
    undertaken.” See Remand Results at 46; see also 
    id. at 46-47
    (asserting that Commerce has “no
    reliable information on the record indicating the exact nature of the Azadpur surrogate input”).
    As a threshold matter, Commerce’s admission that it does not know the actual condition of
    the garlic bulbs purchased by Dadi or the actual condition of the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur
    APMC Market is difficult to square with the agency’s conclusion that the two are fundamentally the
    same.
    Moreover, Commerce’s statement that it does not know the condition of the garlic bulbs at
    the Azadpur APMC Market strains credulity. It is virtually inconceivable that Commerce does not
    know the basic nature of the product that is the basis for the Azadpur Market prices, which
    Commerce has relied on as the surrogate value for Chinese garlic in numerous proceedings in
    addition to this one, including the twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, and sixteenth reviews, as well as
    a number of New Shipper Reviews.
    Accepting Commerce’s statement at face value, it is a very troubling admission, particularly
    as to the condition of the garlic bulbs at the Azadpur Market. It is difficult to understand how
    Commerce can rely on a surrogate value if it does not know what that surrogate value fundamentally
    represents. Moreover, it is not clear that such use can be sustained as reasonable.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 25
    The Condition of Garlic Bulbs at the Azadpur APMC Market. The sole record evidence that
    speaks directly to the condition of the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC Market is a
    declaration under oath, proffered by Xinboda, in which a researcher/consultant based in India attests
    to his first-hand findings and observations based on a visit that he made to the Azadpur Market. See
    generally Declaration of Xinboda Research Consultant, “Survey of Garlic Offerings           Azadpur
    Market, New Delhi” (“Researcher Declaration”) (Pub. Doc. No. 138); see also Pl.’s Brief at 8-11;
    Pl.’s Reply Brief at 4. The Researcher Declaration addresses a handful of basic         but pivotal
    points.13
    13
    The Researcher Declaration was executed in Mumbai, in the Indian state of Mahrashtra.
    See Researcher Declaration. As to certain information relating to the identity of the Indian
    Researcher and the notary public’s seal, Commerce has determined that there is “a clear and
    compelling need” to withhold the information from disclosure, even under an administrative
    protective order. That information is thus designated as “double-bracketed” and is known to
    Commerce, but not the Domestic Producers. See generally 19 C.F.R. § 351.304(a)(1)(ii)-(iii) et seq.;
    Administrative Order Protective Handbook at 10 (U.S. Dept. of Commerce, International Trade
    Administration, Rev. 3/10/2015); see also infra n.18 (explaining, inter alia, that, in this matter,
    Commerce has also granted “double-bracket” protection for similar information vis-a-vis the
    Domestic Producers’ market research reports). With those limited exceptions, the text of the
    Researcher Declaration is public information and reads, in full:
    1.     My name is [[redacted]]. I work under the supervision of [[redacted]], of
    [[redacted]], which has been doing import/export trade for over 20 years.
    This firm’s primary function is to identify raw materials for various domestic
    producers or foreign producers and traders.
    2.     I spent the day of January 31, 2011 at the Azadpur Market and interviewed
    the eight vendors selling garlic in the Azadpur Market that day. Based on
    research and my discussions with those vendors, I offer the following
    observations for the Department of Commerce’s consideration.
    3.     The Azadpur Market does not publish or otherwise publicly make available
    a standardized grading system for the garlic sold in the market.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                               Page 26
    As to the condition of the garlic bulbs at the Azadpur APMC Market, the Researcher
    4.     The mechanism at the market for grading the garlic is size as well as quality.
    However, visual inspection of the garlic offered in the market indicated that
    the size is what primarily distinguishes the garlic by grade in the Azadpur
    Market.
    5.     There are 3 grades of garlic in the Indian Market.
    Grade A: All Garlics above 40 mm are classified as Grade A. The sample
    obtained is approx. 50 mm. See Exhibit 1.
    Grade B: Garlics between 25-40 mm (+/- 5) are classified as Grade B. The
    sample obtained is approx. 40 mm. See Exhibit 2.
    Grade C: Garlics below 25 mm (+/- 5) would be Grade C. The sample is
    approx. 30 mm (but still was grade C) in the marketplace. See Exhibit 3.
    6.     There is no “Super A” Grade sold in the Azadpur Market since the first
    quarter of 2008. No vendor in the Azadpur Market had any recent experience
    selling “Super A” variety garlics. However, several vendors confirmed that
    garlic of sizes 55mm-65mm is sold under “Grade A” from the month of
    March and stays till the November-December period each season.
    7.     Some vendors claimed that the 55mm-65mm size range is from China and is
    not readily available any more in the Indian markets.
    8.     The traders here do not classify the garlics according to different grades as it
    already comes classified by the suppliers in a mesh bag.
    9.     The garlic sold in the Azadpur Market is ready for retail consumption and is
    already fully processed when it arrives there, as in: (1) taking off the outside
    dirty layers so the garlic has a fresh white appearance; (2) cutting any long
    stems; and (3) packaged in a mesh bag. The Azadpur Market simply re-sells
    this cargo downstream. In fact, the bags are pre-graded; the market does not
    even decide this. The garlic is ready to be consumed in the state it is sold in
    the Azadpur Market.
    Confidentiality
    [Text concerning request for confidential treatment]
    So Sworn.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 27
    Declaration states, in relevant part, that “[t]he garlic sold in the Azadpur Market is ready for retail
    consumption and is already fully processed when it arrives there, as in: (1) taking off the outside
    dirty layers so the garlic has a fresh white appearance; (2) cutting any long stems; and (3) packaged
    in a mesh bag.” Researcher Declaration ¶ 9. The Researcher Declaration further states that “[t]he
    garlic is ready to be consumed in the state it is sold in the Azadpur Market.” Id.14
    Significantly, neither Commerce nor the Domestic Producers point to any record evidence
    to controvert the facts set forth in the Researcher Declaration.15 Instead, they attempt to discredit it
    14
    The Researcher Declaration bears on two critical factual matters in controversy: (1) the
    condition of the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC Market, and (2) whether garlic bulbs of a
    certain size (which would have previously been designated as grade “S.A.” or “Super-A”) were being
    sold as “grade A” during the period of review here. See generally Researcher Declaration. This
    second point is the subject of section III.A.3, below.
    15
    This point is crucial and bears repeating: Apart from the Researcher Declaration, neither
    Commerce nor the Domestic Producers points to any record evidence whatsoever to establish the
    basic condition of the garlic bulbs at the Azadpur AMPC Market. Neither Commerce nor the
    Domestic Producers has placed any such evidence on the record. See 
    generally supra
    n.12
    (analyzing, inter alia, Commerce’s statements as to its lack of knowledge of the basic condition of
    the garlic bulbs at the Azadpur Market).
    The party advocating for the use of a particular surrogate value bears the burden of
    establishing what that value represents. Here, Commerce and the Domestic Producers argue for the
    use of the Azadpur Market prices. The Domestic Producers thus have a legal obligation to adduce
    affirmative evidence to adequately establish the basic nature of the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur
    Market, as an integral element of their case advocating for Commerce’s use of the Azadpur Market
    prices. However, no affirmative evidence of the basic nature of the product has been placed on the
    record (other than the Researcher Declaration).
    In addition to its legal obligation as the proponent of the Azadpur Market, as a matter of
    common sense, it is the Domestic Producers that have the incentive to rebut the statements in the
    Researcher Declaration concerning the condition of the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur Market. Yet
    the Domestic Producers also have failed to present any rebuttal evidence.
    Presumably, if the Researcher Declaration’s statements attesting to the condition of the garlic
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 28
    and reject it in its entirety. See Remand Results at 11 (asserting a lack of “credible evidence” to
    refute Commerce’s conclusion that the price paid by Dadi and the Azadpur APMC Market prices
    are “reasonably similar”); 
    id. at 46-47
    (characterizing Researcher Declaration as “not reliable” and
    asserting that “there is no reliable information on the record indicating the exact nature of the
    Azadpur surrogate input or the exact steps Indian farmers might take before sending their products
    to [the Azadpur Market]”); see also Def.’s Brief at 16-17; Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 15-19.16
    bulbs sold at the Azadpur Market are factually inaccurate, the Domestic Producers would be the first
    to say so. In fact, however, the Domestic Producers actually never dispute the substantive accuracy
    of the statements in the Declaration. Instead, the Domestic Producers content themselves with
    challenging (on less than solid grounds) the “reliability” of the Researcher Declaration that Xinboda
    has placed on the administrative record the only record evidence on point. See generally Jinan
    Yipin Corp. v. United States, 35 CIT at ____ n.71, 
    800 F. Supp. 2d 1226
    , 1287 n.71 (2011)
    (observing, inter alia, that the domestic producers there had incentive to submit evidence to rebut
    evidence adduced by the foreign producers, but failed to do so; and noting that it was telling that the
    domestic producers never actually disputed the substantive accuracy of the foreign producers’
    evidence) (“Jinan Yipin II”); 
    id., 35 CIT
    at ____ 
    n.101, 800 F. Supp. 2d at 1310
    n.101 (same); Pl.’s
    Brief at 10-11 (arguing that “it was in [the Domestic Producers’ interest to prove that the statements
    included in . . . [the] Researcher Declaration did not reflect the actual situation at the Azadpur
    Market. At the very least, to provide more convincing evidence, [the Domestic Producers] could
    have sent two researchers on two days to the Azadpur Market to interview vendors. [The Domestic
    Producers] did not provide this or any other rebuttal evidence.”).
    16
    Xinboda maintains that, to the extent that Commerce had questions or concerns about the
    Researcher Declaration and the information set forth in that document, Commerce should have
    issued a “deficiency questionnaire” to Xinboda, seeking clarification. See generally Pl.’s Brief at
    9-10, 16-17; Plaintiff’s Motion for Leave to File Record and Other Impeachment Documents Issued
    by the U.S. Department of Commerce, International Trade Administration at 1-3 et seq. (“Pl.’s
    Motion to File Additional Documents”). Commerce concluded that it had no such obligation.
    According to Commerce, it “is required to issue deficiency questionnaires only when [the agency]
    requested the specific information” as to which the agency has questions; and, here, according to
    Commerce, the agency did not request the Researcher Declaration “rather, Xinboda chose to
    provide it.” See Remand Results at 45 (citing 19 U.S.C. §1677m(d) (“Deficient submissions”)); see
    also Def.’s Brief at 17-18; Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 15, 19-21; Defendant’s Response to Xinboda’s Motion
    to File Additional Documents at 4-5. But see Pl.’s Brief at 16-17 (arguing that, as a practical matter,
    the Researcher Declaration was an integral part of Xinboda’s response to Commerce’s standard
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 29
    (“Section D”) questionnaire on factors of production for non-market economy countries); Pl.’s
    Motion to File Additional Documents at 1-4, 5, 7-8 (same).
    Whether or not Commerce was obligated by statute to issue a deficiency questionnaire under
    these facts, Xinboda contrasts Commerce’s position here with its treatment of market research
    submitted by the Domestic Producers. Xinboda points to the Domestic Producers’ Market Research
    Report, stating that Commerce affirmatively sought clarification of certain matters in a supplemental
    questionnaire issued to the Domestic Producers. See Pl.’s Brief at 10; Pl.’s Motion to File
    Additional Documents at 6. But see Remand Results at 50 n.126 (disputing Xinboda’s argument).
    Xinboda now has moved to supplement the existing administrative record with several
    documents, seeking to demonstrate that information on the surrogate valuation of the factors of
    production, such as the Researcher Declaration, is submitted in response to Commerce’s factors of
    production questionnaire, and that in other similar situations, where Commerce has had questions
    or concerns Commerce has sought clarification from parties, affording them an opportunity to
    address alleged deficiencies in their submissions. Xinboda thus contends that, as a matter of both
    law and agency practice, Commerce was required to alert Xinboda to any agency concerns about the
    Researcher Declaration and to give Xinboda an opportunity to respond to them. See generally Pl.’s
    Motion to File Additional Documents.
    Opposing Xinboda’s Motion, the Government cites Mukand and Marvin Furniture in support
    of Commerce’s position that the Researcher Declaration was not submitted in response to any agency
    questionnaire or other “request for information,” rendering 19 U.S.C. §1677m(d) inapplicable, and,
    further argues that Commerce’s conclusion that the Researcher Declaration is not reliable is not the
    equivalent of an agency conclusion that (in the words of the statute) the Declaration “d[id] not
    comply” with an agency request for information. See Marvin Furniture (Shanghai) Co. v. United
    States, 
    744 F.3d 1319
    , 1325 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (affirming holding that 19 U.S.C. §1677m(d)) was not
    applicable where interested party’s defective request for a new shipper review was filed on that
    party’s own initiative, and not in “response to a request for information” from the agency); Mukand,
    Ltd. v. United States, 
    767 F.3d 1300
    , 1304-06 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (summarizing application of 19
    U.S.C. §1677m(d) where Commerce requested information from respondent, alerted respondent to
    deficiencies in respondent’s submissions, and gave respondent the opportunity to remedy the
    deficiencies, before Commerce resorted to “facts otherwise available”). In addition, the Government
    argues that judicial review in international trade litigation is confined to the record compiled before
    the agency, and Xinboda’s proposed supplemental documents are not part of (and could not have
    been part of) the record in this administrative review; that the proposed supplemental documents do
    not fall within any of the established exceptions permitting expansion of the record compiled before
    the agency; and that, in any event, the proposed supplemental documents do not support Xinboda’s
    claim that Commerce’s actions here are inconsistent with agency practice in other cases. See
    Defendant’s Response to Xinboda’s Motion to File Additional Documents; Essar Steel Ltd. v.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 30
    Quoting verbatim from Commerce’s Issues and Decision Memorandum in the sixteenth
    administrative review (i.e., the review following the administrative review at issue here), the Remand
    Results state:
    As an initial matter, it is not clear whether Xinboda’s “Indian researcher” was a
    market researcher or field expert; the individual reports having worked in
    “import/export trade for over 20 years.” Moreover, the individual who provided this
    Researcher Declaration made a number of observations based on a single visit to the
    Azadpur Market on January 31, 2011 during which eight vendors were interviewed.
    These observations [documented in the Researcher Declaration] included discussions
    of the sizes of the garlic sold, the grading system for the garlic, and the market
    readiness of the garlic sold in Azadpur. While the researcher states that all
    observations are “[b]ased on research and my discussions with vendors,”
    [Commerce] has not been presented with any research conducted by this individual,
    nor has any information regarding the vendors (i.e., name, time selling at the market,
    etc.) been provided to corroborate what the Researcher Declaration actually reports.
    Finally, the signature date (February 2, 2011) does not match the date of the notary
    public’s signature. While this may not be a primary concern, the discrepancy
    between the date the document was signed and the date the notary public signed,
    United States, 
    678 F.3d 1268
    , 1277-78 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (noting that courts “have carved out a small
    number of exceptions . . . [to] allow supplementation of an agency record”).
    Notwithstanding the general principle that review of an agency determination is confined to
    the administrative record that was compiled before the agency, it stands to reason as a matter of
    principle and in the interests of fundamental fairness and process, as well as the integrity of judicial
    proceedings that parties must have some means of documenting alleged inconsistent practices and
    confronting an agency with them. Here, Xinboda is not seeking to place additional documents on
    the record “for the truth of the matter stated,” but, instead, for what are essentially “impeachment”
    purposes (to establish the existence of an agency practice). And it is worth noting that the
    Government has not objected that Xinboda waived any rights that it may have had by not proffering
    the proposed supplemental documents earlier in this litigation.
    In any event, in light of the analysis herein concerning the Researcher Declaration and
    Commerce’s criticisms of it, there is no need to rule on the merits of Plaintiff’s Motion to File
    Additional Documents. The Motion is therefore denied as moot, without prejudice to re-filing,
    should circumstances warrant.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 31
    nonetheless, raises additional questions about the Researcher Declaration. Although
    the affidavit appears to have been drafted and notarized in 2011, it is unclear why it
    also contains a stamp date of 2010. The lack of supporting documentation and, for
    that matter, even information on the “researcher” as well as the discrepancy in when
    the document was signed, make it impossible for [Commerce] to consider the
    Researcher Declaration a reliable source of information upon which we may base our
    conclusions.
    Remand Results at 5-6 (quoting Issues and Decision Memorandum for Fresh Garlic from the
    People’s Republic of China: Final Results of the 2009-2010 Administrative Review at 20 (“Issues
    & Decision Memorandum for 16th Review”)).
    Commerce further states that “the Researcher Declaration is a two-page set of statements
    with no documentation provided to supports its conclusions and no details provided by the
    ‘researcher’ regarding the methods or steps he took to reach his conclusions beyond noting that he
    interviewed ‘every’ merchant of garlic on the day he visited.” Remand Results at 6. Commerce
    continues: “The researcher provides no indication of having met with those responsible for gathering
    and publishing [the Azadpur APMC prices] (which is an especially relevant problem . . . related to
    the issue . . . concerning why the [Azadpur APMC’s Market Information Bulletin] no longer
    publishes prices for grade Super-A raw garlic bulbs.” Id.; see generally Def.’s Brief at 16-17
    (arguing that Researcher Declaration was properly found to be unreliable); Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 2-3,
    15-19 (same). But see Pl.’s Brief at 8-13 (defending reliability of Researcher Declaration); Pl.’s
    Reply Brief at 4-6 (same).
    Commerce concedes that, “in certain contexts, [the Researcher Declaration] would be
    sufficient for [Commerce’s] purposes.” Remand Results at 6. Nevertheless, Commerce ultimately
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 32
    rejects the Declaration as “not reliable.” Id.17
    A clear-eyed, objective, and dispassionate examination of the Researcher Declaration and
    17
    The Remand Results contrast the Researcher Declaration with the Domestic Producers’
    Market Research Report and the related October 2006 Clarification, which Commerce states it
    “found to be . . . reliable, detailed and well-documented source[s] of information regarding the
    Azadpur market.” Remand Results at 5; see also Market Research Report on Fresh Whole Garlic
    in India (June 2003) (“Market Research Report”) (AR Pub. Doc. No. 131); Clarifications on Garlic
    Study (Oct. 2006) at 6 (“Clarification of Market Research Report”) (AR Pub. Doc. No. 133).
    Whether or not Commerce’s assessment of the Domestic Producers’ Market Research Report
    and the related Clarification as “reliable, detailed and well-documented source[s] of information
    regarding the Azadpur market” is accurate, it is beyond cavil that the nature, length, and purposes
    of the Domestic Producers’ reports are very different from those of the Researcher Declaration. For
    example, unlike the Researcher Declaration, much (if not most) of the factual information in the
    Market Research Report and the Clarification cannot be attributed to personal observation by the
    Domestic Producers’ market research consultants. As such, the Market Research Report and the
    Clarification require references, citations to sources, and, in many instances, back-up data and
    documentation, in a way that the Researcher Declaration does not. The Remand Results ignore this
    significant distinction.
    More importantly, however, whether or not the Domestic Producers’ Market Research Report
    and the related Clarification are as Commerce states “reliable, detailed and well-documented
    source[s] of information” as to some aspects of the Azadpur APMC Market, those reports are silent
    on two key matters concerning that Market which are at the very heart of this dispute and which are
    addressed in the Researcher Declaration: (1) the condition of the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur
    Market, and (2) whether garlic bulbs of a certain size (which would have previously been designated
    as grade “S.A.” or “Super-A”) were being sold at the Azadpur Market as “grade A” garlic bulbs
    during the relevant period of review. Compare Researcher Declaration with Market Research Report
    and 2006 Clarification.
    In other words, this is not a situation where Commerce is confronted with two authorities that
    address the same point but take positions that are diametrically opposite, thus requiring Commerce
    to determine which of the two authorities is accurate or correct or more reliable. Moreover, not only
    is it the case that the Market Research Report and the Clarification do not contradict the Researcher
    Declaration on the two key points above; but, in addition, the fact is that there is nothing anywhere
    in the administrative record that contradicts the Researcher Declaration’s statements on those points.
    
    See supra
    n.17 (noting that neither Commerce nor the Domestic Producers placed on the record
    evidence concerning the basic condition of the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur Market, and
    discussing the implications of the absence of such evidence).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                            Page 33
    each of Commerce’s criticisms leads to a different conclusion. As summarized below, Commerce’s
    critique of the Declaration is wide of the mark.18
    For example, the length of the Researcher Declaration whether two pages or two hundred
    has no bearing on the veracity of the statements made in the Declaration. Such declarations and
    similar reports and other documents need not be any longer than is necessary to fulfill their purpose.
    There is no magic number of pages. Here, the two-page Declaration is confined to a few basic
    factual matters at issue in this administrative review and addresses them at an adequate level of
    detail. Commerce’s criticism of the length of the Researcher Declaration thus lacks a rational basis.
    Similarly lacking in merit is Commerce’s complaint that the Researcher Declaration does not
    18
    Market studies such as the Researcher Declaration, as well as the Market Research Report
    and the related Clarification (both of which were commissioned by the Domestic Producers) are
    relatively common in international trade proceedings such as the instant administrative review. See
    generally Researcher Declaration; Market Research Report; Clarification of Market Research
    Report; Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1355 (noting that the Market
    Research Report “was commissioned and placed on the record by the Domestic Producers”); Jinan
    Yipin II, 35 CIT at ____, 800 F. Supp. 2d at 1261 (discussing the Domestic Producers’ Market
    Research Report, citing examples of other market studies submitted in other international trade
    proceedings, and explaining that “various types of market studies, generally commissioned by the
    parties, are not unusual in international trade proceedings”).
    Further, Commerce has in place standard procedures in order to withhold from disclosure,
    even under an administrative protective order, highly sensitive information (such as the identities
    of a party’s customers or market research consultants) where Commerce finds that “there is a
    compelling need” to do so. See generally 19 C.F.R. § 351.304(a)(1)(ii)-(iii) et seq.; Administrative
    Order Protective Handbook at 10 (U.S. Dept. of Commerce, International Trade Administration,
    Rev. 3/10/2015); see 
    also supra
    n.13 (explaining restrictions on disclosure of information as to the
    identity of the consultant who prepared the Researcher Declaration and the notary public’s seal). In
    this review, Commerce made such a finding as to the research consultants of both parties the
    market research consultants that the Domestic Producers commissioned to prepare the Market
    Research Report and the related Clarification, and the researcher who prepared the Declaration
    submitted by Xinboda.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 34
    indicate whether the researcher is “a market researcher or [a] field expert,” as well as Commerce’s
    broadbrush complaint that the Declaration lacks “information on the ‘researcher.’” See Remand
    Results at 4. Given the straightforward nature of the facts set forth in the Declaration, the
    Researcher’s background      whether he is a “market researcher” or a “field expert” or has some other
    title and sub-specialty   is of no moment.19 The Researcher is not being proffered as an “expert
    witness” and the statements made in the Declaration do not require any special expertise.20 Given
    the nature of the information provided in the document, the credence to be accorded the Researcher
    Declaration is the same, without regard to whether the Researcher had (or did not have) any
    particular background or expertise.
    Commerce’s observation that the Researcher Declaration is based on a “single visit” to the
    Azadpur APMC Market also is lacking in substance. See Remand Results at 4. The record is devoid
    of any evidence indicating that additional visits to the Market would have affected the facts set forth
    in the Researcher Declaration in any way, as Commerce seems to suggest.
    In like manner, Commerce appears to fault the Researcher Declaration because it is based
    in part on interviews of eight garlic vendors.        See Remand Results at 4.         As Commerce
    19
    The Domestic Producers assert that the Researcher has “no apparent experience in the sale
    of fresh garlic.” See Def.-Ints. Brief at 2. As noted here, however, given the nature of the
    information set forth in the Researcher Declaration, no such experience is necessary. The Domestic
    Producers’ brief does not indicate whether the consultants who prepared the Domestic Producers’
    Market Research Report (a fairly substantial publication) had been previously employed as garlic
    vendors.
    20
    The Declaration does specify that the Researcher’s firm has more than two decades of
    experience in the “import/export trade” and that the firm is primarily engaged in “identify[ing] raw
    materials for various domestic producers or foreign producers and traders.” See Researcher
    Declaration ¶ 1.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 35
    acknowledges, however, the Declaration attests that the Researcher “interviewed ‘every’ merchant
    of garlic” present at the Azadpur APMC Market on the day of his visit      not a survey of a sample
    of garlic vendors, but, rather, interviews with 100% of the garlic vendors at the Market. See 
    id. at 5;
    Researcher Declaration ¶ 2. There is no record basis for any implication that additional visits to
    the Market, which might (or might not) have included interviews of additional vendors,21 would have
    altered the statements set forth in the Researcher Declaration.
    Commerce further discounts the Researcher Declaration, asserting that it provides “no details
    . . . regarding the methods or steps [the Researcher] took to reach his conclusions.” See Remand
    Results at 5. Commerce’s point here is, again, misguided. The text of the Declaration itself
    discloses that the Researcher personally visited the Azadpur APMC Market, interviewed all eight
    of the garlic vendors at the Market, personally observed the garlic bulbs that were offered for sale,
    and took six photographs of those garlic bulbs (Grades A, B, and C). See generally Researcher
    Declaration & Exhs. 1-3 (photos of garlic bulbs, measured against ruler in order to establish scale)
    21
    The Domestic Producers question in the abstract “how representative [the] eight vendors
    are relative to all entities that sell fresh garlic at the Azadpur APMC market.” Def.-Ints.’ Brief at
    17. Although it is neither here nor there, it is not clear how many vendors were selling garlic bulbs
    at the Azadpur APMC Market but were not present at the Market on the day of the Researcher’s
    visit. Moreover, in explaining Commerce’s decision not to rely on the Researcher Declaration, the
    Remand Results do not cite concerns about the “representativeness” of the eight vendors and the
    information that they provided. The Domestic Producers’ argument thus constitutes impermissible
    post hoc rationale. It is well-established that an agency determination cannot be sustained on the
    strength of a rationale supplied after the fact by counsel in the course of litigation. See, e.g.,
    Burlington Truck Lines, Inc. v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 156
    , 168-69 (1962). As the Supreme Court
    has explained, “an agency’s action must be upheld, if at all, on the basis articulated by the agency
    itself.” Motor Vehicle Mfrs. 
    Ass’n, 463 U.S. at 50
    . In any event, and perhaps most importantly, the
    information provided by the eight vendors is not the type of information where “representativeness”
    is typically a concern.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 36
    (AR Pub. Doc. Nos. 138-39). The Researcher’s simple, basic “methodology,” as evidenced by the
    Declaration, was appropriate and proportional to the purpose and nature of his inquiry and to the
    facts in question.
    In addition, Commerce seeks to make much of the Researcher’s statement that the
    observations documented in the Declaration are “[b]ased on research and . . . discussions with
    vendors.” See Remand Results at 5 (quoting Researcher Declaration ¶ 2). Underscoring that
    statement, Commerce indicates that the agency has not been provided with “any research conducted
    by [the Researcher]” and that the agency has received “[n]o documentation . . . to support [the
    Declaration’s] conclusions.” See Remand Results at 4; see also 
    id. (criticizing Researcher
    Declaration for “lack of supporting documentation”); 
    id. at 5
    (stating that “no documentation [is]
    provided to support” the Declaration’s statements). However, it appears that Commerce simply
    reads too much into the Declaration’s generalized reference to “research” (which, in context, seems
    to refer broadly to the Researcher’s visit to the Market). There is nothing to indicate that “research”
    and “supporting documentation” exist but were not provided to the agency. Even more to the point,
    in light of the basic nature of the content of the Researcher Declaration and the straightforward facts
    set forth therein, there was no need for “research” beyond the inquiry described in the Declaration.
    Nor is there any need for back-up “documentation.”
    In particular, Commerce disparages the Researcher Declaration because it does not provide
    certain information i.e., their names and how long they have worked at the Azadpur APMC Market
    for the eight garlic vendors who were interviewed. Remand Results at 5. Like the other criticisms
    that Commerce has leveled at the Declaration, this point initially may have a certain superficial
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                               Page 37
    appeal, but it does not bear up under close scrutiny. The vendors’ names are of no moment in this
    context, and the duration of their employment is not important here, provided that the vendors have
    knowledge of the very basic information that they provided to the Researcher          and the record is
    devoid of any evidence to suggest that, in fact, they lacked such knowledge.
    Moreover, realistically, there can be no serious claim that, if their names and other
    information about the vendors were provided, Commerce or the Domestic Producers would
    undertake to investigate the vendors in an effort to impeach the Declaration’s credibility. Speaking
    practically, given the nature of the very basic factual information provided in the Researcher
    Declaration, it would be not only inefficient but largely pointless to probe the educational
    backgrounds and work experience of the vendors, and to run background checks on them. Even if
    an investigation were to identify some anomaly as to one or more of the vendors, any showing of
    minimal formal education, limited work experience, and/or a criminal record (for example) would
    have no real effect as to the statements in the Researcher Declaration and would be collateral to the
    central issues at hand.
    In other words, the fact remains that it is either true or false that the garlic arriving for sale
    at the Azadpur APMC Market has had all “long stems” cut and “the outside dirty layers” removed,
    “so the garlic has a fresh white appearance” (see Researcher Declaration ¶ 9), without regard to the
    individual credibility of any or all of the eight garlic vendors. To adequately and effectively refute
    the straightforward statements in the Researcher Declaration, evidence to that effect must be placed
    on the record. In the specific circumstances of this case, and in light of the wholly factual nature of
    the points made in the Researcher Declaration, it is of little practical consequence that the Researcher
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 38
    Declaration does not specify the names and employment histories of the eight garlic vendors who
    were interviewed.22
    Lastly, Commerce points to what it refers to as “date inaccuracies” in the Declaration. See
    Remand Results at 5. In particular, Commerce focuses on an asserted “discrepancy in when the
    [Researcher Declaration] was signed,” noting that “the signature date (February 2, 2011) does not
    match the date of the notary public’s signature.” See 
    id. at 4;
    see also 
    id. at 5
    n.11. In addition,
    Commerce states that, “[a]lthough the [Declaration] appears to have been drafted and notarized in
    2011, it is unclear why it also contains a stamp date of 2010.” See 
    id. at 4.
    Commerce does not even acknowledge much less attempt to refute Xinboda’s explanation
    of the 2010 date that appears on the face of the Declaration (“Certified Stamp L.S.V. No. 694 20
    22
    As noted above, Commerce also critiques the Researcher Declaration on the ground that
    it “provides no indication [that the Researcher] met with those responsible for gathering and
    publishing [the Azadpur APMC prices] (which is an especially relevant problem . . . related to the
    issue . . . concerning why the publication no longer publishes prices for grade Super-A raw garlic
    bulbs).” See Remand Results at 5 (emphasis added).
    In the case at bar, however, it does not matter why the Azadpur Market no longer sells garlic
    bulbs that are designated as grade “Super-A.” The real point at issue is a straightforward factual
    question: Were garlic bulbs that were for a time (i.e., beginning in May 2006) classified and sold
    at the Azadpur Market as grade “Super-A” (or “S.A.”) subsequently classified and sold as grade “A”
    garlic bulbs as of early February 2008 (when publication of prices for “Super-A” or “S.A.” grade
    garlic bulbs ceased)? Presumably vendors are as knowledgeable as anyone about the essential
    characteristics of the produce that they sell (as well as other matters addressed in the Researcher
    Declaration). Certainly there is no record evidence here to the contrary. See infra section III.A.3
    (analyzing parties’ arguments concerning Commerce’s use of prices for “Super A”- (or “S.A.”-)
    grade garlic bulbs in calculating surrogate value for Dadi’s garlic bulbs).
    In short, the mere fact that the Researcher Declaration could have provided additional
    information (for example, to address the “why” question) in no way diminishes the relevance, the
    significance, or the reliability of the information that is provided.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                               Page 39
    April 2010 Proper Officer”), even though that explanation appeared in Xinboda’s comments on the
    Draft Remand Results. Xinboda advises that the 2010 date is the date on which the Licensed Stamp
    Vendor (“L.S.V.”) in India sold the official “non-judicial stamp paper” on which the Declaration is
    printed. Compare Xinboda Comments on Draft Remand Determination at 4 n.3 (explaining April
    2010 date) (SAR Pub. Doc. No. 6) and Pl.’s Brief at 10 n.4 (same) with Remand Results at 4
    (contrasting 2010 stamp date on Declaration with 2011 date of signature and notarization). And, as
    to the slight difference between the Declaration’s signature date and the date of the notary’s
    signature, Commerce concedes that the difference is “not . . . a primary concern” for the agency. See
    Remand Results at 4.23
    In sum, Commerce’s criticisms of the Researcher Declaration are largely without merit, and
    23
    There is no indication on the record here as to whether or not notarization practices in India
    parallel those in the U.S. for example, whether it would normally be expected that an affidavit
    would be executed in the presence of the notary public such that the signature date and the date of
    notarization would be the same.
    Further, as a practical matter, any such differences in dates is not necessarily proof of a lack
    of probity or reliability. There is a solid case to be made that, if anything, minor discrepancies are
    evidence of the authenticity and/or reliability of a document. See, e.g., Jinan Yipin Corp. v. United
    States, 38 CIT at ____n.39, ____
    n.51, 971 F. Supp. 2d at 1323
    n.39, 1330 n.51 (explaining that,
    “[i]f one were inclined to forge or manipulate price data, presumably one would produce data that
    were more clearly decisive in other words, one would generate a greater number of price quotes,
    and those price quotes would span the full duration of the period of review”) (“Jinan Yipin III”);
    Taian Ziyang Food Co. v. United States, 37 CIT ____, ____ n.24, ____ n.36, 
    918 F. Supp. 1345
    ,
    1367 n.24, 1375 n.36 (2013) (same). As such, the difference in dates here could reasonably be read
    as (in effect) supporting the authenticity and reliability of the Declaration. See Jinan Yipin II, 35 CIT
    at ____ 
    n.101, 800 F. Supp. 2d at 1310
    n.101 (observing that, “[v]iewed through this lens, the
    problems that Commerce sees in the[] price quotes are actually indicia of authenticity”).
    Commerce’s conclusion that the differences in dates are “not . . . a primary concern” for the
    agency is thus a sound one. See Remand Results at 4.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                               Page 40
    the agency’s sweeping, wholesale dismissal of the Declaration is unwarranted.                Under the
    “substantial evidence” standard and the circumstances of this case, Commerce here is not free to
    disregard the only specific, relevant, concrete record evidence concerning the condition of the garlic
    bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC Market i.e., the evidence that “[t]he garlic sold in the Azadpur
    Market is ready for retail consumption and is already fully processed when it arrives there, as in: (1)
    taking off the outside dirty layers so the garlic has a fresh white appearance; (2) cutting any long
    stems; and (3) packaged in a mesh bag” and the evidence that the garlic bulbs sold at the Market are
    “ready to be consumed in the state [in which they are] sold.” See Researcher Declaration ¶ 9.24
    The Condition of Garlic Bulbs Delivered to Dadi. Much as Commerce has stated that it does
    not know key specifics concerning the basic condition of the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC
    Market, so too Commerce states that it does not know the basic condition of the garlic bulbs that
    purchased by and delivered to Dadi. See Remand Results at 46 (stating that Commerce “does not
    have reliable information describing in detail the physical characteristics of the surrogate product
    [i.e., here, the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur Market]. Thus, [Commerce] cannot know exactly
    how the actual input [i.e., the garlic bulbs purchased by Dadi] and the surrogate input [i.e., the garlic
    bulbs sold at the Azadpur Market] differ.”); see 
    also supra
    n.12. The Remand Results nevertheless
    essentially equate the two, asserting that both have undergone post-harvest processing. See Remand
    24
    Significantly, even if Commerce’s disregard of the Researcher Declaration were to be
    sustained, it is doubtful that the agency’s use of the Azadpur APMC Market prices could be
    sustained as a surrogate value for the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi in the absence of any affirmative
    evidence establishing what the Azadpur Market prices fundamentally represent (i.e., in the absence
    of evidence documenting the basic condition of the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur Market). 
    See supra
    n.17 (analyzing absence of record evidence on the condition of the garlic bulbs sold at the
    Azadpur APMC Market and its implications).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                                Page 41
    Results at 47 (stating that Commerce finds that both the actual input [i.e., the garlic bulbs delivered
    to Dadi] and the surrogate input for raw garlic [i.e., the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC
    Market] are processed beyond the ‘farm gate’ to some extent”).25 In particular, Commerce
    25
    The parties spill much ink debating whether or not the garlic bulbs that Dadi purchased
    were at the “farm gate” level of trade. See, e.g., Remand Results at 6-8, 11 n.31, 46; Pl.’s Brief at
    2-8; Def.’s Brief at 10-13, 15; Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 2-15; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 2-4. However, that issue
    is nothing more than a semantics sideshow. The term “farm gate” is shorthand, but, as the Remand
    Results and the parties’ briefs amply illustrate, there is no well-settled, established definition of the
    term.
    As Commerce correctly points out, the real issue presented is whether, as the Remand Results
    conclude, the condition of the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi is essentially the same as that of the
    garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC Market. See Remand Results at 46 (explaining that “what
    is important is finding a reasonable match between the input the producer uses and the [surrogate
    values] placed on the record, not the definition of the term ‘farm gate’”); see also Def.-Ints.’ Brief
    at 5 (noting that “at bottom it is the physical condition of the input bulbs purchased by Dadi . . . that
    determines the appropriate surrogate value”).
    It is nonetheless worth noting that Commerce’s pinched definition of the term “farm gate”
    apparently contemplates buyers driving directly into farmers’ garlic fields and loading into the
    buyers’ trucks garlic bulbs exactly as they are plucked from the ground leaves, stems, roots, clods
    of dirt and all. Thus, according to Commerce:
    Were the respondents to have purchased raw garlic inputs at farmgate prices, they
    would have purchased raw garlic fresh at the field during the harvest. That garlic that
    they purchased would not [have] been cleaned, sorted by size, bagged, transported
    or otherwise handled. Upon taking possession of the garlic, [the] respondents would
    have (1) sorted the garlic (by size, quality, etc.); (2) cleaned it of all stems, root
    plates, etc.; (3) transported it; and (4) stored it.
    Remand Results at 6 (quoting Issues & Decision Memorandum for 16th Review). This definition
    of “farm gate” is so narrow that it seems highly unlikely as a practical matter that Commerce
    could ever make a finding that garlic bulbs had been sold at the “farm gate.” See, e.g., Pl.’s Brief
    at 3 (observing that Commerce “appears to suggest that in order for . . . purchases to be at farm gate
    prices, the garlic must be pulled from the ground unidentified as to type and size and handed to a
    purchaser ‘as is’” a practice that “would . . . not allow either party to the transaction to have any
    basis for agreeing on a purchase price”); 
    id. at 3-4
    (arguing generally that, “around the world,” all
    newly-harvested garlic bulbs are the subject of at least some very basic processes, such as an “initial
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 42
    emphasizes that prior to delivery to Dadi for processing the garlic bulbs that Dadi purchased had
    been “sorted by grade/size, cleaned, bagged, [and] stored,” sometimes in cold or controlled
    atmosphere storage. See Remand Results at 6-7 (quoting Issues & Decision Memorandum for 16th
    Review). See id.26
    cleaning,” etc., such that Commerce’s definition of “farm gate” to mean “produce immediately
    following harvest that has not been sorted, cleaned, or transported is not a reasonable
    characterization” of the operations of real-life farmers); Def.’s Brief at 12-13 (conceding that, if
    Xinboda’s description of the real-life operations of garlic farmers is accurate, “Commerce would find
    very few garlic farmers to be selling their product at farmgate”).
    Indeed, according to the Remand Results, Commerce has never made a finding that garlic
    bulbs were sold at the “farm gate,” in any administrative review. See Remand Results at 11 n.31
    (stating that, “[i]n prior reviews, [Commerce] applied the facts before it in each review, and
    determined that, during those reviews, no record evidence demonstrated that respondents purchased
    raw garlic inputs at farmgate prices”). That statement is in error. It is true that Commerce has never
    found that Dadi purchased garlic bulbs at farm gate prices. However, as the Government and the
    Domestic Producers acknowledge, Commerce in fact did find, in the tenth administrative review,
    that the respondents there had purchased garlic bulbs at “farm gate” prices. See Def.’s Brief at 12;
    Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 13; Jinan Yipin II, 35 CIT at ____, 800 F. Supp. 2d at 1256-57 (quoting results
    of first remand in litigation concerning the 10th review, where Commerce explained that, in selecting
    a surrogate value for the garlic bulbs consumed by the respondents at issue there, the agency sought
    (and selected) “a price that . . . represents the ‘intermediate input’ at issue i.e., raw garlic bulb as
    it is harvested, at the ‘farm gate’”) (emphasis added)). Yet there was no record evidence in that case
    to indicate that the garlic bulbs there at issue were left in the field following harvest, in the exact
    state in which the bulbs were pulled from the ground, until they were picked up by buyers leaves,
    stems, roots, clods of dirt and all in the fields where the garlic was grown.
    26
    At one point in the Remand Results, Commerce states that the bags of garlic bulbs arriving
    at Dadi’s processing facilities were “either immediately opened for processing or stored in one of
    Dadi’s refrigerated or dry storage spaces” thus referring to the possibility of storage at Dadi’s
    processing facilities. See Remand Results at 8. As noted above, the Remand Results also state that
    the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi had been “stored by farmer suppliers in cold storage” prior to their
    delivery. 
    Id. at 7-8
    (emphasis added). Yet, elsewhere in the Remand Results, Commerce
    equivocates on that point. See 
    id. at 46-47
    (stating that “the farmers supplying . . . Dadi[] sort, bag,
    and possibly store the raw garlic bulbs they supply to Dadi”) (emphasis added).
    There are several salient points to be made. First, Xinboda does not dispute that some of the
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 43
    garlic bulbs that farmers delivered to Dadi had been held in cold storage prior to delivery. See, e.g.,
    Pl.’s Brief at 7 (stating that “it is normal . . . for a farmer to store (whether by cold storage or
    otherwise) his produce,” for sale outside of harvest season); 
    id. at 6
    (stating that “it would not be
    unusual for the farmer[s] to store their produce throughout the year so that the produce can generate
    stead y income and attract a premium as fresh garlic becomes scarce at the end of the cycle”).
    However, to the extent that the Remand Results highlight the possibility that garlic bulbs may have
    been held in cold storage at Dadi’s processing facilities, such storage has no bearing on the matter
    that is in dispute i.e., the condition of the garlic bulbs at the time they were delivered to Dadi. The
    Remand Results’ analysis thus reflects some measure of confusion on this issue.
    More generally, the Remand Results include a lengthy excerpt on the subject of cold storage
    (and, more generally, the handling of garlic bulbs after harvest), which Commerce cut-and-pasted
    verbatim from the Issues & Decision Memorandum for the 16th Review. See generally Remand
    Results at 6-7 (quoting Issues & Decision Memorandum for 16th Review at 20-21); see also Def.-
    Ints.’ Brief at 5, 6, 7-8, 9 (discussing cold storage); Pl.’s Brief at 6, 7 (same). Although it is not
    entirely clear, the gravamen of the excerpt quoted in the Remand Results seems to be that Commerce
    views cold storage by farmers as a form of “post-harvest processing,” and, as such, as evidence that
    the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi are comparable to the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC
    Market (in the sense that, according to Commerce, both have been subject to some post-harvest
    processing). See generally, e.g., Remand Results at 6-7, 46; see also Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 7
    (characterizing “cold or controlled atmosphere storage” as “a further, substantial post-harvest
    handling operation”); 
    id. at 3
    (arguing that the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi had been “subjected
    to significant post-harvest processing”; 
    id. at 6
    (same); 
    id. at 6
    -7 (same); 
    id. at 14-15
    (same).
    There are a number of problems with Commerce’s emphasis on the use of cold storage. First,
    although the administrative record in the sixteenth administrative review may have supported the
    quoted findings concerning cold storage, the subject of cold storage including any implications of
    its use has not been a focus in the record of this review. Nor has the subject been adequately
    briefed in this litigation. Thus, for example, the extended discussion of cold storage at pages six to
    seven of the Remand Results (lifted from the Issues & Decision Memorandum in the 16th Review)
    is not supported by any citations to the administrative record in the instant review. See Remand
    Results at 6-7. As another example, that discussion in the Remand Results includes multiple
    references to “Golden Bird” and relies on “Golden Bird’s statements.” 
    Id. Golden Bird
    Trading Co.,
    Ltd. participated in the sixteenth review. But Golden Bird made no shipments during the period of
    review at issue here. Commerce therefore rescinded the instant review as to the company. See Final
    Determination, 76 Fed. Reg. at 37,323 (rescinding 15th administrative review as to various
    companies, including Golden Bird). Accordingly, by definition, there is no evidence or argument
    from Golden Bird in the record of this review. The excerpt quoted in the Remand Results similarly
    incorporates numerous other statements and findings of fact, including statements that Commerce
    attributes to Xinboda, which have not been tied to anything in the record here. Remand Results at
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                               Page 44
    6-7.
    In principle, there is nothing to prohibit Commerce from “importing” into this proceeding
    (quoting and relying on) its findings in the sixteenth review, particularly if that is the most efficient
    means of communicating the agency’s determination. See Def.’s Brief at 19 n.2 (explaining, inter
    alia, that “Commerce cited and quoted [the Issues & Decision Memorandum for the 16th Review]
    because it found this to be a convenient means of articulating its reasoning in [the instant review]”).
    However, the analysis in the Remand Results states without reservation that “the information
    provided by Xinboda in [the sixteenth administrative review] . . . is the same information submitted
    in [the fifteenth review].” See Remand Results at 6 n.16; see also Def.’s Brief at 19 n.2 (asserting
    that, although “Commerce cites to and quotes from” the Issues & Decision Memorandum for the
    16th Review, “the explanations and findings in the . . . Remand Results were based on and in
    accordance with the facts and record of [the administrative review at issue here]”); 
    id. at 17-18
    (arguing that the Remand Results’ quotation of the Issues & Decision Memorandum for the 16th
    review “does not draw any ‘facts’ from the 16th administrative review onto the record of the
    [administrative review at issue here]”).
    Even assuming arguendo that it is true that as Commerce states the information that
    Xinboda submitted (and the arguments that Xinboda made) in the sixteenth review are, in fact,
    identical in every meaningful respect to those of Xinboda in this fifteenth review (which seems
    improbable), Commerce’s statement stops short of saying that all other evidence and argument in
    the administrative record of the sixteenth review (such as that of the Domestic Producers) is
    essentially identical to that in this review. In other words, significantly, Commerce does not say that
    that (as to this issue) the administrative records in the two reviews are essentially identical. Nor
    could Commerce truthfully make such a statement. At the very least, as noted above, the record in
    the sixteenth review included the evidence and argument of Golden Bird, which is not included in
    the record of this review.
    Further, the mere fact that Xinboda participated in the sixteenth review does not mean that
    Xinboda is in any way precluded from disputing findings and conclusions from that review, or that
    Xinboda is foreclosed from offering more or different evidence and arguments, in this review (and,
    as appropriate, in this litigation). As Commerce frequently reminds parties in international trade
    proceedings, and as the agency reiterated here, Commerce “reviews each record and applies the facts
    accordingly, for ‘each administrative review is a separate segment of the proceedings with its own
    unique facts.’” Remand Results at 11 n.31 (quotation omitted). As a matter of fundamental fairness,
    Xinboda here is entitled to an opportunity to present its own evidence and to respond to all
    arguments and to other record evidence for purposes of this review, without regard to the evidence,
    arguments, findings, conclusions, and determinations in the sixteenth review. By the same token,
    Commerce cannot make findings, conclusions, and determinations in this matter that are not
    grounded in the record of this review, even if they are supported by the record in another review
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                                Page 45
    Contrary to Commerce’s implication, however, Xinboda has never denied that farmers
    supplying garlic bulbs to Dadi “provide[d] rudimentary services such as cleaning, removing stems
    and root parts, sorting, and bagging for transport,” and that, in some instances, bulbs were held in
    cold storage prior to delivery. Pl.’s Brief at 3, 6, 7-8.27 But, more to the point, the record evidence
    involving Xinboda. Lastly, to the extent that the parties wish to argue cold storage (or any other
    issue) in this litigation, they must cite to specific and substantial evidence on the record at issue here.
    From what can be gleaned from the Remand Results and the parties’ briefs, it seems a virtual
    certainty that at least some of the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi, and some of the garlic bulbs sold
    at the Azadpur APMC Market, had been previously held in cold storage. Ultimately, however, the
    issue of cold storage is a proverbial “red herring.” The fundamental issue at stake is whether the
    condition of the garlic bulbs purchased by Dadi and the condition of the garlic bulbs sold at the
    Azadpur Market are essentially the same, as Commerce contends they are. As explained herein, the
    bottom line is that whatever may be the case as to cold storage the existing record makes it clear
    that the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur Market were “processed” to a degree significantly beyond
    the garlic bulbs that were delivered to Dadi.
    27
    As an aside, the record evidence indicates that sorting garlic bulbs by size is not as time-
    consuming an operation as Commerce and the Domestic Producers seem to suggest. See generally,
    e.g., Verification of the Sales and Factors Responses of Shenzhen Xinboda Industrial Co., Ltd. in
    the Administrative Review of Fresh Garlic from the People’s Republic of China at 10 (explaining
    that those in the garlic bulb industry “can identify garlic size by sight”) (“Verification Report”) (AR
    Pub. Doc. No. 151).
    Similarly, at one point in the Remand Results, Commerce states that the garlic bulbs sold to
    Dadi have not only been sorted by size by Dadi’s farmer suppliers, but also have been “measured.”
    See Remand Results at 7-8; see also Verification Report at 16 (stating that “[Dadi] officials
    explained that suppliers provide bulbs . . . based on Dadi’s requirements, so the garlic bulbs received
    [by Dadi] . . . have already been measured and sorted by size”). Everywhere else, however,
    Commerce states only that the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi were already “sorted by size.” See, e.g.,
    Remand Results at 6 (quoting Issues & Decision Memorandum for 16th Review, stating that “all the
    raw garlic inputs purchased by the respondents . . . were sorted by grade/size, cleaned, bagged,
    stored, and then transported”); 
    id. at 7
    (same, stating that “local farms had to clean, sort and bag the
    harvested raw garlic”); 
    id. (same, stating
    that “the farmer selling the garlic . . . [must] have gone
    through the raw harvested garlic, cleaned it up, sorted it based on size and type, placed it into large
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 46
    on the condition of the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi belies any suggestion that their condition and
    the condition of the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC Market were essentially the same.
    As detailed above, the Researcher Declaration       the only record evidence on point      states
    that the garlic bulbs at the Azadpur APMC Market have already had the “long stems” and “outside
    dirty layers” removed, leaving the bulbs with “a fresh white appearance.” Researcher Declaration
    ¶ 9. However, the record evidence establishes that these same processes peeling away the outside
    layers of the garlic bulbs, cutting their roots and long stems, and so on    are processes that Dadi’s
    workers performed at Dadi’s own processing facilities. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____,
    
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1349. In the Verification Report, Commerce staffers noted their own first-hand,
    eyewitness observations to that effect: “[Dadi’s] production process includes peeling off outer skins,
    cutting root and stem, the utilization of mesh bags when required by order, buckling the bag, and
    then placing it in a cardboard box.” See Verification of the Sales and Factors Responses of
    Shenzhen Xinboda Industrial Co., Ltd. in the Administrative Review of Fresh Garlic from the
    People’s Republic of China at 9 (“Verification Report”) (AR Pub. Doc. No. 151).
    Logically, the processing that was performed at Dadi’s facilities was by definition over
    and above any operations that may have occurred before the garlic bulbs were delivered to Dadi.
    Moreover, as a matter of logic, because Dadi’s workers peeled off the outer skins of the garlic bulbs
    mesh bags, and, finally, delivered it to . . . Dadi”); 
    id. at 8
    (stating that, “[p]rior to delivery, . .
    farmers themselves sorted and packaged the garlic based on size and type”); 
    id. (stating that
    the
    garlic delivered to Dai was “presorted”); 
    id. (referring to
    “the pre-sorted and packaged garlic
    purchased by Dadi”); 
    id. at 46
    (stating that “the farmers supplying . . . Dadi[] sort, bag, and possibly
    store” the garlic bulbs before they are delivered to Dadi). It is thus somewhat unclear whether or not
    the garlic farmers supplying Dadi literally “measured” garlic bulbs in order to size them, and if so
    whether that is a fairly time-consuming operation.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 47
    and cut their roots and stems, the garlic bulbs that were delivered to Dadi could not possibly have
    been in the same condition as those sold at the Azadpur APMC Market. At the Azadpur Market, the
    “long stems” of the garlic bulbs already had been cut off and the “outside dirty layers” of the bulbs
    already had been removed, leaving the garlic bulbs with “a fresh white appearance.” Compare
    Verification Report at 9 with Researcher Declaration ¶ 9.
    The Consequences for Commerce’s Analyses. If the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC
    Market were at a more advanced level of trade (i.e., had been subjected to more processing) than the
    garlic bulbs that were delivered to Dadi (as all existing record evidence indicates), the Azadpur
    Market prices cannot reasonably be used as a surrogate value for the garlic bulbs that were delivered
    to Dadi     at least not without further adjustment.
    As one example, Xinboda has explained that it was required to report to Commerce the labor
    hours and the electricity that Dadi workers consumed in tasks such as stripping off the outside layers
    of the garlic bulbs and cutting the roots and stems, and that Commerce then added the value of that
    labor and electricity together with a proportional figure for overhead (specifically, selling, general,
    and administrative expenses or “SG&A” )         to Commerce’s calculated surrogate value for whole
    raw garlic bulbs, i.e., the Azadpur Market prices. Because Commerce separately accounted for such
    expenses, and because the expense of such processes is already effectively “embedded” in the
    Azadpur Market prices, Commerce’s calculations reflect impermissible double-counting. See
    Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1349.
    This matter therefore must be remanded to Commerce for a second time, to allow the agency
    to once again reconsider its selection of a surrogate value for the “intermediate input” in question
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 48
    i.e., the whole raw garlic bulbs that were purchased by and delivered to Dadi taking into account
    the analysis herein, as well as all arguments and all record evidence. In its reconsideration,
    Commerce shall make any adjustments to the surrogate value that Commerce selects which may be
    necessary in order to avoid the double-counting of expenses and to otherwise calculate Dadi’s
    dumping margin as accurately as possible. See also infra sections III.A.2 & III.A.3 (analyzing,
    respectively, Xinboda’s related claim that the Azadpur Market prices reflect expenses associated
    with intermediaries that are not incurred by Dadi, and Xinboda’s related claim that Commerce’s use
    of Azadpur Market prices for grade S.A. garlic bulbs skewed the agency’s surrogate value).28
    28
    At one point, the Remand Results take an “all or nothing” approach to the Azadpur APMC
    Market prices, asserting that if they are the best available information for use as a surrogate value
    for Dadi’s whole raw garlic bulbs, Commerce is entitled to rely on those prices “as is” (or, more
    precisely, without any adjustments other than the two adjustments that Commerce has already made).
    See Remand Results at 11 (stating that Commerce has determined that the Azadpur Market prices
    are the best available data, and that, “[w]ith that decision, [the agency] is not required to adjust or
    modify the Azadpur data” any further). However, if Commerce continues to rely on the Azadpur
    Market prices on remand, Commerce must make such further adjustments to those prices as may be
    necessary.
    For its part, as noted above, Xinboda argues that in light of the problems with the Azadpur
    Market prices Commerce should instead base the surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs on
    the prices that are reflected in Garlico’s financial statements. See generally Pl.’s Brief at 14-16
    (advocating for use of Garlico prices). But see Remand Results at 13-14 (highlighting asserted
    deficiencies in Garlico prices and concluding that Azadpur Market prices are best available
    information); Def.’s Brief at 8-10, 15 (arguing that Commerce properly rejected Garlico prices);
    Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 22-24 (same). On remand, Commerce will go back to the drawing board to
    reconsider its selection of a surrogate value, re-examining the record evidence and re-evaluating the
    strengths and weaknesses of the data sources on the record (including both the Garlico prices and
    the Azadpur APMC Market prices, as well as any other data that Commerce may deem appropriate).
    It is at least possible that, on remand, Commerce will select the Garlico prices as the basis
    for the surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs. At a minimum, Commerce’s analysis of the
    relative merits of the two data sources will be affected. And it is conceivable that Xinboda may be
    satisfied with the surrogate value that Commerce calculates on remand. There is therefore no need
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 49
    2. Expenses Associated With “Intermediaries”
    Apart from Xinboda’s challenge to Commerce’s determination that the condition of the garlic
    bulbs delivered to Dadi and the condition of those sold at the Azadpur APMC Market are essentially
    the same and Xinboda’s “double-counting” claim (discussed above), Xinboda also contends that the
    Azadpur Market prices reflect substantial “intermediary” expenses        that is, fees and downstream
    expenses, such as sums paid to “middlemen” and “intermediaries” including “commission agents,
    wholesalers, and retailers”   which are expenses that Dadi did not incur and which impermissibly
    inflate the surrogate value that Commerce has calculated for the intermediate input at issue here (i.e.,
    the garlic bulbs that were delivered to Dadi). Pl.’s Brief at 6; see generally Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38
    CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1350-53 (addressing Xinboda’s claims concerning sums paid to
    “middle men” and “intermediaries,” including “commission agents, wholesalers and retailers to
    cover transportation, loading, unloading, storage, overhead, profits, etc.,” which, according to
    Xinboda, are associated with sales at markets such as the Azadpur Market).29
    The Remand Results make the point that Commerce has already deducted 7% from the
    Azadpur Market prices “in order to account for commissions,” including “middleman type expenses”
    to further consider at this time other aspects of Xinboda’s claim that Commerce should base the
    surrogate value on the Garlico prices, including Xinboda’s argument that the Garlico prices more
    accurately reflect Xinboda’s level of trade.
    29
    See also, e.g., Jinan Yipin II, 35 CIT at ____, 800 F. Supp. 2d at 1270-71 (stating that “the
    apparent involvement of intermediaries” in sales at the Azadpur APMC Market both “substantiates
    the Chinese Producers’ concerns that the prices included in the Azadpur APMC data may include
    costs, fees, and commissions that hike up the prices” and also “undermines Commerce’s claims that
    the Azadpur APMC data . . . are representative of the value of the ‘intermediate input’ at issue”).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 50
    associated with “services typically rendered by a sales agent.” Remand Results at 47; see also 
    id. at 6
    n.16.30 However, Xinboda claims that the actual expenses attributable to middlemen and
    intermediaries dwarf Commerce’s 7% adjustment. According to Xinboda, the Azadpur APMC
    Market prices include “a 60-80% mark-up, as reported by studies conducted by the government of
    India.” See Pl.’s Brief at 14-15.31
    The Issues and Decision Memorandum that accompanied Commerce’s Final Determination
    inexplicably stated that Xinboda failed to “place[] information on the record” to prove its claims
    concerning intermediary expenses. Issues & Decision Memorandum at 15. Quite to the contrary,
    as Shenzhen Xinboda I observed, “Xinboda mustered significant documentation to substantiate its
    claims,” which Commerce’s Final Determination failed to consider. Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT
    at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1350-51. Shenzhen Xinboda I catalogued some of the record evidence
    on which Xinboda relies. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____ , 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1351-52.32
    30
    See also Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____ n.23, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1353 n.23 (quoting
    Preliminary Surrogate Value Memorandum at 4 (AR Pub. Doc. No. 133), which notes that
    Commerce “subtracted a 7% fee (6% commission fee plus 1% market fee) charged on transactions
    at the Azadpur APMC [Market]” from the Azadpur APMC Market prices).
    31
    Xinboda attached to its brief several articles to support its case, including a June 2014 news
    article published in the Times of India, reporting that the Azadpur APMC Market was being closed
    for the sale of fruits and vegetables because “deregulation would help get rid of the middlemen
    because of whom prices of food items often rose by more than 100% from the time the produce left
    the field till it landed up in one’s home.” See Pl.’s Brief at 14 n.7 (quoting Times of India (June 19,
    2014)) & Exh. 4. However, as the Domestic Producers correctly note, those documents are not part
    of the administrative record here and therefore must be disregarded. See Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 26.
    32
    For example, Shenzhen Xinboda I noted Xinboda’s reliance on the 2009-2010 Annual
    Report of the Indian Ministry of Agriculture’s Department of Agriculture & Cooperation
    (“AgriCoop”), “which advises that the country’s market system has become increasingly ‘restrictive
    and monopolistic’ over time, such that ‘produce is required to be channeled through regulated
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                          Page 51
    markets and licensed traders’ (i.e., the ‘intermediaries’ to which Xinboda refers), resulting in ‘an
    enormous increase in the cost of marketing.’” See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 976 F.
    Supp. 2d at 1351 (quoting Xinboda Surrogate Value Submission at Exh. 35 (AR Pub. Doc. No.
    133)).
    Shenzhen Xinboda I also took note of other record evidence to the same general effect,
    including a December 29, 2010 article published in The Economic Times, “ authored by the Director
    of India’s National Academy of Agricultural Research Management (‘NAARM’) stating that the
    supply chains for agricultural products such as onions, tomatoes, and garlic are ‘inefficient,
    dominated by intermediaries.’” See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1351
    (citing, inter alia, Xinboda Surrogate Value Submission at Exh. 34 (AR Pub. Doc. No. 133)). In
    addition, Shenzhen Xinboda I observed that “[t]he Director of NAARM further explained that
    ‘[s]tudies have shown that nearly 60-80% of the price consumers pay goes to commission agents,
    wholesalers and retailers to cover transportation, loading, unloading, storage, overheads, profits,
    etc.’” See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1351 (citing, inter alia, Xinboda
    Surrogate Value Submission at Exh. 34 (AR Pub. Doc. No. 133)).
    Shenzhen Xinboda I observed that Xinboda cited to another similar article from The
    Economic Times, dated December 29, 2010 and authored by a senior agricultural economist from
    Credit Rating and Information Services of India (“Crisil”), which “‘underscores [t]he difference
    between the farm gate and retail prices’” of onions and other similar vegetables in India and
    attributes that mark-up to “‘exploit[ation] by intermediaries.’” See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at
    ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1351 (citing, inter alia, Xinboda Surrogate Value Submission at Exh. 34
    (AR Pub. Doc. No. 133)).
    In addition, Shenzhen Xinboda I noted that Xinboda argues that “the involvement of
    intermediaries in sales at facilities such as the Azadpur APMC Market and the existence of
    associated additional fees and expenses are borne out by the Domestic Producers’ own Market
    Research Report.” See generally Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1351-52
    (citing Market Research Report). Shenzhen Xinboda I explained that Xinboda also points to the
    Clarification of the Market Research Report, which “states that an individual transporting produce
    out of a local APMC jurisdiction to a market such as the Azadpur APMC Market must pay a market
    fee to the local market at the local district’s exit checkpoint.” See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at
    ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1352 (citing, inter alia, Clarification of Market Research Report at 6).
    Shenzhen Xinboda I further indicated that Xinboda similarly cites the Garlico price data as
    corroboration of Xinboda’s claims. See generally Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1352 (citing Garlico pricing data). Shenzhen Xinboda I explained: “According to Xinboda,
    ‘[d]educting the average 70% markup reported by [India’s National Academy of Agricultural
    Research Management] from the Grade A prices of garlic sold on the Azadpur [APMC] market
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 52
    Commerce now concedes, as it must, that “the articles cited by Xinboda . . . [prove] the
    existence of intermediary expenses added to the cost of raw garlic between farmgate and the Azadpur
    market.” Remand Results at 10.33 The Remand Results nevertheless take the position that there is
    no need for further adjustments to the Azadpur Market prices to account for intermediary expenses,
    advancing four reasons. See 
    id. at 9-11.
    As summarized below, Commerce yet again fails to give
    Xinboda’s claims concerning intermediary expenses the consideration that those claims merit.
    The Remand Results first state, in essence, that it is unnecessary for Commerce to make any
    further deductions for intermediary expenses in calculating the surrogate value for Dadi’s raw garlic
    bulbs because, according to Commerce, Dadi’s garlic bulbs incorporated the services of (and thus
    the costs of) intermediaries. In the words of the Remand Results: “Xinboda’s argument for
    subtracting alleged ‘intermediary expenses’ from the Azadpur APMC prices is based entirely on the
    assumption that its garlic is purchased at . . . prices[] which are free from any intermediary price
    mark-ups.” Remand Results at 9; see also Def.’s Brief at 13-14. Commerce reasons that, because
    the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi had already been sorted by size, bagged, and, in some instances,
    stored, the price that Dadi paid “may include such intermediary or ‘downstream expenses.’” 
    Id. during the
    [period of review] amounts to a farm gate price of 7.055 Rs/kg.’ . . . . Xinboda argues that
    this figure ‘comes very close to the average prices for raw garlic that Garlico paid’ during the period
    of review,” and thus constitutes further proof that the Azadpur Market prices reflect costs above and
    beyond those that Dadi incurred. 
    Id., 38 CIT
    at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1352.
    33
    But see Remand Results at 9 (referring to “alleged ‘intermediary expenses’”).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                          Page 53
    (emphasis added).34
    Even in the excerpt from the Remand Results that is quoted above, Commerce does not state
    definitively that the prices that Dadi paid for garlic bulbs reflected expenses associated with
    intermediaries. Instead, Commerce states only that the prices paid by Dadi “may” have included
    such expenses. See Remand Results at 9. More importantly, Commerce’s position here is premised
    on the Remand Results’ conclusion that the condition of the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi and the
    condition of the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC Market are basically the same. That
    conclusion has now been debunked, at least for the present and on the existing record. See 
    generally supra
    section III.A.1 (at “The Condition of Garlic Bulbs at the Azadpur APMC Market” and “The
    Condition of Garlic Bulbs Purchased by Dadi”).35
    There is therefore no evidentiary basis for Commerce’s attempt to dismiss Xinboda’s claims
    concerning intermediary expenses by broadly equating the condition of the garlic bulbs delivered to
    Dadi and the condition of those sold at the Azadpur Market. The intermediary expenses that are the
    subject of Xinboda’s claim are fees, commissions, and other costs incurred for processing and
    34
    Apparently Commerce is here referring to any costs associated with operations such as the
    sorting, bagging, and storage of garlic bulbs prior to delivery to Dadi as “intermediary expenses.”
    35
    In addition, there is a fundamental flaw in Commerce’s reasoning. In essence, even
    assuming that the prices that Dadi paid included “intermediary expenses” (as Commerce is defining
    the term) and that the Azadpur Market prices also included such “intermediary expenses,” one
    nevertheless could not dismiss the issue of intermediary expenses as a “wash,” as Commerce does
    in the Remand Results. See Remand Results at 9. Commerce’s reasoning fails to consider the
    magnitude of the intermediary expenses. In other words, intermediary expenses could not be
    considered a “wash” if, for example, the prices that Dadi paid for whole raw garlic bulbs included
    a modest sum for intermediary expenses, while the prices for garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur Market
    included very significant sums for such expenses.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 54
    handling of the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur APMC Market above and beyond the very basic
    processing and handling to which the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi had been subject           in other
    words, the fees, commissions, and other expenses that are documented in the evidence that
    Commerce now acknowledges Xinboda has placed on the record.
    The Remand Results also seek to dismiss Xinboda’s claims concerning intermediary
    expenses by brushing aside the evidence that Xinboda has mustered. See Remand Results at 10. But
    this second point is no more effective than the first.
    Rather than carefully reviewing and evaluating each of the numerous articles and other pieces
    of evidence that Xinboda cites in support of its claims, the Remand Results attempt to sweep it all
    away by cherry-picking several of the articles for comment, giving those articles treatment that is
    superficial at best, and turning a blind eye to everything else. However, Commerce is not permitted
    to reach its determinations by selectively citing some evidence while ignoring all the rest.
    For example, the Remand Results state: “[W]hile the articles cited by Xinboda [establish]
    the existence of intermediary expenses added to the cost of raw garlic between farmgate and the
    Azadpur market, they also acknowledge other sources for such costs, such as ‘changing dietary
    habits due to rising incomes.’” See Remand Results at 10; see also Def.’s Brief at 14. Although the
    Remand Results refer to “articles” and “they” (both plural), Commerce cites and quotes only one
    authority as support for its statement    an article by a senior agricultural economist from Credit
    Rating and Information Services of India (“Crisil”) which was published in The Economic Times
    (and is discussed in note 32 above). Further, although Commerce’s meaning is not entirely clear,
    it seems likely that the reference in Commerce’s sentence to “other sources for such costs” was
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 55
    intended to be “other sources for [such?] price increases.”
    More importantly, the Remand Results do not accurately depict the content of the Crisil
    article. The focus of the article is a “demand-supply” mismatch in, among other things, fruits and
    vegetables. The article notes increased demand as a result of factors including “changing dietary
    habits due to rising incomes,” and indicates that production has not yet caught up. However, the
    article underscores the role of intermediaries, stating, for example, that “[t]he difference between the
    farm gate and retail prices of onion, as also of other vegetables is an indication that the situation is
    being exploited by intermediaries.” (Emphasis added.) The article further states that “[e]ven a
    minor gap between demand and supply is being exploited by intermediaries to aggravate the
    [demand-supply mismatch] situation many-fold.” (Emphasis added.) The article closes by
    emphasizing that the short-term solution to the demand-supply mismatch “has to be on removing
    supplyside bottlenecks,” with the article singling out “increased intermediation costs” as a key
    problem to be addressed. (Emphasis added.)
    Whatever point the Remand Results were trying to make, whether as to prices or costs, the
    Crisil article cannot fairly be read as equating the effects of “changing dietary habits” with those of
    intermediary expenses, as the Remand Results suggest. The Remand Results plainly seek to
    downplay the article’s emphasis on the high costs attributable to intermediaries. As illustrated
    below, this is a pattern, not an isolated instance.36
    36
    There is also a logical fallacy inherent in Commerce’s rationale. Contrary to Commerce’s
    implication, the presence of “other sources” (presumably other contributing factors) that may be at
    play would not negate the existence and effect of intermediary expenses. It would mean only that
    Commerce should take into account the evidence of any such “other sources” (or other factors) in
    determining the amount of any adjustment for intermediary expenses.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                            Page 56
    The Remand Results further state that “APMC reforms have benefitted free movement of
    agricultural products.” See Remand Results at 10. Although no authority is cited for this broad
    assertion, the Remand Results appear to be referring to another article published in The Economic
    Times, which was authored by the Director of India’s National Academy of Agricultural Research
    Management (“NAARM”) (and is also discussed in note 32 above).
    According to the Remand Results, the Director of NAARM “recognized the potential positive
    effects of APMC Act implementation and the generally increasing efficacy of farm-to-market supply
    chains.” Remand Results at 10. As support for that proposition, the Remand Results quote an
    excerpt from the Director’s article: “[T]he country is witnessing a revolution of innovative
    institutions that are effectively linking producers with markets. Such arrangements not only improve
    market efficiency but also augment production of food to meet changing demands.” Id.; see also
    Def.’s Brief at 14.
    Again, the Remand Results not only lift an excerpt out of context, but also obfuscate the
    fundamental thrust of the article. The title of the article itself makes this obvious      “Why are
    margins high in food items? Inefficient supply chain is a key reason.” Much like the Crisil article
    (discussed above), this article too analyzes the reasons behind increased prices for onions, tomatoes,
    and garlic. As Xinboda has previously noted, the article highlights problems in agricultural supply
    chains in India, which the article describes as “inefficient” and “dominated by intermediaries.” The
    article further states that “[s]tudies have shown that nearly 60%-80% of [the] price consumers pay
    goes to commission agents, wholesalers and retailers to cover transportation, loading, unloading,
    storage, overheads, profits, etc.” The Remand Results conspicuously omit any mention of these
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                               Page 57
    points.
    In referring to “a revolution of innovative institutions that are effectively linking producers
    with markets,” the article is merely making the point that the trend is in the right direction and that
    this “revolution” may remedy some existing problems in the future. Even the Remand Results
    correctly note that, at the time the article was published, any “positive effects of APMC Act
    implementation” were still only “potential.” The article thus indicates that “[e]ffective and speedy
    implementation of the model Agricultural Produce and Marketing Committee Act would [be]” not
    “will be,” and certainly not “was”      a step in the right direction.
    Not only does this article not undermine Xinboda’s case on intermediary expenses; to the
    contrary, the article substantiates the fact of such expenses and even goes so far as to quantify their
    effect on produce prices. It simply is not possible to read the article as Commerce attempts to do.
    The article is clear: Notwithstanding the then-not-yet-adopted APMC Act and the referenced
    “revolution of innovative institutions . . . effectively linking producers with markets,” “nearly 60%-
    80% of [the] price consumers pay” was (at the time of publication) attributable to intermediary
    expenses. Again, the Remand Results seek to downplay the article’s emphasis on the high costs
    attributable to intermediaries. If anything, the Remand Results’ treatment of this article is even more
    egregious than the Remand Results’ treatment of the Crisil article, discussed above.
    As a third point, the Remand Results state that “Xinboda’s arguments fail to establish that
    the sales prices at the APMC markets are distorted. In fact, a report on the APMC market system
    conducted and issued by the Government of India merely states that Indian farmers may earn less for
    their produce.” Remand Results at 10 (emphasis in the original). However, the authority cited in
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                            Page 58
    the Remand Results does not stand for this proposition. The Remand Results cite Exhibit 2 to
    Xinboda’s Surrogate Value Submission, which is captioned “DAMB, Azadpur Market Garlic Prices
    & Quantity, Seasonal Graphs.” It consists of two pages (specifically, two graphs) and is not “a report
    on the APMC market system conducted and issued by the Government of India,” despite what the
    Remand Results say. Moreover, Xinboda has not relied on Exhibit 2 to its Surrogate Value
    Submission as support for its intermediary expenses claim.
    It appears that the Remand Results’ assertion that the referenced “report on the APMC
    market system . . . merely states that Indian farmers may earn less for their produce” has been lifted
    by Commerce virtually verbatim from the agency’s Issues & Decision Memorandum in the 16th
    Review (i.e., the review following the review at issue here), although the Remand Results do not so
    indicate. See Issues & Decision Memorandum for 16th Review at 23 (asserting that “the report does
    not, in any way, state that the sales prices at the APMC markets, including Azadpur, are distorted.
    . . . [I]t only states that Indian farmers may earn less for their produce.”).
    As part of the third point, the Remand Results again quote the Issues & Decision
    Memorandum for the 16th Review (this time accurately attributing the quote): “[T]he Department,
    when identifying the [surrogate value] at issue, is not focused on the price the farmer receives but
    is instead focused on the price a processor would pay. The amount of the Azadpur sales price
    apportioned to Indian farmers is not material to this analysis.” Remand Results at 10 (quoting Issues
    & Decision Memorandum for the 16th Review at 23).
    Apart from the mis-citation, the Remand Results’ third point is a bit of a non sequitur here,
    where (perhaps in contrast to the subsequent review) the parties’ arguments have not been framed
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                            Page 59
    in terms of the prices that are paid to farmers. The effect of the Remand Results’ third point is thus
    to muddle the issue of intermediary expenses that is presented here.
    Still, it is worth noting that the two excerpts from the Issues & Decision Memorandum in the
    16th Review seem to be Commerce’s response to the 2009-2010 Annual Report of the Indian
    Ministry of Agriculture’s Department of Agriculture & Cooperation (“AgriCoop”), which is (on this
    record) Exhibit 35 to Xinboda’s Surrogate Value Submission not Exhibit 2 (and which is listed in
    note 32 above). The AgriCoop publication         which the Remand Results tout as “a report on the
    APMC market system conducted and issued by the Government of India”            states, inter alia, that
    the APMC market system in India (of which the Azadpur APMC Market is a part) has become
    increasingly “restrictive and monopolistic” over time, and that “produce is required to be channelled
    through regulated markets and licensed traders” (the intermediaries to which Xinboda refers),
    resulting in “an enormous increase in the cost of marketing.” See Xinboda Surrogate Value
    Submission at Exh. 35, p.58; see also Issues & Decision Memorandum in 16th Review at 22-23
    (summarizing relevant points from the AgriCoop report).
    As with the Crisil article and the article by the Director of NAARM, the Remand Results fail
    to accurately reflect the relevant parts of the AgriCoop report. For example, the Remand Results
    omit any reference to the “restrictive and monopolistic” structure of the APMC market system. Nor
    do the Remand Results acknowledge the AgriCoop report’s observations concerning the role of
    intermediaries and their effect on prices. See Remand Results at 10. Contrary to the representations
    in the Remand Results, the AgriCoop report cannot be read as anything other than support for
    Xinboda’s claim that intermediary expenses are embedded in the Azadpur Market prices. The
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                          Page 60
    Remand Results’ conclusion that “Xinboda’s arguments fail to establish that the sales prices at the
    AMPC markets are distorted” (id.) is not supported by the evidence that the Remand Results discuss.
    Even assuming that the excerpts from the publications referenced in the Remand Results
    were not taken out of context and read in isolation without regard to the remainder of the text (as
    they are), the Remand Results do not address all of the evidence that Xinboda has placed on the
    record as proof of its claim concerning intermediary expenses. See, e.g., Xinboda Surrogate Value
    Submission at Exh. 52 (“Global Market Articles”) (articles referring to, inter alia, “the long chain
    of middlemen and commission agents,” “intermediary exploitation,” the “exploitative element in the
    trade,” the desire to “eliminat[e] middlemen, transportation costs and delayed delivery,” and “the
    stranglehold of markets”); see 
    also supra
    n. 33.
    Commerce’s conclusions concerning intermediary expenses can be sustained only if they are
    based on thorough, independent, objective, and reasoned analyses of all of the evidence on which
    Xinboda relies. Moreover, any evaluation of the substantiality of the evidence “must take into
    account whatever in the record fairly detracts from its weight,” including “contradictory evidence
    or evidence from which conflicting inferences could be drawn.” 
    Suramerica, 44 F.3d at 985
    (quoting
    Universal Camera 
    Corp., 340 U.S. at 487
    -88).
    The Remand Results’ fourth and final point addressed to Xinboda’s claims concerning
    intermediary expenses is a makeweight.        Falling back on one of Commerce’s oft-repeated
    shibboleths, relying on Longkou (and reiterating the position that the agency took in the Final
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 61
    Determination),37 the Remand Results state that Commerce is not required to “tailor its choice of
    [surrogate values] to a respondent’s exact experiences.” See Remand Results at 10 (citing Longkou
    Haimeng Machinery Co. v. United States, 
    33 CIT 603
    , 613, 
    617 F. Supp. 2d 1363
    , 1372-73 (2009)).
    As the Remand Results note, however, the overarching principle which Longkou repeats
    is that “a surrogate value must be as representative of the production process in the [non-market
    economy] country as is practicable, if it is to achieve the statutory objective of assigning dumping
    margins as accurately as possible.” See Remand Results at 10 (quoting 
    Longkou, 33 CIT at 613
    , 617
    F. Supp. 2d at 1372); see also, e.g., Yangzhou Bestpak Gifts & Crafts Co. v. United States, 
    716 F.3d 1370
    , 1379 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (stating that “[a]n overriding purpose of Commerce’s administration of
    antidumping laws is to calculate dumping margins as accurately as possible”); Zhaoqing Tifo New
    Fibre Co. v. United States, 37 CIT ____, ____ n.6, 
    60 F. Supp. 3d 1328
    , 1333 n.6 (2013) (collecting
    cases). That is precisely the point of Xinboda’s claims concerning intermediary expenses. Xinboda
    seeks to establish what adjustments (if any) must be made to the Azadpur Market prices (or whatever
    other surrogate value Commerce may choose) in order to approximate Xinboda’s experience as
    closely as practicable.38
    37
    See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1352 (quoting Issues &
    Decision Memorandum at 14 and stating that the Final Determination “dismissively brush[es] off
    Xinboda’s concerns about additional fees and expenses embedded in the Azadpur APMC prices with
    the general proposition that Commerce “is not required to duplicate the exact experience of an
    exporter when calculating surrogate values”).
    38
    The Remand Results reiterate Commerce’s conclusion in the Final Determination that “the
    Azadpur data most broadly reflect the costs of raw garlic in India and are the best option for use in
    calculating [a surrogate value] meant to broadly reflect what Xinboda’s costs would be if it were
    operating in a market economy (ME) country.” Remand Results at 11. The Remand Results
    continue: “With that decision, [Commerce] is not required to adjust or modify the Azadpur data,
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 62
    As outlined above, the Remand Results fail to give adequate consideration to the evidence
    that Xinboda has proffered as proof of intermediary expenses embedded in the Azadpur Market
    prices which Xinboda asserts Dadi did not incur. Commerce’s use of the Azadpur Market prices as
    a surrogate value for the intermediate input in question i.e., the whole raw garlic bulbs delivered
    to Dadi     cannot be sustained (at least not without appropriate adjustments) if those prices
    incorporate intermediary expenses (as Commerce now acknowledges they do) to the extent that such
    expenses were not incurred by Dadi.
    Accordingly, this matter must be remanded for a second time on this point as well. On
    remand, Commerce shall rigorously review the proof of intermediary expenses that Xinboda has
    proffered and shall give full, fair, and balanced consideration to all relevant arguments and record
    or any data for that matter, to precisely replicate Xinboda’s circumstances.” 
    Id. True enough.
    As
    discussed above, there is no requirement that Commerce “precisely replicate” the experience of
    Xinboda or any other respondent (which would, in any event, be an impossible task). It is
    nevertheless also true that whatever surrogate value Commerce selects Commerce must make
    any necessary adjustments to that value, based on the record evidence, in order to calculate
    Xinboda’s antidumping margin “as accurately as possible.” See, e.g., Yangzhou Bestpak Gifts &
    
    Crafts, 716 F.3d at 1379
    ; see 
    also supra
    n.28 (discussing same statements from Remand Results at
    11).
    Similarly, Commerce elsewhere asserts that any further adjustments beyond those that the
    agency has already made “would be guess work.” See Remand Results at 47. As discussed above,
    however, there is a significant body of evidence already on the record, much of which Commerce
    apparently has not closely analyzed and all of which is largely uncontroverted. Cf. Pl.’s Reply Brief
    at 2 (stating that neither Commerce nor the Domestic Producer have adduced “one iota of evidence
    . . . that [Xinboda/Dadi] used the services of middlemen in its purchases of raw garlic”). To the
    extent that Commerce is making the point that it may be challenging to calculate an adjustment for
    intermediary expenses, that does not relieve Commerce of its obligation to do so based on the
    entirety of the record. If the evidence demonstrates that intermediary expenses that Dadi does not
    incur are reflected in the Azadpur Market prices, Commerce must make an appropriate adjustment
    or select a different data source as the basis for calculating the surrogate value for the garlic bulbs
    delivered to Dadi.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 63
    evidence. Commerce shall make any necessary adjustments to the Azadpur Market prices (or
    whatever other surrogate value Commerce may choose) so as to exclude all intermediary expenses
    that do not reflect the experience of Xinboda (including that of Dadi) and thus to calculate Xinboda’s
    dumping margin as accurately as possible.
    3. Use of Azadpur APMC Market Prices for Grade “S.A.” Garlic
    As explained above, to value the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi that had a diameter of 55 mm
    or more, Commerce used Azadpur APMC Market prices for grade “S.A.” garlic bulbs for the period
    February 2007 through January 2008 (i.e., prices from outside the period of review), which
    Commerce then indexed to the dates of the period of review. Similarly, to value the garlic bulbs
    delivered to Dadi that had a diameter of between 50 mm and 55 mm, Commerce used a combination
    of the non-contemporaneous but indexed Azadpur Market prices for grade “S.A.” garlic bulbs
    (described above) and contemporaneous Azadpur Market prices for grade “A” garlic bulbs (i.e.,
    prices for grade “A” garlic bulbs from within the period of review). See generally Shenzhen
    Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1343.39
    39
    In concluding discussion of Xinboda’s challenge to Commerce’s use of prices for grade
    S.A. garlic bulbs in calculating the surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs, the Remand Results
    state that Commerce “continue[s] to find [that the agency] correctly averaged grades Super-A and
    A values for raw garlic ranging from 40 mm to 55 mm.” Remand Results at 14. There are two
    problems with that statement. The first problem, a relatively minor point, is that Dadi did not use
    any 40 mm garlic bulbs in its production of garlic products for Xinboda. The garlic bulbs that Dadi
    used in producing garlic products for Xinboda ranged in diameter from 50 mm to 65 mm. The more
    significant point is that, contrary to the statement from the Remand Results quoted above,
    Commerce’s use of prices for grade S.A. garlic bulbs is not confined to averaging those prices with
    prices for grade A bulbs to calculate a surrogate value for the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi that had
    a diameter of 50 mm to 55 mm. To the contrary, Commerce also uses prices for S.A. grade garlic
    alone to value the garlic bulbs delivered to Dadi that had a diameter of 55 mm to 65 mm. See
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                          Page 64
    There is no dispute that the Azadpur Market prices for S.A.-grade garlic bulbs that
    Commerce used are not contemporaneous with the period of review; and the fact that those prices
    are not contemporaneous (and thus were indexed to the period of review) is not challenged. There
    also is no dispute as to the fact that the Azadpur APMC’s Market Information Bulletin has not
    published prices for S.A.-grade garlic bulbs since early February 2008, which is why Commerce used
    indexed prices for S.A.-grade garlic bulbs from outside the period of review.
    What is in dispute is whether, as Xinboda maintains, the Azadpur Market prices for grade
    A garlic bulbs for the period of review i.e., the contemporaneous prices include not only garlic
    bulbs with a diameter of between 40 mm and 55 mm, but also garlic bulbs with a diameter of 55 mm
    or more. In other words, what is in dispute is whether garlic bulbs that once would have been
    designated as grade S.A. were, as Xinboda puts it, in effect “subsumed” into grade A garlic bulbs
    as of February 2008, before the period of review. Thus, the issue here is whether Commerce’s use
    of non-contemporaneous but indexed Azadpur Market prices for S.A.-grade garlic bulbs not only
    was unnecessary, but, in fact, significantly distorted Commerce’s calculation of the surrogate value
    for whole raw garlic bulbs. See generally Pl.’s Brief at 8-14; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 4-6.
    Shenzhen Xinboda I noted that the Researcher Declaration is the only record evidence that
    is directly on point and that the Declaration supports Xinboda’s claim. Specifically, the Researcher
    Declaration attests that garlic bulbs with diameters of 55 mm to 65 mm in fact were being sold as
    grade A bulbs after the Azadpur APMC’s Market Bulletin ceased publication of prices for grade S.A.
    garlic bulbs. See Researcher Declaration ¶¶ 6-7. Summarizing the state of the record evidence on
    Final Surrogate Value Memorandum at 1.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 65
    this issue (which is the same now as it was then), Shenzhen Xinboda I stated:
    In short, the existing evidence of record supports only one conclusion that grade
    “S.A.” garlic was subsumed into grade “A” garlic as of February 2008. As such,
    Commerce’s use of the non-contemporaneous prices for “S.A.”-grade garlic would
    have been both unnecessary and distortive. Specifically, if (as all record evidence
    indicates) the data for grade “A” garlic that were contemporaneous with the period
    of review included garlic with bulb diameters of up to 65 mm, there was no need for
    Commerce to use indexed non-contemporaneous data for grade “S.A.” garlic to value
    larger-bulbed garlic; the value of such larger-bulbed garlic would be already
    accounted for in the contemporaneous data for grade “A” garlic.
    But, more importantly, if (as all record evidence indicates) the contemporaneous data
    for grade “A” garlic include garlic with bulb diameters of up to 65 mm, then it stands
    to reason that the Final Determination must be distorted. For example, by valuing
    Dadi’s garlic with a bulb diameter of 50 mm to 55 mm using a combination of the
    indexed, non-contemporaneous data for “S.A.”-grade garlic together with the
    contemporaneous data for “A”-grade garlic (which, it now appears, already reflected
    values for garlic with a bulb diameter of up to 65 mm), Commerce presumably
    skewed the surrogate value toward larger-bulb (typically higher-value) garlic.
    Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1355-56.40
    The Remand Results dismiss the Researcher Declaration as “unreliable” and dispute
    Xinboda’s claim that garlic bulbs with a diameter of up to 65 mm were being sold as grade A bulbs
    during the period of review. See Remand Results at 12-14, 44-45; see also Def.’s Brief at 14-20;
    Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 15-19. In an effort to account for the absence of published prices for grade S.A.
    garlic bulbs for the period of review, the Remand Results again borrow from Commerce’s Issues &
    40
    Although the Researcher Declaration is the only evidence that speaks directly to whether
    garlic bulbs with a diameter of up to 65 mm were being sold as grade A bulbs after February 2008,
    Xinboda argues that there is other corroborating evidence on the record. See Pl.’s Brief at 11-13;
    Pl.’s Reply Brief at 4-6; see generally Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____ n.26, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1354 n.26 (noting some of the evidence cited by Xinboda). But see Remand Results at 12-13
    (addressing Xinboda’s reliance on Alibaba advertisements as corroboration); Def.’s Brief at 16-19
    (responding to Xinboda’s assertions concerning corroborating evidence); Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 18-19
    (similar); Issues & Decision Memorandum at 11, 13 (similar).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 66
    Decision Memorandum in the 16th Review (i.e., the administrative review after the review at issue
    here). There, Commerce adopted the Domestic Producers’ theory that, at the time of the period of
    review, large-bulb garlic was “in high demand” and was being “directly exported [from India]
    instead of moving through domestic wholesale [markets],” such as the Azadpur Market. See
    Remand Results at 13 (quoting Issues & Decision Memorandum in 16th Review ) (bracketing in the
    Remand Results); see also Def.’s Brief at 19.
    As detailed above, Commerce’s grounds for dismissing the Researcher Declaration are not
    well taken. Moreover, as to the Domestic Producers’ explanation for the absence of Azadpur Market
    prices for S.A.-grade garlic during the period of review, the Remand Results candidly concede that
    “there is no evidence on the record of this review [or, for that matter, the record of the sixteenth
    review] to prove the domestic industry’s theory.” Remand Results at 13.41
    Commerce’s determinations must be based on actual evidence. Theory will not suffice. The
    Court of Appeals has underscored this principle, explaining that “[i]t is well established that
    speculation does not constitute ‘substantial evidence.’” Novosteel SA v. United States, 
    284 F.3d 1261
    , 1276 (Fed. Cir. 2002). The Court of Appeals continued: “As the Supreme Court noted in
    41
    As such, it is not at all clear that the use of the non-contemporaneous, indexed prices for
    grade S.A. garlic bulbs could be sustained even if the Researcher Declaration were to be discarded.
    There is no affirmative record evidence establishing the correctness of the use of such prices (e.g.,
    no evidence of the correctness of the Domestic Producers’ theory). The fact of the absence of
    published prices for S.A.-grade garlic bulbs during the period of review alone does not suffice. 
    Cf. supra
    n.24 (questioning whether use of Azadpur Market prices as surrogate value for whole raw
    garlic bulbs could be sustained, even if the Researcher Declaration were to be disregarded, absent
    affirmative evidence establishing what the Azadpur Market prices fundamentally represent (i.e., in
    the absence of evidence documenting the basic condition of the garlic bulbs sold at the Azadpur
    Market and a demonstration of comparability to the condition of the whole raw garlic bulbs delivered
    to Dadi)).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 67
    Bowen v. American Hospital Ass’n, agency deference has not come so far that agency action is
    upheld whenever it is possible to conceive a basis for administrative action.” Id.; see also, e.g.,
    Yangzhou Bestpak Gifts & 
    Crafts, 716 F.3d at 1378
    (noting that Commerce determinations cannot
    be based on “mere conjecture or supposition”).
    The sole record evidence that is on point substantiates Xinboda’s claim that garlic bulbs with
    a diameter of 55 mm to 65 mm       garlic bulbs that once would have been classified as grade S.A.
    were classified and sold as grade A bulbs during the period of review. Accordingly, if Commerce,
    on the existing record, continues on remand to rely on the Azadpur Market prices in calculating the
    surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs, Commerce shall base its calculations exclusively on the
    contemporaneous prices for bulbs classified as grade A.
    B. Selection of Surrogate Financial Statements
    Xinboda contends that Commerce has erred in using the financial statements of Tata Tea to
    derive the surrogate financial ratios that the agency used in calculating Xinboda’s dumping margin.
    Xinboda has placed on the record certain evidence that, according to Xinboda, gives “reason to
    believe or suspect” that Tata Tea may have received countervailable subsidies. Based on that
    evidence, Xinboda maintains that Tata Tea’s financial statements must be disregarded, in favor of
    the financial statements of Garlico.42 Xinboda argues that the standard that Commerce has applied
    in evaluating Xinboda’s evidence and Tata Tea’s financial statements is too stringent and is not
    consistent with Congress’ intent. See generally Xinboda Surrogate Value Submission at Exh. 44
    42
    Xinboda argues, in the alternative, that Commerce should use an average of the financial
    statements of both Tata Tea and Garlico. See, e.g., Pl.’s Brief at 34.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                            Page 68
    (Tata Global Beverages Annual Report and Financial Statements for 2009-2010) (AR Pub. Doc. No.
    133); Pl.’s Brief at 20-29; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 6-9; see also Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1367-76.
    As Shenzhen Xinboda I explained, Congress has instructed that, in using the factors of
    production methodology (the methodology used in this administrative review), Commerce is to
    “avoid using any prices which it has reason to believe or suspect may be dumped or subsidized
    prices.” In doing so, Congress emphasized that Commerce is not expected “to conduct a formal
    investigation to ensure that such prices are not dumped or subsidized,” but, instead, is to “base its
    decision [as to whether there is ‘reason to believe or suspect’] on information generally available to
    it at that time.” Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988, Conference Report to Accompany
    H.R. 3, H.R. Rep. No. 100-576 at 590-91 (1998) (Conf. Rep.), reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1547,
    1623-24; Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1373-74. On its face, Congress’
    language includes two related but distinct expressions of attenuation “reason to believe or suspect”
    (not merely “reason to believe”) and “may be dumped or subsidized prices” (not “are dumped or
    subsidized prices”).
    In its Final Determination, Commerce rejected Xinboda’s assertions that Tata Tea’s financial
    statements included evidence of a potential subsidies: “Although Xinboda has placed ‘loan
    agreements’ which it contends indicate that Tata Tea has received financial subsidies [Commerce]
    has found countervailable, . . . we did not find evidence of these loans. We note that it is
    [Commerce’s] practice to rely on information in financial statements on an ‘as is’ basis when
    calculating surrogate financial ratios.” Issues & Decision Memorandum at 20.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 69
    Shenzhen Xinboda I remanded this issue with instructions for Commerce to reconsider and
    explain in detail the agency’s practice in evaluating surrogate financial statements for possible use
    in deriving surrogate financial ratios, focusing particularly on the agency’s interpretation and
    application of the “reason to believe or suspect” standard (including its consistency with Congress’
    intent) and on the nature of the evidence that the agency considers in applying that standard.
    Commerce also was directed to review anew the evidence of alleged subsidies placed on the record
    by Xinboda, if appropriate. In addition, Commerce was directed to clearly explain the rationale for
    whatever determination it reached on remand. Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1375-76.
    In the Remand Results, Commerce summarizes its practice in the application of the “reason
    to believe or suspect” standard and reviews the evidence that Xinboda has proffered, concluding
    once again that in the words of the Remand Results “there is no reason to believe or suspect that
    Tata Tea may have received countervailable subsidies.” Remand Results at 21 (emphases added);
    see generally 
    id. at 14-21,
    48-52 (addressing Xinboda’s claim that there is “reason to believe or
    suspect” that Tata Tea may have received subsidies, reviewing Xinboda’s evidence of alleged
    subsidies, and summarizing Commerce policy and practice on application of the standard); see also
    Def.’s Brief at 20-29 (arguing that Commerce correctly applied “reason to believe or suspect”
    standard and properly concluded that evidence of alleged subsidies proffered by Xinboda was
    insufficient); Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 26-29 (same).43 Commerce’s conclusion in the Remand Results
    43
    Specifically, according to one statement in the Remand Results, Commerce has “concluded
    that [the evidence submitted by Xinboda] indicated that Tata Tea was eligible to eventually receive
    [certain] subsidies but did not indicate that Tata Tea received subsidies during the [period of
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                               Page 70
    quoted above is an accurate recitation (or at least a near accurate recitation) of the relevant standard,
    as set forth in the legislative history.44 However, it is not clear that the quoted conclusion accurately
    reflects either the standard that Commerce has actually applied in this case or the standard that
    review].” See Remand Results at 49-50 (emphasis added). This particular statement indicates that
    Commerce recognizes that the documentation supplied by Xinboda in fact relates to Tata Tea’s
    receipt of subsidies, but that under the agency’s interpretation and application of the “reason to
    believe or suspect” standard Commerce declines to exclude Tata Tea’s financial statements
    because Commerce views the documentation as “mere” evidence of Tata Tea’s “eligibility” for
    subsidies and/or because Commerce believes that Tata Tea did not actually “receive” subsidies. As
    explained here, however, Commerce’s belief as to whether Tata Tea actually “received” subsidies
    may not be reconcilable with Congress’ “reason to believe or suspect” standard, which is intended
    to capture cases whether there is mere room to “suspect” that a company “may be” the beneficiary
    of subsidies. Similarly, as also explained here, Commerce’s dismissal of evidence of a company’s
    “eligibility” for subsidies is arguably at odds with the position that Commerce has taken elsewhere
    i.e., the position that a company that is eligible for a subsidy will take advantage of that subsidy
    and “will not leave money on the table.”
    44
    Commerce’s formulation of the “reason to believe or suspect” standard refers to
    “countervailable” subsidies. The legislative history does not. In discussing the standard elsewhere,
    Commerce has emphasized that the United States’ countervailing duty statute allows duties to be
    imposed “only upon a finding that a countervailable subsidy is being provided.” See Defendant’s
    Response to Order for Supplemental Briefing (filed by Government in Itochu Building Prods. Co.
    v. United States, Consol Court No. 12-000065, on January 6, 2014) (citing 19 U.S.C. § 1671(a)).
    However, as explained in greater detail below, Commerce in this context is not deciding whether
    or not to impose duties. Commerce here is determining only whether there is “reason to believe or
    suspect” that a potential surrogate company (here, Tata Tea) “may” have received subsidies, for
    purposes of deciding whether to consider that company’s financial statements for possible use in
    deriving surrogate financial ratios for use in calculating the dumping margin for a non-market
    economy producer/exporter (here, Xinboda). If Commerce decides that there is such “reason to
    believe or suspect,” Commerce disregards the financial statement. There are no consequences
    whatsoever for the potential surrogate company, which has no stake at all in the underlying
    administrative review (or this litigation) and, indeed, may not be aware that its financial statements
    have been placed on the record and have been the subject of discussion by Commerce and the
    parties.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 71
    Commerce generally applies in other similar cases.45
    As outlined below, the Remand Results do not adequately explain Commerce’s practice in
    the interpretation and application of the “reason to believe or suspect” standard in the selection of
    financial statements for Commerce’s use in deriving surrogate financial ratios in this case, and more
    generally, in other cases as well. Specifically, it is not clear that Commerce is attaching any meaning
    to the words “suspect” and “may be” in the relevant standard. See, e.g., 2A N. Singer & S. Singer,
    Sutherland on Statutory Construction § 46.6 (7th ed. 2014) (explaining that “[i]t is an elementary
    45
    At some points in the Remand Results, Commerce articulates the “reason to believe or
    suspect” standard in a way that is consistent with Congress’ language. See, e.g., Remand Results
    at 18 (stating that Xinboda’s evidence of alleged subsidies “is not sufficient to undermine
    [Commerce’s] initial conclusion . . . that there is no reason to believe or suspect that Tata Tea may
    have received countervailable subsidies”) (emphases added). Elsewhere, however, the standard is
    formulated differently most often, indicating that the standard requires proof of the actual receipt
    of a subsidy during the period of review. See, e.g., Remand Results at 19 (stating that “[e]ven if [the
    documents that Xinboda has presented as evidence] could be viewed as the completion of an
    application for credit or for additional credit, they do not indicate if or when credits were ever
    disbursed”) (emphasis added); 
    id. at 20
    (stating that “the fact that Tata Tea signed . . . hypothecation
    agreements . . . does not mean that it was approved for or received any packing credits during the
    [period of review]” (emphasis added); 
    id. (stating that
    “none of the documents submitted by Xinboda
    provide a reason to believe or suspect that Tata Tea was approved to receive or did receive . . .
    countervailable subsidies during the [period of review]”) (emphasis added); 
    id. (stating that
    “[w]ith
    respect to Xinboda’s argument that Tata Tea’s financial statements . . . include evidence that Tata
    Tea received countervailable subsidies during the [period of review], [Commerce] finds no
    information in the financial statements to support this conclusion”) (emphasis added); 
    id. (stating that
    “[Commerce’s] conclusion that there is not a sufficient basis to believe or suspect that Tata Tea
    received countervailable subsidies during the [period of review] is not altered by a review of
    Schedule 3 found in Tata Tea’s financial statements”) (emphasis added); 
    id. at 21
    (stating that “no
    item in Schedule 3 mentions ‘packing credits,’ ‘export credit,’ ‘pre-shipment financing,’ or anything
    else indicating the receipt of countervailable subsidies”) (emphasis added); 
    id. at 5
    0 (stating that “the
    lack of any identification of . . . subsidies in Tata Tea’s financial statements was consistent with the
    conclusion that the subsidies were likely not disbursed during the [period of review]” (emphasis
    added); 
    id. at 5
    1 (stating that “the words and phrases Xinboda finds in the consolidated financial
    statements do not indicate that the consolidated companies . . . benefited from subsidy programs”)
    (emphasis added).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 72
    rule of construction that effect must be given, if possible, to every word, clause and sentence of a
    statute”; that “[c]ourts construe a statute to give effect to all its provisions, so that no part is
    inoperative or superfluous, void, or insignificant”; and that “[c]ourts assume that every word, phrase,
    and clause . . . is intended and has some meaning”) (footnotes omitted).46
    As a threshold matter, the Remand Results clarify that, contrary to some statements that
    Commerce has made in this case and elsewhere, Commerce in fact does not limit its evaluation of
    potential surrogate financial statements to the “four corners” of the statements themselves.47 Instead,
    46
    The Remand Results state that “financial statements are, for many types of subsidies,
    valuable evidence of whether a company has been subsidized.” Remand Results at 16 (emphasis
    added). The Remand Results further state that “[s]ubsidies frequently constitute revenue that must
    be accounted for in a company’s books and records and acknowledged as subsidy or non-operational
    income, counterbalanced through offsetting accounts.” 
    Id. (emphasis added);
    see also 
    id. at 17
    (stating that “aside from a full subsidy investigation, a company’s financial statements will often be
    the best source of information regarding its receipt of subsidies”) (emphasis added). It may be true
    that a company’s financial statements must necessarily reflect subsidies that are in the form of grants.
    However, Commerce has not explained whether (and, if so, how) financial statements reflect
    subsidies that are in the form of exemptions (e.g., tax exemptions). Similarly, and more generally,
    Commerce has not identified and explained the types of subsidies as to which financial statements
    are not “valuable evidence.” Nor has Commerce explained the circumstances in which subsidies do
    not need to be “accounted for in a company’s books and records.” See, e.g., Shenzhen Xinboda I,
    38 CIT at ____ n.49, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1375 n.49 (discussing, inter alia, Itochu plaintiffs’ argument
    that “[c]ertain subsidies (e.g., receipt of grants) often are reported as line items in financial
    statements,” but “[o]ther subsidies (e.g., reductions in costs, such as exemptions from taxes, duties,
    etc.) are not normally reported as line items”). Commerce has not explained how it applies the
    “reason to believe or suspect” standard in cases such as these.
    47
    Even in the Remand Results here, Commerce continues to state that “it is [Commerce’s]
    policy to limit its search for evidence to the ‘four corners’ of the financial statements (and
    accompanying notes).” See Remand Results at 16; see also 
    id. at 17
    (referring to “[Commerce’s]
    focus on the four corners of a set of financial statements”). That statement, which appears in one
    form or another in many agency determinations, might reasonably be read as indicating that
    Commerce does not consider evidence of subsidies beyond the “four corners” of financial statements
    themselves. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____ n.49, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1375 n.49. As noted
    above, however, Commerce has clarified here that other record evidence will be considered. Thus,
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 73
    in applying the “reason to believe or suspect” standard, Commerce “reviews the record, as a whole.”
    Remand Results at 15. Endorsing Commerce’s statement made in another proceeding, the Remand
    Results note that: “Commerce bases its determination on the totality of the circumstances, from
    information generally available to it at that time [i.e., when it is reviewing possible surrogate
    financial statements for use in deriving surrogate financial ratios] . . . . When Commerce does rely
    on the financial statement to make its determination, this does not mean Commerce is precluded
    from reviewing other evidence. If other evidence were to exist that is . . . [the] opposite of or
    conflicts with a financial statement, Commerce would account for this information in its
    determination.” 
    Id. (quoting Defendant’s
    Response to Order for Supplemental Briefing (filed by
    Government in Itochu Building Prods. Co. v. United States, Consol Court No. 12-000065, on
    January 6, 2014) (“Def.’s Supp. Brief in Itochu) at 10)); see also Remand Results at 16 (stating that
    “it is [Commerce’s] policy to limit its search for evidence to the ‘four corners’ of the financial
    statements (and accompanying notes) and any other information placed on the record. In other
    words, [Commerce] does not seek out additional information in evaluating the presence or absence
    of countervailable subsidies. Instead, [Commerce] rel[ies] solely on that which is placed on the
    record of the proceeding, which, in most proceedings, is generally limited to financial statements.”).
    The Remand Results also explain that         when reviewing a set of financial statements for
    evidence of countervailable subsidies Commerce “employs a couple of general guideposts” : “(1)
    the meaning of Commerce’s statement concerning the “four corners” of financial statements is
    apparently that, in applying the “reason to believe or suspect” standard to a set of potential surrogate
    financial statements, the agency does not itself seek out additional information beyond that which
    the parties place on the record and/or that the agency does not undertake a formal countervailing duty
    investigation.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 74
    If a financial statement contains a reference to a specific subsidy program [which has previously
    been] found to be countervailable in a formal CVD [countervailing duty] determination, [Commerce]
    will exclude that financial statement from consideration. (2) If a financial statement contains only
    a mere mention that a subsidy was received, and for which there is no additional information as to
    the specific nature of the subsidy, [Commerce] will not exclude the financial statement from
    consideration.” Remand Results at 17-18 (emphases added); see also, e.g., Clearon Corp. v. United
    States, 35 CIT ____, ____, 
    800 F. Supp. 2d 1355
    , 1359 (2011) (quoting same “general guideposts”
    set forth in the Remand Results); Def.’s Supp. Brief in Itochu at 8 (quoting Clearon).
    The Remand Results elaborate further: “[I]f a specific subsidy program is mentioned or
    identified within a company’s financial statements, with a dollar amount received, and that subsidy
    program has been determined to be countervailable, [Commerce] will exclude the financial
    statements from consideration. . . . However, mere mention of a subsidy, without information that
    the company actually received the subsidy, or further information as to the specific nature of the
    subsidy, is not enough for [Commerce] to exclude the statements. Such evidence would not rise to
    the level of a ‘reason to believe or suspect.’” Remand Results at 18 (emphases added).48
    48
    At two points in the Remand Results, Commerce makes the point that “the ‘believe or
    suspect’ standard is also the standard for making a preliminary affirmative determination of
    countervailable subsidies in a countervailing duty investigation” and emphasizes that the agency
    “does not make an affirmative preliminary countervailing duty determination in an investigation
    based merely upon a company’s eligibility for a subsidy.” Remand Results at 20 n.53 (emphasis
    added); see also 
    id. at 5
    2 (similar). But this comparison lacks the potency that Commerce suggests.
    An affirmative preliminary determination in a countervailing duty investigation carries with it major
    consequences for companies (e.g., foreign producers and exporters). In stark contrast, there are no
    consequences whatsoever for a potential surrogate company if Commerce elects not to consider that
    company’s financial statements for purposes of deriving surrogate financial ratios because
    Commerce is concerned that there is “reason to . . . suspect” (or even “reason to believe”) that the
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 75
    As the quotations above indicate, in reviewing a set of financial statements for evidence of
    countervailable subsidies, Commerce does not exclude the financial statements unless, inter alia,
    the statements include “a reference to a specific subsidy program.” See Remand Results at 17-18.
    According to Commerce, a “mere mention of a subsidy” in the financial statements does not “rise
    to the level of a ‘reason to believe or suspect.” See 
    id. at 18
    (emphasis added). Thus, to exclude a
    set of financial statements from consideration for possible use in deriving surrogate financial ratios,
    Commerce requires, in essence, that the financial statements identify a subsidy program precisely,
    by its exact title. See, e.g., Clearon Corp. and Occidental Chemical Corp., et al. v. United States
    Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Remand (filed by Commerce in Court No. 13-00073
    on March 22, 2016) (“Clearon Remand Results”) at 43 (stating that Commerce would not disregard
    a company’s financial statements where “the tax incentive references” (i.e., the references to
    subsidies) “are . . . too vague to tie to a previously countervailed subsidy”); 
    id. at 23-24
    (similar).
    No matter how close the comparison of the verbiage used in financial statements to the
    official title of a subsidy program, Commerce does not accept it as a basis for excluding financial
    statements. In that sense, it seems that Commerce excludes financial statements only if there is a
    rock-solid, conclusive “reason to believe” vis-a-vis the subsidy program. Commerce’s position
    appears to afford no allowance for evidence that gives “reason to . . . suspect” by, for example,
    company “may” have received subsidies. (Indeed, companies in a surrogate country often do not
    even know when their financial statements are being considered or have been selected for use
    by Commerce in deriving surrogate financial ratios.) There is thus an obvious reason for a
    demanding standard of proof in a countervailing duty investigation that simply does not exist when
    Commerce is making a “reason to believe or suspect” determination in a case such as this. The two
    contexts are entirely different.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 76
    listing a subsidy using terminology that differs somewhat from the official name of the subsidy
    program. Similarly, Commerce’s position appears to give no effect to the words “may be.”
    Commerce’s position means, logically, that the agency is (at least occasionally, if not frequently)
    relying on the financial statements of companies that are, in fact, recipients of subsidies all because
    Commerce requires that the name of the subsidy program as listed in the financial statements
    precisely match the official title of the program.
    Similarly, as the quotations above indicate, even if a potential surrogate company’s financial
    statements list a subsidy by its exact, official title, Commerce will not exclude the financial
    statements unless, inter alia, the financial statements also specify the precise “dollar amount
    received.” See Remand Results at 18 (emphasis added).49 Thus, again, it seems that Commerce
    excludes financial statements only if there is actual, irrefutable proof that the company in fact
    received the named subsidy and only if the precise amount of that subsidy is specified in the financial
    statements which would seem to constitute “reason to believe.” Commerce gives no indication that
    anything short of that proof would serve to exclude a surrogate company’s financial statements.
    Commerce’s position appears to be clear i.e., that Commerce will not exclude financial statements
    on the strength of evidence that gives rise to “reason to . . . suspect” that the company “may be” the
    recipient of subsidies.
    49
    See also, e.g., DuPont Teijin Films v. United States, 37 CIT ____, ____, 
    896 F. Supp. 2d 1302
    , 1312-13 (2013) (Commerce required “actual dollar amount”) (relied on by Commerce in
    Clearon Remand Results at 43 n.100); Def.’s Supp. Brief in Itochu at 8 (stating that Commerce will
    exclude a company’s financial statements “if a specific subsidy program is mentioned or identified
    within . . . [the] financial statement, with a dollar amount received, and that subsidy program has
    been determined to be countervailable”) (emphasis added).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 77
    Further, and even more to that point (immediately above), Commerce expressly states that
    it will disregard a company’s financial statements only if evidence establishes that a subsidy, in fact,
    “was received” by the company at issue. See Remand Results at 17-18 (emphasis added). “[M]ere
    mention of a subsidy [in a company’s financial statements], without information that the company
    actually received the subsidy . . . is not enough for [Commerce] to exclude the statements.” 
    Id. at 18
    (emphasis added).50 In other words, Commerce requires definitive proof that the subsidy at issue
    indeed actually was received by the surrogate company.51 That sounds like “reason to believe” that
    50
    See also, e.g., Def.’s Supp. Brief in Itochu at 8-9 (stating that “mere mention of a subsidy,
    without information that the company actually received the subsidy, . . . is not enough for Commerce
    to exclude the statement”); Clearon Remand Results at 43 (stating that Commerce would not
    disregard a company’s financial statements absent proof “that the company actually received” the
    subsidies at issue); Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Stanley Works (Langfang)
    Fastening Systems Co., Ltd. and the Stanley Works/Stanley Fastening Systems, LP v. United States,
    Slip Op. 13-118 (filed by Commerce in Consol. Court No. 11-00102 on April 16, 2015) (“Stanley
    Remand Results”) at 2-3 (stating that Commerce “will not normally rely on financial statements
    where there is evidence that the company received countervailable subsidies,” with no reference to
    “reason to . . . suspect” or “may” have received countervailable subsidies); 
    id. at 3
    (stating that
    companies’ financial statements “do not show receipt of countervailable subsidies nor is there reason
    to believe that they received countervailable subsidies,” with no reference to “reason to . . . suspect”
    or “may” have received countervailable subsidies).
    51
    Commerce has stated (in this case and elsewhere) that it will exclude a surrogate company’s
    financial statements from consideration under the “reason to believe or suspect” standard only if
    Commerce concludes that the surrogate company actually received subsidies and only if those
    subsidies were received during the period of review. See, e.g., Remand Results at 20 (referring to
    “[Commerce’s] conclusion that there is not a sufficient basis to believe or suspect that Tata Tea
    received countervailable subsidies during the POR [period of review]”) (emphasis added); 
    id. at 49-
    50 (referring to Commerce’s conclusion that the evidence submitted by Xinboda “did not indicate
    that Tata Tea received subsidies during the POR”) (emphasis added). Elsewhere, however,
    Commerce has taken the position that a company that has previously been determined to have
    received subsidies may be assumed to be a continuing beneficiary. See, e.g., Jiaxing Brother
    Fastener Co. v. United States, 
    34 CIT 1455
    , 1458-59, 
    751 F. Supp. 2d 1345
    , 1350 (2010) (discussing
    Commerce’s decision to disregard financial statements of company where statements indicated
    company’s receipt of subsidy in prior year, but not in period of review; noting Government’s
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 78
    a company has received a subsidy        not “reason to . . . suspect” that the company “may” have
    received a subsidy.52
    Lastly, as the quotations above indicate, Commerce will disregard financial statements that
    evidence receipt of subsidies only if Commerce itself has previously “found [the exact same subsidy
    program] to be countervailable in a formal CVD determination.” See, e.g., Remand Results at 18
    (referring to the requirement for identification of “a specific subsidy program found to be
    countervailable in a formal CVD determination”); 
    id. (referring to
    requirement “that the subsidy
    argument that “what matters is whether a company received or may have received a countervailable
    subsidy at any point, . . . regardless of the year in which the funds were received”). Commerce has
    not explained the basis for here focusing solely on the period of review.
    52
    The fact that Commerce will not disregard financial statements absent concrete proof that
    a subsidy in fact actually “was received,” including a specification of the precise “dollar amount
    received,” would appear to be at least somewhat at odds with the agency’s pragmatic presumption
    (in a related context) that a company that is eligible for a subsidy will take advantage of that subsidy
    i.e., that a company in a competitive market economy “will not leave money on the table.” See,
    e.g., China Nat’l Machinery Import & Export Corp. v. United States, 
    27 CIT 255
    , 259, 
    264 F. Supp. 2d
    1229, 1233 (2003) (noting Government’s position that “as a matter of common sense, we can
    assume that no one is going to leave money on the table. [Companies] are going to take advantage
    of a program that’s out there and exists.”); Gold East Paper (Jiangsu) Co. v. United States, Court
    No. 10-00371; Slip Op. 15-37 (CIT 2015) Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court
    Remand (filed by Commerce in Court No. 10-00371 on July 10, 2015) (“Gold East Remand
    Results”) at 17 (in case challenging Commerce decision concerning use of market prices versus
    surrogate prices in determining a foreign exporter’s dumping margin, invoking Commerce’s
    presumption that a company that is eligible for subsidies will “take advantage” of them).
    The Remand Results do not explain why such a presumption would not be reasonable in
    cases such as this and give no indication why evidence of a company’s eligibility for a subsidy does
    not constitute at least “reason to . . . suspect” (if not “reason to believe”) that the company “may”
    have received subsidies. Compare, e.g., Clearon Remand Results at 43 (where Commerce
    acknowledges that programs at issue “are all tax programs [i.e., subsidies] to which [the company]
    is entitled,” but Commerce nevertheless declines to exclude the company’s financial statements,
    citing an absence of evidence “that the company actually received any of these tax incentives”).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 79
    program has been determined to be countervailable”).53 In short, it appears that Commerce requires
    “reason to believe” or something even stronger that a subsidy is countervailable. Evidence that
    gives “reason to . . . suspect” that a subsidy may be countervailable does not suffice.54 Logically,
    53
    See also, e.g., Stanley Remand Results at 10 (declining to disregard financial statements
    in absence of prior formal determination of countervailability by Commerce; emphasizing that,
    “because [Commerce] never found [the subsidy program at issue] to be countervailable, [Commerce]
    finds that this evidence [i.e., financial statements reflecting receipt of a subsidy] is insufficient to
    satisfy the reason to believe or suspect standard,” and, similarly, that Commerce “never found [the
    subsidy program at issue] to be a countervailable subsidy”); Clearon Remand Results at 23 (stating
    the “[Commerce’s] practice is to only exclude financial statements that contain a subsidy that
    [Commerce] has found countervailable in the past”); 
    id. at 43
    (dismissing party’s argument that tax
    incentives in the financial statements of company at issue are countervailable, Commerce stated that
    “the tax incentive references . . . are for disbursements [Commerce] has not previously countervailed
    as a subsidy”); 
    id. at 43
    (similar).
    In the same vein, Commerce has not been receptive to arguments that a set of financial
    statements should be excluded because the company at issue has received subsidies under a program
    that is very similar (even identical) to a program that Commerce has previously found to be
    countervailable. See, e.g., Clearon Remand Results at 42-43 (where party sought to have Commerce
    disregard a company’s financial statements based on the company’s receipt of subsidies which the
    party emphasized “very closely match programs [Commerce] found are countervailable” in formal
    countervailing duty determinations, and where the party explained that “the same types of programs
    have been found countervailable,” Commerce rejected the party’s argument, stating that
    “[Commerce’s practice is only to exclude financial statements that contain a subsidy that
    [Commerce] has found countervailable in the past”); Stanley Remand Results at 10 (where
    Commerce had previously found “Interest Free Tax Loans from the Government of Maharashtra
    [India]” to be countervailable, and where a party was arguing that a company’s financial statements
    should be disregarded because that company received “Interest Free Tax Loans from the Government
    of Tamil Nadu [India],” Commerce dismissed the party’s argument, stating that “the
    countervailability of a [subsidy] program in Maharashtra is not relevant to a program established and
    administered in another state [in India] such as Tamil Nadu”).
    54
    
    See supra
    n.44 (noting that the legislative history refers only to “subsidies” and makes no
    mention of “countervailable subsidies”). An argument can be made that, based on the legislative
    history, Congress’ intent is that Commerce exclude financial statements wherenever there is “reason
    to believe or suspect” a subsidy, without regard to whether or not that subsidy is (or even may be)
    countervailable.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                              Page 80
    Commerce’s position here means, once again, that          seemingly contrary to Congress’ expressed
    intent    the agency is (at least occasionally, if not routinely) relying on the financial statements of
    companies that are, in fact, recipients of subsidies and, indeed, subsidies that are countervailable
    but which have not been the subject of a formal Commerce countervailing duty investigation,55 and
    thus, by definition, could not have been ruled to be countervailable by Commerce in a formal
    countervailing duty determination.56
    55
    There are a number of reasons why a subsidy might not have been the subject of a formal
    countervailing duty investigation by Commerce. Cf. Gold East Paper (Jiangsu) Co. v. United States,
    39 CIT ____, ____, 
    121 F. Supp. 3d 1304
    , 1308-09 (2015) (noting that revocation of a
    countervailing duty order does not necessarily mean that a subsidy program has been terminated and
    that the flow of benefits instead, but may instead result from, for example, “a lack of interest by the
    domestic industry”).
    56
    To further illustrate this point with a hypothetical that is somewhat metaphysical, consider
    a subsidy that is evidenced on the face of a set of financial statements but which has never been the
    subject of an official Commerce countervailing duty proceeding and thus could not have been found
    to be countervailable by Commerce. Under Commerce’s existing practice, Commerce would not
    exclude that set of financial statements no matter how clear the countervailability of the subsidy
    might be (i.e., even if there were “reason to believe” or even if it were a certainty that the subsidy
    was countervailable) because there had been no formal determination of countervailability by
    Commerce. Commerce thus would rely on those financial statements, if they satisfied all other
    applicable agency criteria and were determined to be the best available information on the record.
    Assume further that, subsequently, in a formal countervailing duty proceeding, Commerce made an
    official determination of countervailability as to the very same subsidy program that was evidenced
    in the financial statements earlier (as hypothesized above). In this second situation, Commerce
    would exclude the financial statements. The two scenarios involve the exact same grant or
    exemption (subsidy) by a foreign government; but there are two completely different outcomes,
    based solely on the absence or existence of a formal countervailing duty determination of
    countervailability by Commerce. Nothing about the subsidy changed. By its nature, the subsidy was
    always “countervailable,” even when it had not yet been officially pronounced “countervailable” by
    Commerce.
    As another example, assume that a subsidy that is evidenced on the face of a set of financial
    statements has been found to be countervailable by Commerce in a preliminary determination in a
    formal countervailing duty proceeding, but the subsidy is not yet the subject of a final countervailing
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                            Page 81
    Commerce casts its requirement that a subsidy have been previously determined to be
    countervailable in a formal Commerce countervailing duty investigation as a matter of
    “[e]xpediency” that is consistent with “Congress’ intent as recognizing the need to filter information
    quickly without initiating a countervailing duty investigation.” Remand Results at 17. Commerce
    argues that “the legislative history reveals that Congress was concerned about [Commerce’s] ability
    to determine quickly whether there is reason to believe or suspect that a company received subsidies.
    [Commerce] therefore looks to past determinations of countervailable subsidies.” 
    Id. Commerce continues:
    “Given Congress’ evident concern with expediency and the ability of [Commerce] to
    make these decisions quickly in an antidumping duty proceeding, [Commerce’s] practice is
    reconcilable with the ‘reason to believe or suspect’ standard in the legislative history.” Id.57
    duty determination (and thus has not been definitively declared to be countervailable). In such
    circumstances, it appears that Commerce would not exclude the financial statements. Commerce
    apparently would not credit a preliminary determination of countervailability by the agency itself
    even as “reason to . . . suspect,” much less “reason to believe.”
    Similarly, Commerce apparently would not credit a determination of countervailability by
    another official international trade authority, such as Commerce’s EU counterpart.
    57
    The Remand Results further state that “the ‘reason to believe or suspect’ standard allows
    [Commerce] to exclude information in an antidumping proceeding even though [Commerce] [is] not
    making the formal finding of a countervailable subsidy (i.e., financial contribution, benefit and
    specificity) that would be required if the case were a countervailing duty proceeding.” See Remand
    Results at 17. However, that is not the issue presented here. Xinboda is not concerned that
    Commerce is, under the “reason to believe or suspect” standard, excluding financial statements that
    Xinboda contends should be considered. Xinboda’s concern is the exact opposite: Xinboda is
    concerned that Commerce is refusing to exclude financial statements which, according to Xinboda,
    should be excluded. As discussed herein, Commerce’s modus operandi seems to be to err on the
    side of using potentially tainted surrogate financial statements, absent evidence that proves
    conclusively that, during the period of review, the company received subsidies that Commerce
    previously determined to be countervailable in a countervailing duty investigation.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                            Page 82
    However, if Congress had intended Commerce to base its decision as to whether to use
    potential surrogate financial statements on whether Commerce had previously found the alleged
    subsidy to be countervailable in a formal Commerce countervailing duty investigation, Congress
    easily could have said exactly that. But Congress did not do so. See, e.g., Tulips Investments, LLC
    v. Colorado, 
    340 P.3d 1126
    , 1135 (Col. 2015) (en banc) (explaining that “[i]f the legislature intended
    that such proceeding was to be handled as just another civil proceeding, it could have said so. But
    it did not.”) (citation omitted); see also, e.g., Michigan v. EPA, ____ U.S. ____, ____, 
    135 S. Ct. 2699
    , 2710 (2015) (noting “if uncertainty about the need for regulation were the only reason to treat
    power plants differently, Congress would have required the [EPA] to decide only whether regulation
    remains ‘necessary,’ not whether regulation is ‘appropriate and necessary’”).
    Commerce’s rationale also reflects a big leap in logic. Commerce assumes that, to the extent
    that Congress was concerned about Commerce’s ability to quickly make determinations concerning
    the use of potentially tainted surrogate financial statements (or other surrogate values), Congress
    intended for Commerce to err on the side of using the potentially tainted data. However, based on
    the language of Congress’ instructions, it seems at least more likely (if not certain) that Congress
    intended Commerce to err on the side of disregarding such data an approach that would serve both
    of Congress’ goals: (1) avoiding the use of tainted values and (2) allowing Commerce to make quick
    determinations without initiating a formal countervailing duty investigation.
    Further, although Congress did express concern for Commerce’s administrative convenience,
    Commerce’s administrative convenience was not Congress’ principal concern. Congress’ principal
    concern was ensuring that Commerce avoids the use of surrogate values (including surrogate
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                                Page 83
    financial ratios derived from surrogate financial statements) where there is any “reason to . . .
    suspect” that those values “may be” subsidized.58
    In light of points such as those outlined above, as well as discussions with counsel in the
    course of oral argument, this matter must be remanded to Commerce once again, to afford the agency
    a second opportunity to do what Shenzhen Xinboda I requested              i.e., “to reconsider and fully
    explain its stated practice (in light of, inter alia, the legislative history of the ‘reason to believe or
    suspect’ standard, as well as the agency’s fundamental obligation to base its determinations on
    substantial evidence on the record as a whole), to review and consider the evidence of alleged
    subsidies placed on the record by Xinboda (if appropriate), and to explain in detail the rationale for
    the agency’s determination on remand.” Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at
    1375-76; see also 
    id., 38 CIT
    at ____ n.49, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1375 n.49 (encouraging Commerce
    “to undertake a comprehensive review of its interpretation and application of the ‘reason to believe
    or suspect’ standard, . . . to ensure the consistency and coherency of its determination on remand and
    58
    Commerce makes another similar argument based on a claim of administrative convenience.
    Specifically, Commerce asserts that “Congress cannot have intended that information indicating that
    a company is eligible to receive subsidies is sufficient to meet the ‘reason to believe or suspect’
    standard because many companies are eligible for subsidies and such a standard would significantly
    limit the data available for [Commerce’s] use.” See Remand Results at 20.
    For the reasons discussed above, like Commerce’s other administrative convenience claim,
    this argument also holds little water. And, to the extent that Commerce seeks to attribute to
    Congress a specific concern that an interpretation other than that which Commerce is now applying
    would “significantly limit the data available for [Commerce’s] use,” Congress’ language evidences
    no such concern.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                             Page 84
    agency practice as a whole,” and identifying various issues for consideration).59
    C. Zeroing
    Xinboda’s final remaining claim challenges Commerce’s application of the agency’s practice
    of “zeroing” in cases such as this, involving an administrative review of an exporter in a non-market
    economy country. Xinboda contends that, rather than assigning a value of zero to sales where goods
    were sold at prices above the calculated normal value (i.e., “zeroing”), Commerce instead should
    have used such sales to offset other sales where goods were sold at prices below normal value (i.e.,
    “offsetting”). See generally Complaint ¶¶ 13, 21-22 (Count IV); Pl.’s Brief at 34-44; Pl.’s Reply
    Brief at 10-14; Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1385-88.60
    59
    In the Remand Results, Commerce reaffirms the Final Determination’s analysis of the
    relative comparability of Garlico, Tata Tea, and Xinboda, as well as the Final Determination’s
    decision, based on that analysis, to rely on the financial statements of Tata Tea (to the exclusion of
    those of Garlico) in deriving surrogate financial ratios. See generally Remand Results at 3, 21-28,
    53-55; see also Issues & Decision Memorandum at 20-22; Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1376-85. Xinboda continues to contest Commerce’s analysis and to dispute the
    agency’s decision. See, e.g., Pl.’s Brief at 20, 29-34; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 9-10. But see Def.’s Brief
    at 29-33; Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 26-27, 30-34. If, on remand, Commerce concludes that in light of any
    changes, refinements, or clarifications to its interpretation and application of the “reason to believe
    or suspect” standard Tata Tea’s financial statements must be disregarded because there is (at a
    minimum) reason to suspect that those statements may be tainted by subsidies, Garlico’s financial
    statements will be the only set of financial statements remaining for Commerce’s use in deriving
    surrogate financial ratios. Because such an outcome presumably would moot the issue of
    comparability, further consideration of the parties’ arguments on the matter is not necessary at this
    time.
    60
    The practice of “zeroing” is explained in greater detail in Union Steel. See generally Union
    Steel v. United States, 36 CIT ____, ____, 
    823 F. Supp. 2d 1346
    , 1348-50 (2012), aff’d, 
    713 F.3d 1101
    , 1103-04 (Fed. Cir. 2013); see also JTEKT Corp. v. United States, 
    642 F.3d 1378
    , 1383-84
    (Fed. Cir. 2011); Dongbu Steel Co. v. United States, 
    635 F.3d 1363
    , 1365-66 (Fed. Cir. 2011).
    After the conclusion of the administrative review at issue here, Commerce changed its policy
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 85
    Acknowledging that Commerce’s Final Determination “did not provide a full explanation
    about its interpretation of the statute permitting offsetting . . . in certain proceedings but not in
    others,” the Government sought a voluntary remand to permit Commerce to “revisit the zeroing
    issue,” and, as appropriate, to further explain its decision. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT at ____,
    
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1387 (quoting Government’s pre-remand brief); see also Issues & Decision
    Memorandum at 31-33 (addressing Xinboda’s challenge to use of zeroing). Over the objections of
    Xinboda, Shenzhen Xinboda I granted the Government’s request. See Shenzhen Xinboda I, 38 CIT
    at ____, 
    976 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1388.
    In the Remand Results, Commerce has continued to use zeroing in calculating Xinboda’s
    dumping margin. See generally Remand Results at 29-44, 55-57. The Remand Results rely heavily
    on the Court of Appeals’ decision in Union Steel, which affirmed Commerce’s rationale for using
    zeroing in administrative reviews    but not in investigations   as a reasonable interpretation of an
    ambiguous statute. See Remand Results at 35-36, 41-42, 55; Union Steel v. United States, 
    713 F.3d 1101
    (Fed. Cir. 2013).
    on zeroing in administrative reviews. See Antidumping Proceedings: Calculation of the Weighted-
    Average Dumping Margin and Assessment Rate in Certain Antidumping Duty Proceedings; Final
    Modification, 77 Fed. Reg. 8101, 8101 (Dep’t Commerce Feb. 14, 2012) (announcing Commerce’s
    adoption of the average-to-average methodology (without zeroing) as its default comparison method
    for all administrative reviews, including both market economy and non-market economy
    proceedings). Commerce’s change in policy did not entirely abandon the practice of zeroing in
    administrative reviews; there is a caveat. Under the new policy, Commerce compares “monthly
    weighted-average export prices with monthly weighted-average normal values” and grants an offset,
    “except where [Commerce] determines that application of a different comparison method is more
    appropriate.” Final Modification, 77 Fed. Reg. at 8102; see, e.g., Fine Furniture (Shanghai) Ltd. v.
    United States, 40 CIT ____, ____, 
    182 F. Supp. 3d 1350
    , 1367 (2016).
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                          Page 86
    Xinboda contests Commerce’s reliance on Union Steel, asserting that the Remand Results
    misrepresent the facts and implications of that case and arguing that Commerce’s use of zeroing in
    administrative reviews involving non-market economy countries is unreasonable. See generally Pl.’s
    Brief at 35-43; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 10-14.
    For example, much like the plaintiff in Since Hardware (where the same zeroing issue was
    raised),61 Xinboda argues that Union Steel sustained Commerce’s practice of zeroing in proceedings
    involving market economy countries because of the “greater specificity” that zeroing provided in
    administrative reviews (where Commerce made “average-to-transaction” comparisons) relative to
    the “average-to-average” comparisons made in investigations. See Pl.’s Brief at 42; see also 
    id. at 40-41;
    Pl.’s Reply Brief at 11; Since Hardware (Guangzhou) Co. v. United States, 38 CIT ____,
    ____, 
    37 F. Supp. 3d 1354
    , 1361 (2014), aff’d sub nom. Since Hardware (Guangzhou) Co. v. Home
    Prods. Int’l., Inc., 636 F. App’x 800 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (per curiam). Like the plaintiff in Since
    Hardware, Xinboda asserts that Union Steel’s approval of Commerce’s use of zeroing in
    administrative reviews    but not in investigations   “was only justified by the greater accuracy
    resulting from the use of monthly normal values (calculated from actual invoiced sales prices).” See
    Since Hardware, 38 CIT at ____, 37 F. Supp. 3d at 1361-62; Pl.’s Brief at 40-41, 42-43; Pl.’s Reply
    Brief at 11-14. Like the plaintiff in Since Hardware, Xinboda contends that, due to Commerce’s
    use of a yearly average normal value in the instant non-market economy administrative review
    61
    In the course of oral argument on the Remand Results, Xinboda’s counsel acknowledged
    that Xinboda’s arguments in this case are framed to parallel the plaintiff’s arguments before the
    Court of International Trade and the Court of Appeals in Since Hardware. Plaintiffs in both cases
    are represented by the same counsel.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                           Page 87
    (instead of monthly average normal values), Union Steel does not apply. See Pl.’s Brief at 42-43;
    see also Pl.’s Reply Brief at 10-14; Since Hardware, 38 CIT at ____, 37 F. Supp. 3d at 1362. And
    like the plaintiff in Since Hardware, Xinboda concludes that zeroing in administrative reviews
    involving non-market economy countries “tends to artificially drive some sales below fair value and
    others above fair value” and “unfairly disadvantages NME [non-market economy] respondents.” See
    Pl.’s Brief at 43; Since Hardware, 38 CIT at ____, 37 F. Supp. 3d at 1362; see also Pl.’s Reply Brief
    at 10-14. But see Def.’s Brief at 33-41; Def.-Int.’s Brief at 35.
    The Government’s brief cites the Court of International Trade’s decision in Since Hardware,
    which had recently issued and which found no merit in the zeroing claims of the plaintiff there. See
    Def.’s Brief at 37, 40-41; Since Hardware, 38 CIT at ____, 37 F. Supp. 3d at 1361-63. As the
    Government observed here, “Xinboda’s arguments [in this case] are the same arguments that the
    Court [of International Trade] rejected in Since Hardware.” See Def.’s Brief at 37. In its Reply
    Brief, Xinboda sought to minimize the significance of that opinion, emphasizing that it was “not a
    final court decision.” Pl.’s Reply Brief at 12. Xinboda’s statement was correct at the time that
    Xinboda made it, but it is no longer true.
    The plaintiff in Since Hardware appealed the zeroing issue, and the Court of Appeals
    affirmed the decision of the Court of International Trade dismissing Since Hardware’s zeroing
    claims. See Since Hardware, 636 F. App’x 800. The same result must obtain here. Xinboda’s
    challenge to Commerce’s use of zeroing in the administrative review at issue here therefore must
    be rejected.
    Court No. 11-00267                                                                               Page 88
    IV. Conclusion
    For all the reasons set forth above, the Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Remand
    must be sustained as to Commerce’s determination on the surrogate value for labor, as well as
    Commerce’s application of zeroing in this administrative review. This matter is again remanded to
    Commerce for further consideration of the surrogate value for whole raw garlic bulbs and the
    selection of surrogate financial statements for use in calculating surrogate financial ratios.
    A separate order will enter accordingly.
    /s/ Delissa A. Ridgway
    Delissa A. Ridgway
    Judge
    Dated: December 15, 2017
    New York, New York