OPINION
RIDGWAY, Judge.
In these consolidated actions, both the domestic parties (hereinafter collectively “AL Tech”)
and two Italian producers/exporters of stainless steel wire rod have challenged various aspects of a Final Determination rendered by the U.S. Department of Commerce (“Commerce”), which found that the Government of Italy, the Province of Bolzano, and the European Union (“EU”) provided countervailable subsidies to the two Italian producers— Acciaierie Valbruna S.r.l. (“Valbruna”) and Acciaierie di Bolzano S.p.A. (“Bolzano”) (hereinafter collectively “Valbruna/Bolza-no”),
and which resulted in the imposition of a countervailing duty order.
See Certain Stainless Steel Wire Rod from Italy,
63 Fed.Reg. 40,474 (Dep’t Commerce July 29, 1998)
(“Final Determination”), Stainless Steel Wire Rod from Italy,
63 Fed. Reg. 49,334 (Dep’t Commerce Sept. 15, 1998) (countervailing duty order).
As explained in
AL Tech I,
Commerce’s original investigation identified 10 types of government action considered to confer “subsidies,” which collectively resulted in a calculated subsidy rate of 1.28%—a rate only marginally above the statutory
de minimis
one percent threshold.
Valbru-na/Bolzano here challenged Commerce’s determinations as to six of the 10 alleged subsidies, emphasizing that its success in
even a single one of its six challenges
could potentially shave off enough to drop the subsidy rate below the
de minimis
threshold, rendering the countervailing duty order, in essence, void
ab
initio.
See AL Tech Specialty Steel Corp. v. United States,
28 CIT -, -, 2004 WL 2011471 at *1
(“ALTechl”).
Two of Valbruna/Bolzano’s six challenges disputed aspects of Commerce’s analysis of the adequacy of the remuneration paid as rent for the Bolzano Industrial Site under Valbruna’s Lease Agreement with the Province of Bolzano. The other four challenges disputed Commerce’s determination that countervailable subsidies were conferred by assistance received under three government programs — Law 25/81, Law 193/84, and the European Social Fund.
AL Tech I
sustained Commerce’s determination that the Province of Bolzano’s purchase of the Bolzano Industrial Site did not confer a subsidy, as well as Commerce’s decision to use a nationwide (rather than a region-specific) benchmark to measure the adequacy of the rent paid under Valbruna’s Lease Agreement with the Province of Bolzano. Commerce’s determination that its “tying” practice was inapplicable to plant closure assistance provided under Law 193/84 was similarly upheld.
However, a number of other issues were remanded to Commerce for the agency’s further consideration. Now pending before the Court are Commerce’s Final Results of Redetermination on Remand (“Remand Results”), together with the comments of all parties.
See
Valbru-na’s Comments on Department of Commerce Final Results of Redetermination on Remand Pursuant to Slip Op. 04-114 (“Valbruna Comments”); Comments of AL Tech Specialty Steel Corp. Et Al. on the Final Results of Redetermination on Remand (“AL Tech Comments”); Defendant’s Response to Plaintiffs’ Comments Concerning the Remand Results (“Gov’t Response”).
As a result of its reconsideration of certain issues (summarized below), Commerce recalculated the
ad valorem
net subsidy rate for Valbruna/Bolzano. The revised net subsidy rate is 0.65%, which is
de minimis. See
Remand Results at 10. Commerce therefore plans to revoke the countervailing duty order with respect to Valbruna/Bolzano effective as of the date of publication of that
order
— ie., September 15, 1998.
See
Remand Results at 9.
As discussed more fully below, the Remand Results filed by Commerce comply with
AL Tech I.
The Remand Results are therefore sustained.
I.
Analysis
Seven discrete issues were remanded to Commerce in
AL Tech I.
Commerce’s re-determination on just two of those seven issues — specifically, the two-year rent abatement and aid paid under Law 25/81— sufficed to lower the original net subsidy rate (1.28%) to a revised rate of 0.65%.
A.
The Two-Year Rent Abatement and Aid Under Law 25/81
As explained in
AL Tech I,
Commerce’s original Final Determination in this matter found that the two-year rent abatement which the Province granted to Valbruna under their Lease Agreement
constituted a subsidy, resulting in a subsidy rate of 0.38%. Valbruna/Bolzano disputed the agency’s determination, maintaining that the rent abatement was part of a “bargained-for exchange” in which Valbru-na agreed to assume the Province’s responsibility for certain specific, urgent, initial extraordinary maintenance and environmental remediation projects related to the buildings that it leased from the Province.
See generally AL Tech I,
28 CIT at -, 2004 WL 2011471 at *15-18.
AL Tech I
also considered Valbruna/Bol-zano’s protest of Commerce’s decision to treat as a eountervailable subsidy (with a calculated subsidy rate of 0.28%) certain restructuring assistance and long-term, low interest loans made to Bolzano under Provincial Law 25/81.
Although Commerce itself conceded that Falck had repaid the aid at issue (as ordered by the European Commission), Commerce’s original countervailing duty analysis ignored that repayment, reasoning that — because Falck had appealed the European Commission’s order — the repayment was not legally final.
See generally AL Tech I,
28 CIT at -, 2004 WL 2011471 at *21-23.
On remand, Commerce reevaluated the record and reversed its determination on the two-year rent abatement. Specifically, Commerce concluded “that the balance of the record evidence indicates that the Province of Bolzano was legally obligated to undertake ... [certain] initial, extraordinary maintenance and environmental remediation projects,” which Valbrunain turn — agreed to assume under its Lease Agreement with the Province as
quid pro quo
for a two-year rent abatement.
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OPINION
RIDGWAY, Judge.
In these consolidated actions, both the domestic parties (hereinafter collectively “AL Tech”)
and two Italian producers/exporters of stainless steel wire rod have challenged various aspects of a Final Determination rendered by the U.S. Department of Commerce (“Commerce”), which found that the Government of Italy, the Province of Bolzano, and the European Union (“EU”) provided countervailable subsidies to the two Italian producers— Acciaierie Valbruna S.r.l. (“Valbruna”) and Acciaierie di Bolzano S.p.A. (“Bolzano”) (hereinafter collectively “Valbruna/Bolza-no”),
and which resulted in the imposition of a countervailing duty order.
See Certain Stainless Steel Wire Rod from Italy,
63 Fed.Reg. 40,474 (Dep’t Commerce July 29, 1998)
(“Final Determination”), Stainless Steel Wire Rod from Italy,
63 Fed. Reg. 49,334 (Dep’t Commerce Sept. 15, 1998) (countervailing duty order).
As explained in
AL Tech I,
Commerce’s original investigation identified 10 types of government action considered to confer “subsidies,” which collectively resulted in a calculated subsidy rate of 1.28%—a rate only marginally above the statutory
de minimis
one percent threshold.
Valbru-na/Bolzano here challenged Commerce’s determinations as to six of the 10 alleged subsidies, emphasizing that its success in
even a single one of its six challenges
could potentially shave off enough to drop the subsidy rate below the
de minimis
threshold, rendering the countervailing duty order, in essence, void
ab
initio.
See AL Tech Specialty Steel Corp. v. United States,
28 CIT -, -, 2004 WL 2011471 at *1
(“ALTechl”).
Two of Valbruna/Bolzano’s six challenges disputed aspects of Commerce’s analysis of the adequacy of the remuneration paid as rent for the Bolzano Industrial Site under Valbruna’s Lease Agreement with the Province of Bolzano. The other four challenges disputed Commerce’s determination that countervailable subsidies were conferred by assistance received under three government programs — Law 25/81, Law 193/84, and the European Social Fund.
AL Tech I
sustained Commerce’s determination that the Province of Bolzano’s purchase of the Bolzano Industrial Site did not confer a subsidy, as well as Commerce’s decision to use a nationwide (rather than a region-specific) benchmark to measure the adequacy of the rent paid under Valbruna’s Lease Agreement with the Province of Bolzano. Commerce’s determination that its “tying” practice was inapplicable to plant closure assistance provided under Law 193/84 was similarly upheld.
However, a number of other issues were remanded to Commerce for the agency’s further consideration. Now pending before the Court are Commerce’s Final Results of Redetermination on Remand (“Remand Results”), together with the comments of all parties.
See
Valbru-na’s Comments on Department of Commerce Final Results of Redetermination on Remand Pursuant to Slip Op. 04-114 (“Valbruna Comments”); Comments of AL Tech Specialty Steel Corp. Et Al. on the Final Results of Redetermination on Remand (“AL Tech Comments”); Defendant’s Response to Plaintiffs’ Comments Concerning the Remand Results (“Gov’t Response”).
As a result of its reconsideration of certain issues (summarized below), Commerce recalculated the
ad valorem
net subsidy rate for Valbruna/Bolzano. The revised net subsidy rate is 0.65%, which is
de minimis. See
Remand Results at 10. Commerce therefore plans to revoke the countervailing duty order with respect to Valbruna/Bolzano effective as of the date of publication of that
order
— ie., September 15, 1998.
See
Remand Results at 9.
As discussed more fully below, the Remand Results filed by Commerce comply with
AL Tech I.
The Remand Results are therefore sustained.
I.
Analysis
Seven discrete issues were remanded to Commerce in
AL Tech I.
Commerce’s re-determination on just two of those seven issues — specifically, the two-year rent abatement and aid paid under Law 25/81— sufficed to lower the original net subsidy rate (1.28%) to a revised rate of 0.65%.
A.
The Two-Year Rent Abatement and Aid Under Law 25/81
As explained in
AL Tech I,
Commerce’s original Final Determination in this matter found that the two-year rent abatement which the Province granted to Valbruna under their Lease Agreement
constituted a subsidy, resulting in a subsidy rate of 0.38%. Valbruna/Bolzano disputed the agency’s determination, maintaining that the rent abatement was part of a “bargained-for exchange” in which Valbru-na agreed to assume the Province’s responsibility for certain specific, urgent, initial extraordinary maintenance and environmental remediation projects related to the buildings that it leased from the Province.
See generally AL Tech I,
28 CIT at -, 2004 WL 2011471 at *15-18.
AL Tech I
also considered Valbruna/Bol-zano’s protest of Commerce’s decision to treat as a eountervailable subsidy (with a calculated subsidy rate of 0.28%) certain restructuring assistance and long-term, low interest loans made to Bolzano under Provincial Law 25/81.
Although Commerce itself conceded that Falck had repaid the aid at issue (as ordered by the European Commission), Commerce’s original countervailing duty analysis ignored that repayment, reasoning that — because Falck had appealed the European Commission’s order — the repayment was not legally final.
See generally AL Tech I,
28 CIT at -, 2004 WL 2011471 at *21-23.
On remand, Commerce reevaluated the record and reversed its determination on the two-year rent abatement. Specifically, Commerce concluded “that the balance of the record evidence indicates that the Province of Bolzano was legally obligated to undertake ... [certain] initial, extraordinary maintenance and environmental remediation projects,” which Valbrunain turn — agreed to assume under its Lease Agreement with the Province as
quid pro quo
for a two-year rent abatement. Accordingly, Commerce determined on remand that “the two-year lease abatement was a bargained-for exchange of obligation[s] for consideration and, therefore, does not constitute a eountervailable subsidy.” As a result of its redetermination, Commerce revised the subsidy rate associated with the rent abatement from 0.38% to 0%. As the Remand Results observe, the effect of that change alone suffices to reduce the total net subsidy rate to 0.90% — -which is, as Commerce noted, “a rate that is below the statutory
de minim-is
one percent threshold.”
See
Remand Results at 2-3.
In the course of the remand, Commerce also reevaluated its treatment of the Law 25/81 aid paid to Falck, revising its position on that issue as well. With all of Falck’s avenues of appeal exhausted (and the repayment thus final), Commerce made adjustments to its calculations, to exclude all post-1985 grants.
The effect
was to drop the subsidy rate associated
with the Law 25/81 aid from 0.28% to 0.08%.
See
Remand Results at 5-6.
B.
The Five Remaining Issues
Because its revised determination on the treatment of Valbruna’s two-year rent abatement (as well as its revised determination on the Law 25/81 aid) rendered the overall total subsidy rate
de minimis,
Commerce found it unnecessary to reach the merits of the five remaining issues that
AL Tech I
had remanded to the agency.
As to each of those five issues, Commerce concluded that the issue was moot, since — no matter how the particular issue was resolved — the overall total net subsidy rate would nevertheless remain
de minim-is. See generally
Remand Results at 9 (“even if [Commerce] decided each of the remaining five issues against Valbruna, the net subsidy rate would be
de minimis
and, therefore, [Commerce] need not address the issues”).
See also
Remand Results at 3-4 (finding no need to reconsider whether the national benchmark rate of return of 5.7% used by the agency to evaluate the adequacy of the remuneration paid as rent by Valbruna to the Province assumed that responsibility for extraordinary maintenance was borne by lessor, or by lessee);
id.
at 4-5 (finding no need to reconsider whether depreciation of buildings should have been factored into the agency’s analysis of the adequacy of the remuneration paid by Valbruna under the Lease Agreement);
id.
at 6 (finding no need to reconsider the methodology for application of the “small grants” test used in analyzing certain grants under Law 193/84);
id.
at 7 (finding no need to reconsider whether EU/European Social Fund (“ESF”) Objective 4 funding was regionally specific to Italy);
id.
at 8 (finding no need to reconsider whether Italian ESF Objective 4 funding was regionally specific to the Province of Bolzano).
C.
The Parties’ Comments on the Remand Results
Valbruna/Bolzano endorses Commerce’s revised determinations on both the rent abatement issue and the Law 25/81 issue, and concurs that — in light of those determinations and the resulting revised net subsidy rate, which is below the
de minim-is
threshold — there is no need for the agency to reconsider the five other issues remanded in
AL Tech
7.
Valbruna/Bolza-
no therefore urges that the Remand Results be sustained.
See
Valbruna Comments at 2. The Government’s comments are to the same general effect.
See
Gov’t Response at 4 (asserting that “the Court should sustain the Remand Results”).
AL Tech is a different story. In its comments filed with the Court, AL Tech states that it “respectfully disagrees” with the Remand Results, but does not substantively brief its position.
See
AL Tech Comments at 2. Moreover, as the Government pointedly observes, AL Tech failed to participate at all in the remand proceedings:
No party objected to Commerce’s determinations during the administrative proceedings on remand although they were provided with an opportunity to comment.
Indeed, AL Tech declined to participate. See
Index to Administrative Record (reflecting absence of
any
communications from AL Tech).
Gov’t Response at 2 (emphasis added). Thus, as the Government emphasizes, AL Tech voiced its disagreement with the Remand Results
for the first time
in its comments filed with the Court.
See
Gov’t Response at 2 (“Valbruna supports the Remand Results. AL Tech, for the first time, in its comments to the Court, does not.”).
Asserting that the opinion in
AL Tech I
“drives the results of the Remand Determination,” AL Tech apparently seeks to excuse its failure to participate in the remand proceedings by implying that participation would have been futile. Taking particular exception to Commerce’s revised determination on the two-year rent abatement, and asserting broadly that “[t]he Remand Determination on [that] issue appears to be consistent with the Court’s opinion,” AL Tech states that it “will not repeat the arguments previously made to [the] Court,” and will instead “reserve all future argument for appeal, if any, to the Court of Appeals.” AL Tech Comments at 2.
Contrary to AL Tech’s implications, however,
AL Tech I
did not mandate that Commerce reverse its original determination that the Province had no legal obligation to undertake the initial, extraordinary maintenance and environmental
remediation projects at issue.
Rather, that opinion merely highlighted various discrepancies in the agency’s logic (see,
e.g.,
28 CIT at -, 2004 WL 2011471 at *16-17), and noted the absence of citations to record evidence to substantiate various aspects of the agency’s analysis (28 CIT at -, 2004 WL 2011471 at *16 nn. 38-39). Nor did
AL Tech I
direct Commerce to find that the two-year rent abatement was the
quid pro quo
(much less an appropriate one) for Valbruna’s agreement to take responsibility for those projects. To the contrary, the remand on the two-year rent abatement issue was deliberately framed in the broadest possible terms, giving Commerce an unusually wide berth “to reconsider its determination and to fully articulate the rationale for that determination, taking into consideration the record evidence as well as all parties’ arguments, both at the administrative level and in this forum.”
AL Tech I,
28 CIT at -, 2004 WL 2011471 at *18. Simply stated, nothing in
AL Tech I
ruled out the possibility that Commerce could have reached the same result on the two-year rent abatement that it reached in the original Final Determination, albeit on an expanded record — or even on the same record, with a more clearly articulated and supported rationale.
In sum, there can be no suggestion that
AL Tech I
dictated Commerce’s determination on remand, obviating the domestic industry’s need to participate (at least in some limited fashion) in the remand proceedings. Ultimately, of course, it will be for the Court of Appeals to determine whether AL Tech’s failure to participate in the remand proceedings (and to file any substantive comments on the Remand Results with the Court) effectively waived any of its rights, should AL Tech seek to take an appeal. However, it is black letter law that — to properly preserve an issue for appeal — a party generally must first exhaust its remedies by making its argument before the agency, then brief that argument before the trial court. Arguments that are not properly preserved are waived.
See generally Novosteel SA v. United States,
284 F.3d 1261, 1273-74 (Fed.Cir.2002).
When a party elects to passively sit on the sidelines throughout remand proceedings, it is — “[a]s a matter
of
litigation fairness and procedure” (284 F.3d at 1274)— generally unreasonable to expect the agency (and the other parties) to try to guess how any arguments that the silent party may have previously advanced would apply to the agency’s draft remand results. Under these circumstances, the agency (and the other parties) may well be entitled to assume that the silent party has decided, on reflection, that it concurs in the agency’s draft remand results (or that, for some other reason, the party is abandoning its arguments). A party that chooses to absent itself from proceedings — whether at the administrative level or in a judicial forum — does so at its peril.
II.
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, the Final Results of Redetermination on Remand in this matter are sustained. Judgment will enter accordingly.