SunEdison, Inc. v. United States , 179 F. Supp. 3d 1309 ( 2016 )


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  •                              Slip Op. 16 - 
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    SUNEDISON, INC.,
    Plaintiff,     Before: Donald C. Pogue,
    Senior Judge
    v.
    Consol. Court No. 15-000661
    UNITED STATES,
    Defendant.
    OPINION and ORDER
    [remanding Department of Commerce’s antidumping duty scope
    determination]
    Dated: June 14, 2016
    David S. Christy, Jr., Michael P. House, and David J.
    Townsend, Perkins Coie LLP, of Washington, DC, for Plaintiff
    SunEdison, Inc.
    J. Kevin Horgan and Alexandra H. Salzman, deKieffer
    & Horgan, PLLC, of Washington, DC, for Plaintiffs Kyocera Solar,
    Inc. and Kyocera Mexicana S.A. de C.V.
    Joshua E. Kurland and Agatha Koprowski, Trial
    Attorneys, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S.
    Department of Justice, of Washington, DC, for the Defendant.
    Also on the brief were Benjamin C. Mizer, Principal Deputy
    Assistant Attorney General, Jeanne E. Davidson, Director, and
    Reginald T. Blades, Jr., Assistant Director. Of counsel was
    Scott D. McBride, Senior Attorney, Office of the Chief Counsel
    for Trade Enforcement & Compliance, U.S. Department of Commerce,
    of Washington, DC.
    Timothy C. Brightbill and Usha Neelakantan,
    1 This action is consolidated with Kyocera Solar, Inc. v. United
    States, Ct. No. 15-00081. Order, July 1, 2015, ECF No. 21,
    at ¶ 4; Order, Apr. 28, 2016, ECF No. 64.
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                      Page 2
    Wiley Rein LLP, of Washington, DC, for Defendant-Intervenor
    SolarWorld Americas, Inc.
    Pogue, Senior Judge:   This consolidated action arises
    from the final affirmative determination made by the U.S.
    Department of Commerce (“Commerce”) in its antidumping
    investigation of certain crystalline silicon photovoltaic
    products (solar cells and panels) from Taiwan.2   Before the court
    are motions for judgment on the agency record, challenging
    Commerce’s final determinations regarding the scope of these
    proceedings.3
    The court has jurisdiction pursuant to Section
    516A(a)(2)(B)(i) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended,
    19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(i) (2012),4 and 28 U.S.C. § 1581(c)
    (2012).
    As explained below, Commerce’s final scope definition
    2 See Certain Crystalline Silicon Photovoltaic Products from
    Taiwan, 79 Fed. Reg. 76,966 (Dep’t Commerce Dec. 23, 2014)
    (final determination of sales at less than fair value) and
    accompanying Issues & Decision Mem., A-583-853, Investigation
    (Dec. 15, 2014) (“Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem.”) cmt. 1.
    3 See Br. of Pl. SunEdison, Inc. in Supp. of Pl.’s Mot. for J.
    Upon the Agency R., ECF Nos. 32 (conf. version) & 33 (pub.
    version) (“SunEdison’s Br.”); Kyocera Solar, Inc. & Kyocera
    Mexicana S.A. de C.V. Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for J. on the
    Agency R., ECF Nos. 29 (conf. version) & 30 (pub. version)
    (“Kyocera’s Br.”).
    4 Further citations to the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, are to
    the relevant provisions of Title 19 of the U.S. Code, 2012
    edition.
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                      Page 3
    is remanded for consistency with, and based on the same
    reasoning as, related proceedings concerning solar panels from
    the People’s Republic of China (“China” or “PRC”).5   Essentially,
    Commerce’s final scope determination, in both cases, treated
    solar panels differently depending on their country of assembly,
    and failed to consider or discuss either the proportion of
    production necessary to determine a solar panel’s country of
    origin or the reasonableness of applying duties to the entire
    value of solar panels assembled in the PRC when only a small
    percentage of the cost of production actually occurs there.
    After a statement of the background, arguments
    presented, and standard of review, the Plaintiffs’ challenges to
    Commerce’s final scope determination are discussed below.
    BACKGROUND
    Relevant background leading to this case is summarized
    in the court’s prior opinion.6   Briefly, the Solar II PRC opinion
    addressed Commerce’s scope determinations in related proceedings
    concerning solar panels from China that are assembled from cells
    5 See SunPower Corp. v. United States, Slip Op. 16-56,
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98, (June 8, 2016)
    (“Solar II PRC Slip Op.” or “the Solar II opinion”);
    infra Discussion Sections IV, VI, & VII.
    6 Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56,
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98, at Background Sections I
    & II.
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                      Page 4
    manufactured outside of China,7 including specifically cells that
    were manufactured in Taiwan (the “Solar II PRC” proceedings).8
    Commerce’s final scope definition here (in the “Solar II Taiwan”
    proceedings) covers all solar cells manufactured in Taiwan that
    are assembled into panels anywhere in the world, except those
    covered by the Solar II PRC proceedings because they are
    assembled into panels in China.9    Both cases concern the rules of
    origin for solar panels manufactured from Taiwanese cells.     For
    this reason, the issues here are inextricably entwined with
    those already addressed in the Solar II PRC opinion.
    Familiarity with the Solar II PRC opinion is therefore presumed.
    Solar panels assembled from solar cells made in the
    PRC were also, and initially, the subject of separate
    proceedings (the “Solar I PRC” proceedings).     The Solar I PRC
    proceedings resulted in antidumping and countervailing duty
    orders covering all solar cells manufactured in China, whether
    or not and regardless of where in the world such cells are
    7 Solar panels (also referred to as modules or laminates) are
    assembled from solar cells, which use crystalline silicon to
    convert sunlight into electricity. Certain Crystalline Silicon
    Photovoltaic Products from China and Taiwan, USITC Pub. 4519,
    Inv. Nos. 701-TA-511 & 731-TA-1246-1247 (Feb. 2015) (final
    determination) (“Solar II ITC Final Determination”) at 10.
    8 Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct. No. 15-
    00067, ECF No. 98, at Background Section II & Discussion
    Section IV.
    9   See Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 23.
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 5
    assembled into solar panels prior to exportation to the United
    States.10
    In the Solar I PRC proceedings, Commerce determined
    that “solar module assembly does not substantially transform
    solar cells such that it changes the country-of-origin.”11
    Accordingly, Commerce concluded that “where solar cell
    production occurs in a different country from solar module
    assembly, the country-of-origin of the solar modules/panels is
    the country in which the solar cell was produced [and not the
    country of panel assembly].”12
    10See Crystalline Silicon Photovoltaic Cells, Whether or Not
    Assembled into Modules, from the [PRC], 77 Fed. Reg. 63,791
    (Dep’t Commerce Oct. 17, 2012) (final determination of sales
    at less than fair value, and affirmative final determination of
    critical circumstances, in part) and accompanying Issues
    & Decision Mem., A-570-979, Investigation (Oct. 9, 2012)
    (“Solar I PRC AD I&D Mem.”); Crystalline Silicon Photovoltaic
    Cells, Whether or Not Assembled into Modules, from the [PRC],
    77 Fed. Reg. 63,788 (Dep’t Commerce Oct. 17, 2012) (final
    affirmative countervailing duty determination and final
    affirmative critical circumstances determination) and
    accompanying Issues & Decision Mem., C-570-980, Investigation
    (Oct. 9, 2012); Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56,
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98, at Background Section I.
    11[Commerce’s] Mem. re Scope Clarification, Crystalline Silicon
    Photovoltaic Cells, Whether or Not Assembled into Modules, from
    the [PRC], A-570-979 & C-570-980, Investigations (Mar. 19,
    2012), reproduced in, e.g., App. to Br. of Consol. Pl. Suniva,
    Inc. in Supp. of its Mot. for J. on the Agency R., Consol. Ct.
    No. 15-00067, ECF No. 58-3 at Tab 1 Ex. 2 (“Solar I PRC Scope
    Clarification Mem.”), at 8 (unchanged in Solar I PRC AD I&D Mem.
    cmt. 1 at 6–7).
    12   
    Id. Consol. Ct.
    No. 15-00066                                      Page 6
    Following the imposition of the Solar I PRC orders,
    however, domestic producer SolarWorld Americas Incorporated
    (“SolarWorld”) (now Defendant-Intervenor in this action)
    petitioned Commerce to initiate additional proceedings.
    SolarWorld alleged, inter alia, that after the Solar I PRC
    orders were imposed, exports of solar panels to the United
    States from China shifted from panels assembled from cells that
    were also made in China, to panels assembled from cells
    “completed or partially manufactured in Taiwan or other
    countries (i.e., cells manufactured in Taiwan from Taiwanese
    inputs, or cells manufactured in Taiwan or other countries from
    Chinese inputs, including wafers).”13
    Commerce agreed that this “measurable shift in trade
    flows . . . resulted in increased imports of non-subject modules
    produced in China.”14   In response, Commerce initiated
    13Pet. for Imposition of Antidumping & Countervailing Duties
    Pursuant to Secs. 701 & 731 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
    Amended, Certain Crystalline Silicon Photovoltaic Products from
    the [PRC] and Taiwan, A-570-010, A-583-853, & C-570-011
    Investigations (Dec. 31, 2013), reproduced in App. to Def.’s
    Resp. in Opp’n to Pls.’ Rule 56.2 Mots. for J. on the Agency R.,
    ECF Nos. 53-1 (conf. version) & 54-1 (pub. Version) at Tab 1
    (“Solar II Pet.”), at 5-6.
    14Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 21 (citing Solar II Pet.,
    [ECF Nos. 53-1 & 54-1 at Tab 1], at 3, 5-6, 21, 34, 37, 53);
    see also 
    id. at 17
    (“[SolarWorld’s Solar II] Petition claimed
    that Chinese solar producers were ‘using cells fully or
    partially manufactured in Taiwan in the modules they assembled
    for export to the United States,’ which allowed the Chinese
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                      Page 7
    (1) antidumping and countervailing duty investigations that
    ultimately resulted in orders covering all panels assembled in
    China from solar cells made outside of China, including
    Taiwanese cells15 (the Solar II PRC proceedings); and (2) an
    antidumping investigation that ultimately resulted in an order
    covering all solar cells produced in Taiwan, whether or not, and
    regardless of where, assembled into panels, except those
    assembled into panels in China16 (the Solar II Taiwan
    proceedings).
    Plaintiffs here17 are U.S. importers and a foreign
    producer of solar panels containing solar cells manufactured in
    Taiwan.18    Plaintiffs now challenge Commerce’s final
    solar producers to ‘export those modules, duty-free, to the U.S.
    market.’ . . . The Petition claimed that Taiwanese cell and
    module imports increased by 85 percent, in large part as a
    result of this alleged loophole.”) (quoting and citing,
    respectively, Solar II Pet., [ECF Nos. 53-1 & 54-1 at Tab 1],
    at 4, 6); 
    id. at 21
    (“[F]ollowing the implementation of the
    [Solar I PRC] AD and CVD orders . . ., there has been a
    measurable shift in trade flows that has resulted in increased
    imports of non-subject modules produced in China.”)
    (citing Solar II Pet., [ECF Nos. 53-1 & 54-1 at Tab 1], at 3,
    5-6, 21, 34, 37, 53).
    15See Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct. No. 15-
    00067, ECF No. 98, at Background Section II & Discussion Section
    IV).
    16   See Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 23.
    17SunEdison, Inc. (“SunEdison”), and Kyocera Solar, Inc. and
    Kyocera Mexicana S.A. de C.V. (collectively “Kyocera”).
    18   Compl., ECF No. 11, at ¶ 5; see Compl., Ct. No. 15-00081,
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                      Page 8
    determination regarding the scope of the Solar II Taiwan
    proceedings.   Specifically, the Plaintiffs make the following
    arguments regarding Commerce’s final scope determination in the
    Solar II Taiwan investigation.
    PARTIES’ ARGUMENTS
    (I) Commerce’s late modification of the Solar II
    Taiwan scope substantially deprived interested parties –
    including Kyocera, a Mexican assembler of Taiwanese solar cells
    into panels exported to the United States – of due process.19
    (II) Commerce unlawfully expanded the scope of
    Solar II Taiwan, after the close of factual submissions, to
    include merchandise that had been excluded from Commerce’s
    unfair pricing analysis (as well as the International Trade
    ECF No. 6, at ¶¶ 5-6, 9, 17.
    19See Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 3 (describing
    Kyocera’s production structure), 24-25 (arguing that Commerce’s
    approach to scope definition throughout this investigation
    deprived Kyocera of due process); see also SunEdison’s Br.,
    ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 28 (“[Commerce] deprived respondents of the
    opportunity to comment on the novel scope adopted in the final
    determination by issuing it so late in the proceeding.”);
    
    id. at 9
    (“[Commerce] did not address any of the comments
    opposing [its ultimate] scope proposal . . ., even though it
    adopted in its final determination virtually all of [that]
    proposal with respect to Taiwan.”).
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 9
    Commission’s injury analysis) throughout the investigations.20
    (III) Commerce’s final Solar II Taiwan scope
    determination was contrary to explicit statutory and regulatory
    requirements.21    Specifically, Plaintiffs argue that Commerce’s
    final Solar II Taiwan scope determination was contrary to one or
    more of the following statutory/regulatory provisions:
    (A) 19 U.S.C. § 1673 (providing Commerce’s authority to impose
    antidumping duties on products within “a class or kind of
    foreign merchandise”);22 (B) 19 U.S.C. §§ 1677b(a) (requiring a
    “fair comparison” between prices of the foreign like product
    20See SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 28 (“In reporting
    U.S. sales in their questionnaire responses, Commerce instructed
    the Taiwan respondents to follow . . . a scope definition that
    Commerce totally abandoned [in the final determination,] long
    after verifications of those responses were completed . . . .”);
    
    id. at 26
    (“In Allegheny Bradford, this Court explained that
    ‘Commerce’s discretion to define and clarify the scope of an
    investigation is limited in part by concerns for the finality of
    administrative action, which caution against including a product
    that was understood to be excluded at the time the investigation
    began.’”) (quoting Allegheny Bradford Corp. v. United States,
    
    28 CIT 830
    , 
    342 F. Supp. 2d 1172
    , 1187-88 (2004) (citation
    omitted)); Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 7 (“[Commerce]’s
    attempt to expand the [final] scope of the [Solar II Taiwan]
    investigation comes too late. The [prior] scope ha[d] not only
    been used in [Commerce]’s selection of mandatory respondents, it
    has also defined the scope of the International Trade
    Commission’s injury investigation . . . .”) (quoting Kyocera’s
    administrative case brief below).
    21SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 14-16, 21-24; Kyocera’s
    Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 11-16.
    22   SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 12-14; 19 U.S.C. § 1673.
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 10
    from the country under investigation (normal value) and the U.S.
    export prices of the subject merchandise) & 1677(16)(A)-(C)
    (requiring that the “foreign like product” must be “produced in
    the same country” as the subject merchandise);23 (C) 19 U.S.C.
    § 1677j(b) (dealing with circumvention of existing antidumping
    duty orders) & 19 C.F.R. § 351.225(h) (providing for Commerce’s
    issuance of scope rulings, under existing antidumping duty
    orders, for “products completed or assembled in other foreign
    countries”).24    SunEdison also argues that, (D) “by enacting and
    revising the antidumping law in 1984, 1988 and 1994, Congress
    bound Commerce to [continue to] use the substantial
    transformation test to determine the scope of antidumping duty
    orders . . . .”25
    (IV) Commerce’s final Solar II Taiwan scope
    determination unlawfully departed from prior practice without
    23   SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 14-15.
    24   Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 11-16.
    25SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 21 (relying on GPX Int’l
    Tire Corp. v. United States, 
    666 F.3d 732
    , 739 (Fed. Cir. 2011)
    (“In the case of a widely known judicial decision or agency
    practice, ‘Congress is presumed to be aware of an administrative
    or judicial interpretation of a statute and to adopt that
    interpretation when it re-enacts a statute without change.’”)
    (quoting Lorillard v. Pons, 
    434 U.S. 575
    , 580 (1978));
    
    id. at 21
    -25 (expanding on this argument).
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 11
    sufficient explanation.26
    (V) Commerce’s conclusion that, with the exception of
    Taiwanese cells assembled into solar panels in China, all panels
    assembled from Taiwanese cells are subject to the Solar II
    Taiwan proceedings as products of Taiwan, regardless of where
    they are assembled, is not supported by substantial evidence.27
    Specifically, Commerce’s determination that Taiwanese solar
    cells are not substantially transformed when assembled into
    panels in Mexico is unreasonable in light of the evidentiary
    record.28
    (VI) Commerce unreasonably determined to apply
    antidumping duties on the full value of the panels into which
    Taiwanese solar cells are incorporated, rather than solely the
    value of the cells themselves.29
    (VII) Commerce unreasonably excluded from its final
    dumping analysis third-country sales that the mandatory
    respondents reported as ultimately destined for the United
    26   SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 12-13, 21.
    27   Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 7, 18-23.
    28See id.; infra Standard of Review Section (defining
    “substantial evidence” review).
    29SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 10, 54-56; Kyocera’s
    Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 8, 15-16, 25-26.
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                        Page 12
    States.30
    Following a statement of the applicable standard of
    review, each group of arguments is addressed in turn below.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The court will sustain Commerce’s antidumping
    determinations if they are supported by substantial evidence and
    are otherwise in accordance with law.31     Substantial evidence
    refers to “such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might
    accept as adequate to support a conclusion,”32 considering any
    relevant evidence that fairly detracts from the reasonableness
    of the agency’s determination.33     The substantial evidence
    standard of review can be roughly translated to mean “is the
    determination unreasonable?”34     The agency must “examine the
    relevant data and articulate a satisfactory explanation for its
    30   SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 4-6, 27, 33-40.
    31   See 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i).
    32SKF USA, Inc. v. United States, 
    537 F.3d 1373
    , 1378
    (Fed. Cir. 2008) (quoting Consol. Edison Co. v. NLRB, 
    305 U.S. 197
    , 229 (1938)).
    33   Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 
    340 U.S. 474
    , 488 (1951).
    34Nippon Steel Corp. v. United States, 
    458 F.3d 1345
    , 1351
    (Fed. Cir. 2006) (quotation and alteration marks and citation
    omitted).
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                   Page 13
    action,”35 including “a ‘rational connection between the facts
    found and the choice made.’”36
    “[A]n agency determination that is arbitrary is ipso
    facto unreasonable,”37 and a determination is arbitrary when it
    fails to “consider an important aspect of the problem,”38 or
    “treat[s] similar situations in dissimilar ways.”39
    35Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co.,
    
    463 U.S. 29
    , 43 (1983).
    36Id. (quoting Burlington Truck Lines v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 156
    , 168 (1962)).
    37Shenyang Yuanda Aluminum Indus. Eng’g Co. v. United States,
    __ CIT __, __ F. Supp. 3d __, Slip Op. 16-11, 
    2016 WL 524268
    ,
    at *17 n.148 (Feb. 9, 2016) (quoting Ward v. Sternes, 
    334 F.3d 696
    , 704 (7th Cir. 2003) (“[A] decision [that] is so
    inadequately supported by the record as to be arbitrary [is]
    therefore objectively unreasonable.”) (quotation marks and
    citations omitted)).
    38   State 
    Farm, 463 U.S. at 43
    .
    39Anderson v. U.S. Sec’y of Agriculture, 
    30 CIT 1742
    , 1749, 
    462 F. Supp. 2d 1333
    , 1339 (2006) (“Agencies have a responsibility
    to administer their statutorily accorded powers fairly and
    rationally, which includes not ‘treat[ing] similar situations in
    dissimilar ways.’”) (quoting Burinskas v. NLRB, 
    357 F.2d 822
    ,
    827 (D.C. Cir. 1966) (“[An agency] cannot act arbitrarily nor
    can it treat similar situations in dissimilar ways.”) (citation
    and footnote omitted)); see also 
    id. (“Indeed, a
    principal
    justification for the administrative state is that in ‘areas of
    limitless factual variations, like cases will be treated
    alike.’”) (quoting Nat’l Muffler Dealers Ass’n v. United States,
    
    440 U.S. 472
    , 477 (1979) (citations omitted)) (also quoting
    South Shore Hosp., Inc. v. Thompson, 
    308 F.3d 91
    , 101
    (1st Cir. 2002) (“The goal of regulation is not to provide exact
    uniformity of treatment, but, rather, to provide uniformity of
    rules so that those similarly situated will be treated
    alike.”)); Trs. in Bankruptcy of N. Am. Rubber Thread Co.
    v. United States, 
    32 CIT 663
    , 665, 
    558 F. Supp. 2d 1367
    , 1370
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                   Page 14
    Where the statutory language is sufficiently broad to
    permit a range of policy choices, the agency may change course
    from its prior practice and adopt a new approach within its
    statutory authority,40 but it must explain how the new policy is
    consistent with the continued relevance (if any) of the factual
    findings on which the agency’s prior policy was based.41
    “[A] reasoned explanation is needed for disregarding facts and
    circumstances that underlay or were engendered by the prior
    (2008) (“Generally, an agency action is arbitrary when the
    agency offers insufficient reasons for treating similar
    situations differently.”) (quotation and alteration marks and
    citation omitted).
    40See, e.g., Nakornthai Strip Mill Pub. Co. v. United States,
    
    32 CIT 1272
    , 1276, 
    587 F. Supp. 2d 1303
    , 1307 (2008) (“Commerce
    has discretion to change its policies and practices as long as
    they are reasonable and consistent with their statutory mandate
    and may adapt its views and practices to the particular
    circumstances at hand, so long as the agency’s decisions are
    explained and supported by substantial evidence on the record.”)
    (quotation and alteration marks and citation omitted).
    41See British Steel PLC v. United States, 
    127 F.3d 1471
    , 1475
    (Fed. Cir. 1997) (“An agency is obligated to follow [its]
    precedent, and if it chooses to change, it must explain why.”)
    (quotation marks and citation omitted); State 
    Farm, 463 U.S. at 46
    –48 (holding that an agency may not change course without
    addressing the continued relevance of factual findings on which
    the agency’s prior policy was based); FCC v. Fox Television
    Stations, Inc., 
    556 U.S. 502
    , 537 (2009) (J. Kennedy, concurring
    in part and concurring in judgment) (explaining that State Farm
    followed the principle that an agency “cannot simply disregard
    contrary or inconvenient factual determinations that it made in
    the past, any more than it can ignore inconvenient facts when it
    writes on a blank slate”).
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                      Page 15
    policy.”42    Thus, “when departing from its own precedent,
    Commerce must explain its departure,”43 providing a rational link
    between the facts found and the conclusions reached, after
    considering all important aspects of the problem.
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Remand on Other Grounds Makes Reaching Due Process
    Arguments Unnecessary.
    Because remand of Commerce’s final Solar II Taiwan
    scope determinations is warranted on other grounds,44 and because
    the parties will therefore have ample opportunity to address the
    scope issues on remand, Plaintiffs’ due process challenges to
    the final scope determination are moot.    The court therefore
    offers no opinion in this regard.
    In addition, Kyocera’s claim that, as a third-country
    assembler of Taiwanese solar cells into panels, it was deprived
    of its “right to participate in the investigation as a
    respondent and submit information demonstrating that it was not
    42   
    Fox, 556 U.S. at 516
    .
    
    43Nakornthai, 32 CIT at 1276
    , 587 F. Supp. 2d at 1308 (citing
    and quoting Trs. in Bankruptcy of N. Am. Rubber Thread Co.
    v. United States, 
    31 CIT 2040
    , 2047, 
    533 F. Supp. 2d 1290
    , 1297
    (2007) (“Commerce [must] attempt to distinguish the reasoning
    set forth in [prior cases] from the present case.”) (alterations
    in Nakornthai)).
    44   See infra Discussion Section IV.
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 16
    dumping solar products”45 is entwined with the scope
    determinations remanded here and in Solar II PRC.46    Accordingly,
    this matter will be clarified once the issues remanded here are
    resolved, and the scope of these proceedings is finalized.
    II.    Commerce’s Final Solar II Taiwan Scope Modification’s
    Effect On the Databases Used Throughout the Investigation
    Plaintiffs next argue that Commerce’s final Solar II
    Taiwan scope determination unlawfully altered the sales
    databases relied on throughout the investigation, resulting in
    incongruence between the sales used to determine dumping
    liability and those ultimately covered by the order.47    Because
    45   Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 25.
    46See infra Discussion Sections IV, VI, & VII; Solar II PRC Slip
    Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct. No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98,
    at Discussion Section IV.
    47See SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 28 (“In reporting
    U.S. sales in their questionnaire responses, Commerce instructed
    the Taiwan respondents to follow . . . a scope definition that
    Commerce totally abandoned long after verifications of those
    responses were completed . . . .”); 
    id. at n.14
    (noting that in
    Solar II PRC Commerce had emphasized that its final scope
    modification “‘result[ed] in no change to [the mandatory
    respondents’] reported database[s]’”) (quoting Issues & Decision
    Mem., Certain Crystalline Silicon Photovoltaic Products from the
    [PRC], A-570-010, Investigation (Dec. 15, 2014) (adopted in
    79 Fed. Reg. 76,970 (Dep’t Commerce Dec. 23, 2014) (final
    determination of sales at less than fair value)) (“Solar II PRC
    AD I&D Mem.”) cmt. 1 at 19); Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30,
    at 7 (quoting Kyocera’s administrative case brief below
    (“[Commerce’s scope modification changed the scope from that]
    used in [Commerce]’s selection of mandatory respondents [and]
    . . . the International Trade Commission’s injury investigation,
    which has undertaken no analysis of the impact of third-country
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 17
    this claim also implicates the specific agency decisions that
    are remanded here and in Solar II PRC,48 the court also defers
    consideration of this matter until the issues remanded here are
    resolved, and the scope of these proceedings is finalized.
    III. Commerce’s Final Solar II Taiwan Scope Determination Was
    Not Contrary to Explicit Statutory and Regulatory
    Requirements.
    Next, Plaintiffs argue that Commerce’s final Solar II
    Taiwan scope determination was contrary to one or more
    statutory/regulatory provisions.49    Each argument is addressed in
    turn.
    solar modules on the domestic industry.”)); but see Solar II ITC
    Final Determination, supra note 7, at 7 (“The [International
    Trade] Commission recognized early in these [Solar II PRC and
    Solar II Taiwan] investigations that changes in the scopes were
    likely and took steps to ensure that it collected the
    information that would allow it to fulfill its statutory
    obligations. In the questionnaires issued in the final phase of
    these investigations, the Commission asked U.S. producers and
    importers to segregate their import data into sixteen
    categories, which were designed to provide the Commission with
    flexibility to adjust the data to conform to different possible
    scope definitions. The manner in which the Commission collected
    the data in these investigations permitted the agency and the
    parties to consider and evaluate the implications of various
    possible scope definitions to the Commission’s analysis.”)
    (citations omitted).
    48See infra Discussion Sections IV, VI, & VII; Solar II PRC
    Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct. No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98,
    at Discussion Section IV.
    49   
    See supra
    notes 21-25 and accompanying text.
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 
    18 A. 19
    U.S.C. § 1673
    SunEdison argues that Commerce impermissibly “assigned
    to [the statutory phrase] ‘a class or kind of foreign
    merchandise’ different and inconsistent meanings for the same
    merchandise – modules containing Taiwanese-origin cells –
    depending on where the module assembly took place.”50
    But as explained in the Solar II PRC opinion, it is
    well-established that the scope of an antidumping order is
    defined by two separate inquiries – (1) is the product within
    the relevant class/kind of merchandise? and (2) did the product
    originate in the country covered by the order?51   Here, the
    relevant class/kind of merchandise is solar cells, whether or
    not assembled into panels.52   The essence of the parties’ dispute
    concerns the second inquiry – Commerce’s rule for determining
    whether a given product within this class/kind of merchandise
    originates in the country covered by the order.    Commerce did
    50SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 14 (quoting 19 U.S.C.
    § 1673).
    51Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct. No. 15-
    00067, ECF No. 98, at 25 (quoting and citing relevant
    authorities).
    52See Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. Section III (Scope of the
    Investigation) at 4 (“The merchandise covered by this
    investigation is crystalline silicon photovoltaic [i.e., solar]
    cells, and modules, laminates and/or panels consisting of [such]
    cells, whether or not partially or fully assembled into other
    products, including building integrated materials.”).
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 19
    not assign different and inconsistent meanings to the phrase
    “class or kind of foreign merchandise” in 19 U.S.C. § 1673, but
    rather applied two different origin rules to products within
    this class or kind of merchandise, depending on where the solar
    cells were assembled into panels.53   Because the statute does not
    directly address this concern, Commerce’s decision in this
    regard was not explicitly contrary to the plain language of
    19 U.S.C. § 1673.
    B.   19 U.S.C. § 1677b(a) & 1677(16)(A)-(C)
    SunEdison also argues that, because “[t]he statute
    defines the term ‘country’ as limited to a single country for
    purposes of antidumping proceedings,”54 it therefore “compels a
    uniform test to determine when the foreign like product is
    ‘produced in the same country’ as subject merchandise, because
    multiple tests arbitrarily create a mismatch between the
    universes [i.e., respective scopes] of subject merchandise and
    the foreign like product.”55   Because this claim is related to
    53See infra Discussion Section IV; Solar II PRC Slip Op.,
    Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct. No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98,
    at Discussion Section IV.
    54SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 14-15 (quoting 19 U.S.C.
    § 1677(3)).
    55Id. (quoting 19 U.S.C. § 1677(16)) (also citing and quoting
    Slater Steels v. United States, 
    27 CIT 1786
    , 1788, 
    297 F. Supp. 2d
    1362, 1364 (2003) (“Under any of these definitions [of normal
    value], both the ‘foreign like product’ and the ‘subject
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 20
    one of the grounds for remand, both here and in Solar II PRC,56
    the court will defer its adjudication of this issue until the
    agency has had an opportunity to reconsider on remand.
    C.   19 U.S.C. § 1677j(b) & 19 C.F.R. § 351.225(h)
    Next, Kyocera argues that Commerce’s decision – to
    include, within the scope of this order on merchandise from
    Taiwan, all Taiwanese solar cells that are assembled into panels
    in Taiwan or in other countries (except those that are assembled
    into panels in China) – should be evaluated under 19 U.S.C.
    § 1677j(b) (dealing with circumvention of existing antidumping
    duty orders) and 19 C.F.R. § 351.225(h) (providing for
    Commerce’s issuance of scope rulings, under existing antidumping
    duty orders, for “products completed or assembled in other
    foreign countries”).57
    As Kyocera acknowledges, however, these provisions
    apply to circumstances where an order with a defined scope is
    already in effect,58 whereas here Commerce was defining the scope
    merchandise’ must be in the same country as the merchandise that
    is the subject of the investigation.”) (footnote omitted).
    56See infra Discussion Sections IV & VI; Solar II PRC Slip Op.,
    Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct. No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98,
    at Discussion Section IV.
    57   Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 11-16.
    58See 
    id. at 14;
    19 U.S.C. § 1677j(b)(1)(A)(i) (providing that
    this provision applies to “merchandise imported into the United
    States [that] is of the same class or kind as any merchandise
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 21
    of an order prior to its imposition.   Although Kyocera argues
    that this distinction is immaterial,59 the distinction is in fact
    significant.   Here, Commerce is fashioning the foundational
    scope of a proceeding, before the imposition of the order,
    rather than extending an existing order to cover new merchandise
    so as to address circumvention of an order’s pre-existing scope.
    19 U.S.C. § 1677j(b) and 19 C.F.R. § 351.225(h) are therefore
    inapposite to the specific issues presented here.
    D.   Congress Did Not Bind Commerce To Always Use The
    Substantial Transformation Test To Establish the
    Origin of Products Manufactured in Multiple Countries.
    Finally, Congress did not require Commerce to continue
    to use its substantial transformation test60 when determining the
    produced in a foreign country that is the subject of . . . an
    antidumping duty order [that is already] issued”) (emphasis
    added); 19 C.F.R. § 351.225(h) (noting that this regulatory
    provision applies once an antidumping duty order “is [already]
    in effect”).
    59See Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 14 (arguing that “the
    same reasoning applies” regardless of whether Commerce is
    initially establishing an origin rule for a class of merchandise
    in which products are manufactured in more than one country, or
    whether the agency is subsequently asked to cover additional
    merchandise that was not previously covered by the origin rule
    initially established).
    60See infra Discussion Section V (discussing Commerce’s
    substantial transformation test); Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem.
    cmt. 1 at 19-23 (applying the substantial transformation test to
    determine the origin of all panels assembled from solar cells
    made outside the country-of-assembly, except panels assembled in
    China); Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct.
    No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98, at Background Sections I & II, and
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 22
    origin of (and hence the appropriate foreign market for
    calculating the comparison normal values for) merchandise
    manufactured in multiple countries.61    Because the plain language
    of the antidumping statute does not unambiguously prescribe any
    specific approach to origin determinations, Commerce may
    exercise reasonable discretion in selecting a reasonable method
    for such determinations.62    Thus even if SunEdison were correct
    that, by revisiting the antidumping law without explicitly
    rejecting Commerce’s prior use of the substantial transformation
    test to determine the origin of products made in multiple
    countries, Congress ratified the agency’s use of this test,63 it
    does not follow that the agency is therefore required to always
    exercise its discretion in the same way.     That Congress did not
    reject the agency’s particular exercise of discretion is not
    equivalent to a requirement that the agency must always exercise
    Discussion Section IV (providing additional background and
    discussion).
    61See SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 21-25 (making the
    argument that “Congress bound Commerce to use the substantial
    transformation test to determine the scope of [all] antidumping
    duty orders”).
    62   
    See supra
    Standard of Review Section.
    63See SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 21-25 (making this
    argument).
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                       Page 23
    its discretion using the same method.64
    IV.    Commerce’s Final Solar II Taiwan Scope Determination Is
    Remanded for Consistency with the Solar II PRC Proceedings.
    Next, SunEdison argues that Commerce’s final Solar II
    Taiwan scope determination unlawfully departed from prior
    practice without sufficient explanation.65    Both here in Solar II
    Taiwan and in Solar II PRC, Commerce established two different
    origin rules for solar panels, depending on where they are
    assembled.66    As this Court has already ruled with regard to the
    64See, e.g., 
    Nakornthai, 32 CIT at 1276
    , 587 F. Supp. 2d at 1307
    (“Commerce has discretion to change its policies and practices
    as long as they are reasonable and consistent with their
    statutory mandate and may adapt its views and practices to the
    particular circumstances . . . at hand, so long as the agency’s
    decisions are explained and supported by substantial evidence on
    the record.”) (quotation and alteration marks and citation
    omitted). SunEdison’s argument regarding the Statement of
    Administrative Action (“SAA”), SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32
    & 33, at 24 (arguing that the SAA requires Commerce to always
    use the substantial transformation test to determine the origin
    of products manufactured in multiple countries) (quoting Uruguay
    Round Agreements Act, SAA, H.R. Doc. No. 103–316 (1994) at 844,
    reprinted in 1994 U.S.C.A.A.N. 4040 (“Outside of a situation
    involving circumvention of an antidumping duty order, a
    substantial transformation of a good in an intermediate country
    would render the resulting merchandise a product of the
    intermediate country rather than the original country of
    production.”)), is unpersuasive for the same reason. That the
    SAA accepts “substantial transformation” as sufficient to
    determine country-of-origin does not mean that it requires this
    test as necessary for that purpose.
    65   See SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 12-13, 21-22.
    66See Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 23 (“[S]olar modules
    assembled in the PRC using Taiwanese cells are within the scope
    of, and therefore subject to, the [Solar II PRC] investigations
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                    Page 24
    Solar II PRC proceedings, in doing so, Commerce did not provide
    sufficient explanation for (1) departing from the agency’s prior
    practice of establishing a single consistent origin rule for all
    products within a single class or kind of merchandise;
    (2) treating similarly-situated products differently; and
    (3) departing from the agency’s prior practice of calculating
    the foreign like product’s normal value in the market where the
    majority of production of the subject merchandise took place.67
    Because the final Solar II Taiwan scope incorporates
    the Solar II PRC exception for solar panels assembled in China –
    which exempts all such panels from the otherwise generally-
    applicable rule that the origin of solar panels is determined by
    the origin of their constituent cells68 – these same concerns are
    also implicated here.69    Accordingly, Commerce’s final Solar II
    as Chinese modules . . . . This is in contrast to cells from
    Taiwan which are used in the assembly of solar modules in other
    countries . . ., [which] are considered Taiwanese in origin, and
    are within the scope of this [Solar II Taiwan] investigation.”)
    (footnote omitted); Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56,
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98, at Background Section II
    & Discussion Section IV.
    67Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct.
    No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98, at Discussion Section IV.
    68See, e.g., Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 24 (“[T]he solar
    cell determines the country of origin, unless manufactured into
    a module, laminate or panel in the PRC.”).
    69The Government’s additional reliance here on Certain Softwood
    Lumber Products from Canada, 67 Fed. Reg. 15,545 (Dep’t Commerce
    Apr. 2, 2002) (notice of final affirmative countervailing duty
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                  Page 25
    Taiwan scope determination must be remanded for the same reasons
    as those elaborated in the court’s prior opinion,70 to ensure
    that the agency’s approach in these proceedings is consistent.
    determination and final negative critical circumstances
    determination) (“Softwood Lumber from Canada”), in support of
    the proposition that “[s]uch exclusions [as the exception from
    the general origin rule for panels assembled in China] are
    common,” Def.’s Resp. in Opp’n to Pls.’ Rule 56.2 Mots. for J.
    on the Agency R., ECF Nos. 44 (conf. version) & 45 (pub.
    version), at 33 (citing Softwood Lumber from Canada, 67 Fed.
    Reg. at 15,547), is unpersuasive. In that case, Commerce
    exempted softwood lumber products made in certain Canadian
    Provinces (referred to as the “Maritime Provinces”) from its
    countervailing duty investigation, Softwood Lumber from Canada,
    67 Fed. Reg. at 15,547 (citing Certain Softwood Lumber Products
    from Canada, 66 Fed. Reg. 40,228 (Dep’t Commerce Apr. 2, 2001)
    (amendment to the notice of initiation of countervailing duty
    investigation)), due to “unique circumstances,” 66 Fed. Reg.
    at 40,228. Specifically, Commerce explained that “[t]hroughout
    much of the history of this dispute, the Maritime Provinces have
    been exempt from the various actions taken,” and that (unlike
    here, with regard to solar panels) “[a]ll parties have generally
    recognized that there are unique circumstances associated with
    the Maritime Provinces and have supported those exemptions.” 
    Id. at 40,229.
    Thus not only was the exemption uncontested and
    non-controversial (unlike here), the Softwood Lumber from Canada
    example is in any event inapposite to the issue presented here
    and in Solar II PRC with respect to the multiple origin rules
    established for solar panels. Here the issue is not (as in
    Softwood Lumber from Canada) that some products were exempted
    from antidumping/countervailing duty liability (for whatever
    political reasons), but rather that some products within the
    class or kind of merchandise are treated using a different rule
    than that which is otherwise generally applicable to products
    within that overall class/kind. Softwood Lumber from Canada is
    not an example of a case where the agency has established two
    different national origin rules for products within the same
    class or kind of merchandise.
    70See Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct. No. 15-
    00067, ECF No. 98, at Discussion Section IV.
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                    Page 26
    V.   Commerce’s Determination that Solar Cells Are Not
    Substantially Transformed When Assembled Into Panels Is
    Supported by Substantial Evidence.
    Next, Plaintiff Kyocera argues that the Taiwanese
    cells used to assemble Kyocera’s solar panels in Mexico are
    substantially transformed in Mexico, such that they cannot be
    assessed antidumping liability as products of Taiwan.71
    Here, as in Solar I PRC, Commerce employed the
    substantial transformation test that is the agency’s “usual
    starting point” when deciding which country’s foreign market
    should provide the basis for the antidumping liability of
    products produced in multiple countries.72   Using this test,
    Commerce found that (1) solar cells and panels are within the
    same class or kind of merchandise; (2) solar panel assembly does
    not change the nature or use of the product’s essential
    component, the solar cell; and (3) solar panel assembly does not
    constitute substantial or sophisticated processing of the
    constituent solar cells.73   Accordingly, Commerce concluded that,
    71See Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 18-23; see also 
    id. at 7.
    72Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 18; compare 
    id. at 19-21,
    with Solar I PRC Scope Clarification Mem., Consol. Ct.
    No. 15-00067, ECF No. 58-3 at Tab 1 Ex. 2, at 8 (unchanged in
    Solar I PRC AD I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 6-7).
    73Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 19-21 (explicitly also
    relying on the analysis conducted for the same class/kind of
    merchandise in Solar I PRC).
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                       Page 27
    “consistent with [the] determination in Solar I [PRC],” panel
    assembly does not substantially transform the constituent solar
    cells so as to change the cells’ country-of-origin.74
    Kyocera argues that Commerce should have instead
    concluded that solar cells are substantially transformed when
    assembled into panels in Mexico, such that a solar panel’s
    country-of-origin for antidumping purposes should be the country
    in which the panel is assembled, rather than the country where
    the constituent cells are produced.75    But Kyocera does not
    directly challenge the factors that Commerce has chosen to use
    for determining whether components produced in a country
    different from where they are then incorporated into a finished
    product are so transformed in the exporting country as to
    justify an assessment of antidumping liability based on normal
    values calculated in the market of ultimate assembly, rather
    74See id.; see also Solar I PRC Scope Clarification Mem.,
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00067, ECF No. 58-3 at Tab 1 Ex. 2, at 8
    (“[W]here solar cell production occurs in a different country
    from solar module assembly, the country-of-origin of the solar
    modules/panels is the country in which the solar cell was
    produced.”) (unchanged in Solar I PRC AD I&D Mem. cmt. 1
    at 6-7); Solar II PRC AD I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 15 (“[Commerce]
    determined in [Solar I PRC] that the solar cell [is] the
    essential active component of the module, [and] that assembly of
    cells into modules [does] not constitute substantial
    transformation such that the assembled module could be
    considered a product of the country of assembly . . . .”)
    (citation omitted).
    75   See Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 7, 18-23.
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                       Page 28
    than the market of component production.76
    Instead of making an argument about the reasonableness
    of the factors of analysis that Commerce actually employed here,
    Kyocera argues that Commerce should have used a different test,
    analogizing this case to country-of-origin analyses undertaken
    by different agencies in contexts unrelated to antidumping.77
    But Customs’ country-of-origin determinations, made pursuant to
    and in furtherance of entirely different statutory authority,
    are inapposite to the issue presented here.78
    76   See 
    id. 77See id.
    at 19-21 (arguing that Commerce should have used the
    country-of-origin test applied by the predecessor to U.S.
    Customs & Border Protection (“Customs”) in Koru N. Am. v. United
    States, 
    12 CIT 1120
    , 
    701 F. Supp. 229
    (1998), enforcing
    country-of-origin marking requirements under 19 U.S.C. § 1304
    (1982), see 
    Koru, 12 CIT at 1125-26
    , 701 F. Supp. at 233-34);
    
    id. at 22-23
    (arguing that Texas Instruments, Inc. v. United
    States, 
    681 F.2d 778
    (CCPA 1982), in which the court reviewed
    Customs’ interpretation of 19 C.F.R. § 10.177(a) (1982),
    relating to country-of-origin determinations for purposes of the
    U.S. Generalized System of Preferences, see Texas 
    Instruments, 681 F.2d at 781-82
    , constitutes “binding authority” in this
    case).
    78See Certain Cold-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products from
    Argentina, 58 Fed. Reg. 37,062, 37,065 (Dep’t Commerce July 9,
    1993) (notice of final determination of sales at less than fair
    value) (“Cold-Rolled Steel from Argentina”) (explaining that the
    statutory provisions governing Customs’ country-of-origin
    determinations are separate from those governing Commerce’s
    antidumping determinations, such that imported products may be
    determined by different agencies to have different origins for
    different statutory purposes); see also, e.g., Wax & Wax/Resin
    Thermal Transfer Ribbon from the Republic of Korea, 69 Fed. Reg.
    17,645, 17,648 (Dep’t Commerce Apr. 5, 2004) (notice of final
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 29
    Here, Commerce exercised its discretion to use the
    test that it had previously established for determining which
    country will be used to calculate normal values for antidumping
    duty assessment when products are manufactured in multiple
    countries.79   Kyocera neither addresses this particular analysis
    nor makes any specific argument as to why it was not reasonable
    determination of sales at not less than fair value) (“Ribbon
    from Korea”) (“As [Commerce] has stated on numerous occasions,
    [Customs] decisions regarding substantial transformation and
    customs regulations . . . are not binding on [Commerce], because
    we make these decisions with different aims in mind (e.g.,
    anticircumvention).”) (citation omitted); Stainless Steel Round
    Wire from Canada, 64 Fed. Reg. 17,324, 17,327 (Dep’t Commerce
    Apr. 9, 1999) (notice of final determination of sales at less
    than fair value) (“[W]e reiterate that the disciplines of the
    [World Trade Organization] Agreement on Rules of Origin that are
    currently in effect under Article 2 of the Agreement simply do
    not require us to apply the country-of-origin determinations
    made by the Customs Service when making determinations in
    [antidumping] proceedings.”).
    79See Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 19 (relying on Issues
    & Decision Mem., Glycine from India, A-533-845, Investigation
    (Mar. 28, 2008) (adopted in 73 Fed. Reg. 16,640 (Dep’t Commerce
    Mar. 28, 2008) (notice of final determination of sales at less
    than fair value)) (“Glycine from India”) at cmt. 5); see Glycine
    from India cmt. 5 at 5-6 (“The Department applies, as
    appropriate, the following criteria in determining whether
    substantial transformation occurs, thereby changing a product’s
    country of origin [for antidumping purposes]: 1) whether the
    processed downstream product falls into a different class or
    kind of product when compared to the upstream product,
    2) whether the essential component of the merchandise is
    substantially transformed in the country of exportation,
    and 3) the extent of processing.”) (citing Ribbon from Korea,
    69 Fed. Reg. at 17,647; Erasable Programmable Read Only Memories
    (EPROMs) from Japan, 51 Fed. Reg. 39,680, 39,692 (Dep’t Commerce
    Oct. 30, 1986) (final determination of sales at less than fair
    value)).
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                   Page 30
    for the agency to apply its usual test in this case.80   Nor does
    Kyocera present any argument, or point to any record evidence,
    to suggest that Commerce’s conclusions in applying the three
    factors of its substantial transformation test81 to the evidence
    here82 do not comport with a reasonable reading of the
    evidentiary record.83
    80   See Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 18-23.
    81
    See supra
    note 79 (quoting and providing relevant citations
    for Commerce’s statement of the factors employed in its
    substantial transformation test).
    82
    See supra
    note 73 and accompanying text (summarizing and
    providing relevant citation for Commerce’s evidentiary
    findings).
    83
    See supra
    Standard of Review Section. Kyocera attempts to
    analogize this case to Diamond Sawblades Mfrs.’ Coalition
    v. United States, Slip Op. 13-130, 
    2013 WL 5878684
    (CIT Oct. 11,
    2013), Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 21-22, where the
    court affirmed Commerce’s determination that, with respect to
    the class/kind of merchandise containing diamond sawblades, “the
    essential quality of the [finished] product is not imparted
    until the [components] are attached to create a finished
    [diamond sawblade],” Diamond Sawblades, 
    2013 WL 5878684
    at *10-
    11. But the court’s unrelated decision that Commerce reasonably
    weighed the particular evidentiary record in a different case,
    concerning a different class/kind of merchandise, has no bearing
    on whether Commerce’s factual determinations with respect to the
    products in this case are reasonably supported by the specific
    evidentiary record presented here. And to the extent that
    Kyocera simply invites the court to re-weigh the evidence to
    conclude that the process of panel assembly does substantially
    transform the solar cells used in panel production,
    see Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 20-23, it is not the
    court’s providence to do so. See, e.g., Jiangsu Jiasheng
    Photovoltaic Tech. Co. v. United States, __ CIT __,
    
    121 F. Supp. 3d 1263
    , 1272 (2015); Pakfood Pub. Co. v. United
    States, 
    34 CIT 1122
    , 
    724 F. Supp. 2d 1327
    , 1348 (2010).
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 31
    Accordingly, this case presents no basis to disturb
    Commerce’s factual findings that (1) solar cells and panels are
    within the same class or kind of merchandise; (2) solar panel
    assembly does not change the nature or use of the product’s
    essential component, the solar cell; and (3) solar panel
    assembly does not constitute substantial or sophisticated
    processing of the constituent solar cells.84     Nor do the parties
    present a basis to disturb the agency’s consequent conclusion
    that the cell is not substantially transformed in the process of
    panel assembly so as to change the cell’s country-of-origin,
    pursuant to Commerce’s usual substantial transformation test in
    the antidumping context.
    VI.    Assessment of Antidumping Duties Based on the Full Value of
    Solar Panels Assembled in Third Countries from Taiwanese
    Cells
    Plaintiffs also challenge Commerce’s decision to apply
    antidumping duties to the full value of solar panels assembled
    in other countries from cells produced in Taiwan, rather than
    only the value of the constituent Taiwanese cells.85     But as
    84   Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 19-21.
    85SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 10, 54-56; Kyocera’s
    Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 8, 15-16, 25-26; see Solar II Taiwan
    I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 24 n.80 (“[W]ith regard to [the] argument
    that [Commerce] should take into consideration the processing
    done in the country that produces the cell and the country that
    produces the module, laminate or panel, and then only apply
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                  Page 32
    explained in the Solar II PRC opinion, Commerce previously had a
    reasonable policy of applying antidumping duties to the full
    value of merchandise that is manufactured in part in countries
    other than the subject country, because the statute requires
    that Commerce assess such duties “in an amount ‘equal to the
    amount by which the foreign market value [now referred to as
    ‘normal value’] of the merchandise [i.e., the entire finished
    product] exceeds the United States price of the merchandise.’”86
    [antidumping] duties to the portion of the processing that was
    done in Taiwan, we disagree. Solar modules assembled in third-
    countries using Taiwanese solar cells are covered by the scope
    of the [Solar II Taiwan] investigation, no matter the amount of
    processing done in the third country. Thus the full value of
    these solar modules [is] subject to . . . applicable antidumping
    duties.”).
    86Cold-Rolled Steel from Argentina, 58 Fed. Reg. at 37,065
    (quoting predecessor to 19 U.S.C. § 1673e (requiring assessment
    of antidumping duties “equal to the amount by which the normal
    value of the merchandise exceeds the export price (or
    constructed export price) of the merchandise”)); see also Large
    Newspaper Printing Presses and Components Thereof, Whether
    Assembled or Unassembled, from Germany, 61 Fed. Reg. 38,166,
    38,171 (Dep’t Commerce July 23, 1996) (notice of final
    determination of sales at less than fair value) (“LNPPs from
    Germany”) (“[A]ny interpretation [of the law] which sought to
    limit the application of antidumping duties . . . to the foreign
    content [attributable solely to a particular country] would be
    inconsistent with [Commerce]’s statutory mandate to assess
    antidumping duties on the extent to which the normal value . . .
    (previously referred to as ‘foreign market value’) exceeds the
    export price (previously referred to as ‘United States price’).
    Application of antidumping duties only on [a particular
    country’s partial] processing or content portion of the import
    might mean that the margin of dumping would not be fully
    offset.”) (citing Certain Corrosion-Resistant Carbon Steel
    Products from Canada, 58 Fed. Reg. 37,099 (Dep’t Commerce
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                       Page 33
    As Commerce had previously explained, because the foreign market
    value of the finished foreign like product is not necessarily
    subdivisible, “[a]pplication of antidumping duties only on [a
    particular country’s partial] processing or content portion of
    the import might mean that the margin of dumping would not be
    fully offset.”87
    But as also discussed in the Solar II PRC opinion,
    this policy of assessing antidumping duties on the full value of
    finished products was also coupled with Commerce’s policy of
    calculating normal value using foreign like products in the
    country where most of the essential production of the subject
    merchandise took place.88       Because the statute requires a fair
    comparison between the U.S. export price of the subject
    merchandise and the normal value of the foreign like product,89
    Commerce had, prior to its decisions in Solar II PRC and
    Solar II Taiwan, reasonably assessed antidumping duties on the
    July 9, 1993) (final determination of sales at less than fair
    value), aff’d, In the Matter of Certain Corrosion-Resistant
    Carbon Steel Products from Canada, USA-93-1904-03 (Binational
    Panel under the United States-Canada Free Trade Agreement
    Oct. 31, 1994)); Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol.
    Ct. No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98, at 32-35, 47-48.
    87   LNPPs from Germany, 61 Fed. Reg. at 38,171.
    88Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct.
    No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98, at 31-33, 38-39, 42-44.
    89   19 U.S.C. § 1677b(a)(1).
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                    Page 34
    full value of finished products after calculating dumping
    margins using foreign normal values from the same market as that
    where most of the actual manufacturing of the subject
    merchandise occurred.90
    Given this policy, Commerce reasonably determined to
    assess antidumping duties pursuant to the Solar II Taiwan order
    on the full value of the solar panels produced/imported by the
    Plaintiffs here, because it is undisputed that at least fifty
    percent of the production costs of Plaintiffs’ solar panels were
    incurred in the production of the panels’ constituent cells in
    Taiwan.91
    90Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct.
    No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98, at 43-44.
    91See SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 10, 54-56 (arguing
    that Commerce “must limit the collection of antidumping duty
    deposits and assessments to the value of Taiwanese-origin
    [solar] cells in the module,” without disputing that the
    majority of a solar panel’s production costs are incurred in the
    production of the constituent cells); Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29
    & 30, at 5, 8, 15-16, 25-26 (essentially same). Kyocera makes
    an argument regarding the value added by panel assembly as
    compared with the market value of the individual cells,
    Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 5, 16, but as Commerce has
    explained, the agency is concerned with where the costs of
    production are incurred, rather than percentages of value added,
    because “we are primarily concerned with where [most of] the
    actual manufacturing is occurring.” LNPPs from Germany, 61 Fed.
    Reg. at 38,168; see also Cold-Rolled Steel from Argentina,
    58 Fed. Reg. at 37,065 (explaining that antidumping liability is
    not susceptible to subdivision using the market values of a
    finished product’s constituent parts, because “[antidumping]
    duties are not an assessment against value,” but are rather
    “determined by the amount of [ultimate] price discrimination
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                    Page 35
    But as the court also held in Solar II PRC, Commerce
    deviated from its prior policy by determining, in Solar II PRC
    and also here in Solar II Taiwan, that solar panels assembled in
    China from cells produced elsewhere are to be assessed
    antidumping duties based on a comparison to normal values
    calculated for China, rather than the market where most of the
    production of the panels (i.e., cell-production) took place.92
    Because Commerce neither discussed nor reconciled this aspect of
    its Solar II PRC and Solar II Taiwan scope decisions with the
    agency’s prior policy and reasoning, remand is necessary for the
    agency to do so.93    The outcome of these remand proceedings will
    bear directly on the reasonableness of Commerce’s approach to
    antidumping duty assessment here.
    Commerce’s Solar II PRC exception for solar panels
    assembled in China from non-Chinese cells (which is incorporated
    . . ., not by the value of the good”). In any event, even the
    evidence regarding the percentage of value added by panel
    assembly that Kyocera relies on does not dispute that a majority
    of the value of a solar panel resides in the constituent cells.
    See Kyocera’s Br., ECF Nos. 29 & 30, at 5 (citing [Kyocera’s]
    Req. for Scope Determination re Solar Prods. from Mexico,
    Certain Crystalline Silicon Photovoltaic Products from Taiwan,
    A-583-853, Investigation (Sept. 15, 2014), reproduced in App. to
    Pl.’s Rule 56.2 Mem. in Supp. of J. on the Agency R., ECF Nos.
    34 (conf. version) & 35 (pub. Version) at App. 2, at 4).
    92Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct.
    No. 15-00067, ECF No. 98, at 38-39, 45-46.
    93   Id.; 
    see supra
    Discussion Section IV.
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 36
    into the Solar II Taiwan scope94) seemingly abandons the agency’s
    reasonable prior policy, and thereby removes that policy’s
    explanatory power with respect to Commerce’s decision here.    In
    the absence of such explanation, Commerce’s conclusory statement
    that antidumping duties will be assessed pursuant to Solar II
    Taiwan on the full value of solar panels assembled in third
    countries from Taiwanese cells simply because such panels “are
    covered by the scope of the [Solar II Taiwan] investigation, no
    matter the amount of processing done in the third country,”95 is
    by itself insufficient to address Plaintiffs’ arguments.96
    Thus how Commerce addresses this concern on remand in
    94   See, e.g., Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 23.
    95   
    Id. at 24
    n.80.
    96See Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct. No. 15-
    00067, ECF No. 98, at 24-25 (noting that it is well-established
    that the scope of an antidumping order is defined by two
    separate inquiries – (1) is the product within the relevant
    class/kind of merchandise? and (2) did the product originate in
    the country covered by the order?) (relying on Cold-Rolled Steel
    from Argentina, 58 Fed. Reg. at 37,065 (relied on by Commerce in
    Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 18 n.52); 3.5” Microdisks and
    Coated Media Thereof from Japan, 54 Fed. Reg. 6433 (Dep’t
    Commerce Feb. 10, 1989) (final determination of sales at less
    than fair value) (relied on in Cold-Rolled Steel from Argentina,
    58 Fed. Reg. at 37,065); and Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. cmt. 1
    at 18 (“In determining the scope of the investigation,
    [Commerce] must not only address . . . the products intended to
    be covered by the scope, but also determine the country-of-
    origin of the solar products at issue.”)). In the absence of
    the explanatory power of its prior policy, Commerce’s
    explanation here appears to conflate these two separate
    inquiries.
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                     Page 37
    Solar II PRC, and here, will also have implications for the
    reasonableness of its decision with respect to this issue.
    VII. Commerce’s Treatment of Sales of Taiwanese Cells to Third-
    Country Panel Assemblers For Export to the United States
    Finally, SunEdison challenges Commerce’s treatment of
    respondents’ “sales to third countries for which [the Taiwanese
    solar cell producers/exporters] ha[d] knowledge that the
    merchandise was ultimately destined for the United States.”97       A
    significant proportion of such sales, however, appear to have
    been sales of Taiwanese solar cells to panel assemblers in
    China,98 which Commerce specifically excluded as non-subject
    merchandise pursuant to the determinations that are remanded
    here and in Solar II PRC.99    The court will therefore defer its
    97SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 4 (quoting [Commerce’s]
    Quantity & Value Questionnaire, Certain Silicon Photovoltaic
    Products from Taiwan, A-583-853, Investigation (Jan. 29, 2014),
    reproduced in [Pub.] App. to Br. of Pl. [SunEdison] in Supp. of
    Pl.’s Mot. for J. Upon the Agency R., ECF No. 37-1 at Tab 22,
    at Attach. I (“Format for Reporting Quantity & Value of
    Sales”)); see 
    id. at 29-49
    (presenting this challenge);
    see also 
    id. at 27
    (“Commerce’s respondent selection was faulty
    because Taiwan respondents reported indirect U.S. sales of cells
    through China as ‘subject merchandise’ in accordance with
    Commerce’s instructions, yet Commerce in the end removed those
    transactions as ‘non-subject’ merchandise under its final scope
    determination[, and t]his eliminated many of their reported
    sales.”) (footnote omitted) & 49-54 (expanding this argument).
    98   See SunEdison’s Br., ECF Nos. 32 & 33, at 34-36.
    99Solar II Taiwan I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 23 (“Neither Taiwanese
    cells used to assemble solar modules in the PRC nor those solar
    modules are covered by the scope of this investigation. Rather,
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Ct. No. 15-00066                                    Page 38
    review of Commerce’s treatment of sales of Taiwanese cells to
    third-country panel assemblers that were reported as destined
    for export to the United States until the issues remanded here
    are resolved, and the scope of these proceedings is finalized.
    CONCLUSION
    For all of the foregoing reasons, the Solar II Taiwan
    final scope determination is remanded to Commerce for
    reconsideration in accordance with this opinion.    Commerce shall
    have until August 15, 2016, to complete and file its remand
    results.   Plaintiffs shall have until September , 2016, to
    file comments, and the agency and Defendant-Intervenor shall
    then have until September , 2016, to respond.
    It is SO ORDERED.
    _____/s/ Donald C. Pogue_____
    Donald C. Pogue, Senior Judge
    Dated: June 14, 2016
    New York, NY
    solar modules assembled in the PRC using Taiwanese cells are
    within the scope of, and therefore subject to, the
    [Solar II PRC] AD and CVD investigations as Chinese modules
    . . . .”); Solar II PRC AD I&D Mem. cmt. 1 at 28 (“[S]olar cells
    assembled in China using solar cells manufactured in Taiwan are
    subject to [the Solar II PRC exception for panels assembled in
    China from non-Chinese inputs] and not [Solar II Taiwan].”)
    (citation omitted); 
    see supra
    Discussion Sections IV & VI;
    Solar II PRC Slip Op., Slip Op. 16-56, Consol. Ct. No. 15-00067,
    ECF No. 98, at Discussion Section IV.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Consol. 15-00066

Citation Numbers: 2016 CIT 59, 179 F. Supp. 3d 1309, 38 I.T.R.D. (BNA) 1360, 2016 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 56, 2016 WL 3264167

Judges: Pogue

Filed Date: 6/14/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

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