OPINION
Restani,
Chief Judge:
This antidumping case is once again before the court following a second remand to the United States Department of Commerce, International Trade Administration (“Commerce,” “the Department,” or “ITA”) to more fully consider its determination with respect to Defendant-intervenor Polyplex Corporation Limited (“Polyplex”). Polyplex is an Indian producer of polyethylene terephthalate film, sheet, and strip (“PET film”), which the Department found in its final antidumping duty (“AD”) determination to be sold, or likely to be sold, in the United States at less than fair value (“LTFV”).
Dupont Teijin Films USA, LP v. United States,
273 F. Supp. 2d 1347, 1348 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2003)
(“Dupont Teijin F); see Dupont Teijin Films USA, LP v. United States,
No. 02-00463, Slip Op. 03-157 (Ct. Int’l Trade Dec. 4, 2003)
(“Dupont Teijin IF)
(denying Plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunction after the Department determined to include Polyplex in the AD order upon first remand). The sole issue is whether, in issuing an amended AD determination simultaneously with the CVD order on PET film from India, the Department was required to recalculate Polyplex’s dumping margin to account for the countervailing duties that were thus
“imposed” under Commerce’s new interpretation of the applicable statute, 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(l)(C), and thus, to exclude Polyplex from the AD order.
See Dupont Teijin Films USA, LP v. United States,
297 F. Supp. 2d 1367, 1374 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2003)
(“Dupont Teijin IIF).
Absent such an amendment, Polyplex’s dumping margin of 10.34 percent would mandate its inclusion in the antidumping duty order.
See Dupont Teijin I,
273 F. Supp. 2d at 1353. In its
Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand
(Dep’t Commerce Mar. 3, 2004) [hereinafter
Second Remand
Determination], the Department more fully explained its new policy in determining respondents’ U.S. prices in simultaneous AD and CVD investigations, but concluded that it was not authorized to amend its original determination in order to recalculate Polyplex’s dumping margin. On appeal, Polyplex claims that such an amendment was required, or at least permitted, under the statute, and that the Department failed to comply with the court’s instructions upon second remand. For the reasons that follow, the
Second Remand Determination
is sustained.
Jurisdiction & Standard of Review
The court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1581(c) (2000). The court will uphold Commerce’s
Second Remand Determination
if it is supported “by substantial evidence on the record” and is otherwise “in accordance with law.” 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(l)(B)(I) (2000).
Background
In its final AD determination, the Department determined that Polyplex dumped PET film in the U.S. market at a margin of 10.34 percent, but excluded Polyplex from the AD order on the ground that, after adjusting Polyplex’s cash deposit rate to account for the countervailable export subsidies found in a concurrent CVD investigation, “there exists no dumping upon which an affirmative determination could be based.”
Polyethylene Terephthalate Film, Sheet, and Strip from India,
67 Fed. Reg. 34,899, 34,901 (Dep’t Commerce May 16, 2002) [hereinafer
Final
Determination]. In
Dupont Teijin I,
the court held that this decision was not in accordance with law and remanded it to Commerce with instructions to “calculate Polyplex’s dumping margin after making the adjustments to export price required by 19 U.S.C. § 1677a
and Commerce’s reasonable interpretations thereof.” 273 F. Supp. at 1352. The court went on to instruct that, “[i]f Commerce continues to calculate a dumping margin of 10.34 percent for Polyplex, Polyplex must be subject to the anti-
dumping duty order, whether or not it is given a cash deposit rate of zero because of
expected
offsetting countervailing duties.”
Id.
at 1352-53.
In its
Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand
(Dep’t Commerce Aug. 11, 2003) [hereinafter
Remand Determination],
the Department explained that it “now interprets 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(l)(C) as requiring an increase in the respondent’s export or constructed export price by the amount of countervailing duties imposed pursuant to a countervailing duty order.”
Remand Determ.
at 8. As applied here, Polyplex’s exports were not subject to a CVD order at the time Commerce issued the final antidumping determination.
Id.
Therefore, Commerce determined to include Polyplex in the AD order, even though the Department issued a revised final determination along with the AD order on PET film on the same day that it issued the CVD order on the subject merchandise.
Dupont Teijin III,
297 F. Supp. 2d at 1374.
In
Dupont Teijin III,
the court sustained the Department’s
Remand Determination
in part, finding that its interpretation of § 1677a(c)(l)(C) was reasonable and entitled to deference.
Id.
at 1373. Nevertheless, the court found that the Department had failed to adequately address several concerns raised by Polyplex in challenging the Department’s application of its new interpretation of “imposed” when calculating Polyplex’s dumping margin. The court also found that the Department had failed to fully consider the broader implications of its general application of the new interpretation, which may unfairly skew proceedings in petitioners’ favor.
See id.
at 1374. Thus, the court remanded the AD determination on PET
film from India to Commerce for a second time with instructions to “explain how it will fairly and consistently apply its interpretation of ‘imposed’ when a final determination or an amended final determination issues on the same day as a countervailing duty order on the subject merchandise.”
Id.
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OPINION
Restani,
Chief Judge:
This antidumping case is once again before the court following a second remand to the United States Department of Commerce, International Trade Administration (“Commerce,” “the Department,” or “ITA”) to more fully consider its determination with respect to Defendant-intervenor Polyplex Corporation Limited (“Polyplex”). Polyplex is an Indian producer of polyethylene terephthalate film, sheet, and strip (“PET film”), which the Department found in its final antidumping duty (“AD”) determination to be sold, or likely to be sold, in the United States at less than fair value (“LTFV”).
Dupont Teijin Films USA, LP v. United States,
273 F. Supp. 2d 1347, 1348 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2003)
(“Dupont Teijin F); see Dupont Teijin Films USA, LP v. United States,
No. 02-00463, Slip Op. 03-157 (Ct. Int’l Trade Dec. 4, 2003)
(“Dupont Teijin IF)
(denying Plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunction after the Department determined to include Polyplex in the AD order upon first remand). The sole issue is whether, in issuing an amended AD determination simultaneously with the CVD order on PET film from India, the Department was required to recalculate Polyplex’s dumping margin to account for the countervailing duties that were thus
“imposed” under Commerce’s new interpretation of the applicable statute, 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(l)(C), and thus, to exclude Polyplex from the AD order.
See Dupont Teijin Films USA, LP v. United States,
297 F. Supp. 2d 1367, 1374 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2003)
(“Dupont Teijin IIF).
Absent such an amendment, Polyplex’s dumping margin of 10.34 percent would mandate its inclusion in the antidumping duty order.
See Dupont Teijin I,
273 F. Supp. 2d at 1353. In its
Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand
(Dep’t Commerce Mar. 3, 2004) [hereinafter
Second Remand
Determination], the Department more fully explained its new policy in determining respondents’ U.S. prices in simultaneous AD and CVD investigations, but concluded that it was not authorized to amend its original determination in order to recalculate Polyplex’s dumping margin. On appeal, Polyplex claims that such an amendment was required, or at least permitted, under the statute, and that the Department failed to comply with the court’s instructions upon second remand. For the reasons that follow, the
Second Remand Determination
is sustained.
Jurisdiction & Standard of Review
The court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1581(c) (2000). The court will uphold Commerce’s
Second Remand Determination
if it is supported “by substantial evidence on the record” and is otherwise “in accordance with law.” 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(l)(B)(I) (2000).
Background
In its final AD determination, the Department determined that Polyplex dumped PET film in the U.S. market at a margin of 10.34 percent, but excluded Polyplex from the AD order on the ground that, after adjusting Polyplex’s cash deposit rate to account for the countervailable export subsidies found in a concurrent CVD investigation, “there exists no dumping upon which an affirmative determination could be based.”
Polyethylene Terephthalate Film, Sheet, and Strip from India,
67 Fed. Reg. 34,899, 34,901 (Dep’t Commerce May 16, 2002) [hereinafer
Final
Determination]. In
Dupont Teijin I,
the court held that this decision was not in accordance with law and remanded it to Commerce with instructions to “calculate Polyplex’s dumping margin after making the adjustments to export price required by 19 U.S.C. § 1677a
and Commerce’s reasonable interpretations thereof.” 273 F. Supp. at 1352. The court went on to instruct that, “[i]f Commerce continues to calculate a dumping margin of 10.34 percent for Polyplex, Polyplex must be subject to the anti-
dumping duty order, whether or not it is given a cash deposit rate of zero because of
expected
offsetting countervailing duties.”
Id.
at 1352-53.
In its
Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand
(Dep’t Commerce Aug. 11, 2003) [hereinafter
Remand Determination],
the Department explained that it “now interprets 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(l)(C) as requiring an increase in the respondent’s export or constructed export price by the amount of countervailing duties imposed pursuant to a countervailing duty order.”
Remand Determ.
at 8. As applied here, Polyplex’s exports were not subject to a CVD order at the time Commerce issued the final antidumping determination.
Id.
Therefore, Commerce determined to include Polyplex in the AD order, even though the Department issued a revised final determination along with the AD order on PET film on the same day that it issued the CVD order on the subject merchandise.
Dupont Teijin III,
297 F. Supp. 2d at 1374.
In
Dupont Teijin III,
the court sustained the Department’s
Remand Determination
in part, finding that its interpretation of § 1677a(c)(l)(C) was reasonable and entitled to deference.
Id.
at 1373. Nevertheless, the court found that the Department had failed to adequately address several concerns raised by Polyplex in challenging the Department’s application of its new interpretation of “imposed” when calculating Polyplex’s dumping margin. The court also found that the Department had failed to fully consider the broader implications of its general application of the new interpretation, which may unfairly skew proceedings in petitioners’ favor.
See id.
at 1374. Thus, the court remanded the AD determination on PET
film from India to Commerce for a second time with instructions to “explain how it will fairly and consistently apply its interpretation of ‘imposed’ when a final determination or an amended final determination issues on the same day as a countervailing duty order on the subject merchandise.”
Id.
The court also instructed the Department to analyze whether certain procedural extensions that would delay the issuance of a CVD order or align it with the issuance of the AD order, devices available only to the Department and the domestic industry that would effectively prevent countervailing duties from being “imposed” prior to issuance of the AD order, would unfairly allow petitioners to dictate the outcome of concurrent antidumping and countervailing duty investigations when, as here, export subsidies are presumed to cause the respondents’ lower-priced sales of subject merchandise in the U.S. market.
Id.
at 1374, 1368 n.l (explaining the economic theory behind § 1677a’s price adjustment provision). The court noted that Commerce should “seek to restore the parties,” to the extent possible, “to the position they would have been had they been able to act on the Department’s new interpretation of ‘imposed,’ and the court’s determination in this matter, prior to the issuance of the
Amended Final Determination.” Id.
at 1374-75.
Commerce issued its
Second Remand Determination
on March 3, 2004. As ordered by the court, the Department first addressed Polyplex’s concern that domestic petitioners would be able to dictate the outcome of concurrent AD/CVD investigations by filing an extension or alignment request in the CVD investigation.
Second Remand Determ,
at 5-6;
see supra
n.5 (explaining statutory extension and
alignment of CVD proceedings). As a preliminary matter, Commerce explained that it is required by statute to align a CVD investigation with a companion AD investigation if the petitioner makes such a request, as happened here.
Second Remand Determ,
at 5. The Department then noted that “even if the alignment provision were discretionary, the record in this proceeding does not support the conclusion that the petitioners manipulated or controlled the results of the AD determination by requesting alignment of the CVD determination,” because the alignment request was filed before either the CVD or the AD preliminary determination issued.
Id.
Further, Commerce pointed out that “Polyplex’s manipulation concerns spring from Commerce’s interpretation of the term ‘imposed’ in 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(l)(C), an interpretation that was not known to the petitioners at the time theyfiled their request for alignment.”
Id.
As a result, Commerce found the petitioners here did not manipulate Polyplex’s AD margin by requesting alignment of the investigations.
Id.
at 5-6. Regarding the extension of proceedings on the ground of extraordinary complication, the Department noted that this is discretionary, so that it can assess such requests on a case-by-case basis.
Id.
at 13.
Commerce next addressed the issue of “how it will fairly and consistently apply its interpretation of ‘imposed’ when a final determination or an amended final determination issues on the same day as a countervailing duty order on the subject merchandise.”
Dupont Teijin III,
297 F. Supp. 2d at 1374. Commerce explained that its final determinations are based solely on the information on the record at the time of the determination.
Second Remand Determ,
at 6. While Commerce stated that it “likely” will adjust U.S. prices if an AD determination issues on the same day as a CVD order, the Department stressed that “these are not the facts in this proceeding.”
Id.
The CVD order here was published after the final AD determination, and “any information received by Commerce after the particular determination at issue is not part of the reviewable record.”
Id.
(quoting
Alloy Piping Product, Inc. v. United States,
201 F. Supp. 2d 1267, 1280 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2002)). As a result, Commerce explained that it should not have, and in fact could not have, considered the post-
Final Determination
CVD order in calculating Polyplex’s U.S. price.
See id.
Although Commerce admitted that there are limited circumstances under which it may amend final AD determinations, such amendments are limited to correcting “unintentional errors that occurred while operating upon record information before it when it issued the determinations.”
Id.
Thus, Commerce maintained that, de
spite its amendment of the
Final Determination
here to correct a ministerial error in the calculation of another respondent’s dumping margin, it was not authorized to revise its margin calculation for Polyplex because there were no “errors” to correct.
Id.
at 6-7. The Department noted that this court has held that the ministerial error provisions do “not give the agency authority to upset final decisions where no errors have occurred.”
Id.
at 6 (quoting
Badger-Powhatan,
10 CIT at 245, 633 F. Supp. at 1369). As a result, “if an amended final AD determination is issued on the same day as a CVD order on the same merchandise, Commerce cannot rely upon the ministerial error provision to reflect the duties imposed by a CVD order in its amended final AD determination.”
Id.
at 7. Thus, Commerce concluded that, because countervailing duties had not been imposed at the time of the
Final Determination,
it did not err in failing to increase Polyplex’s U.S. prices in the AD determination.
Id.
The Department next addressed the court’s instructions to restore the parties to the position they would have been had they been aware of the new interpretation of “imposed” before the issuance of the
Amended Final Determination.
Commerce reiterated that it was required to align the CVD investigation with the AD duty investigation under § 1671d(a)(l), and that it was not permitted to amend its final AD determination to adjust Polyplex’s export prices under the ministerial error provision.
Id.
at 9. “Thus, it is Commerce’s position, given the specific restrictions imposed by the statute, that the parties would be in the same position had they been able to act on Commerce’s new interpretation of ‘imposed,’ and the court’s determination in this matter.”
Id.
After addressing the parties’ comments to the draft second remand results, Commerce concluded that, since countervailing duties are not “imposed” until a CVD order has been
issued, Polyplex must be included in the AD order, “given the statutory restraints and the Court’s initial ruling on this matter.”
Id.
at 19. This action followed.
Discussion
As noted above, in
Dupont Teijin III,
the court upheld Commerce’s interpretation of “imposed” in the context of an AD investigation to mean the issuance of a countervailing duty order.
See
19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(l)(C) (requiring Commerce to adjust respondent’s U.S. price by “the amount of any countervailing duty imposed on the subject merchandise under part I of this subtitle to offset an export subsidy”). On appeal, Polyplex claims that the Department failed to comply with the court’s instructions regarding the application of the new interpretation. Polyplex asks the court to reverse and remand this action to the Department once again with instructions to make an upwards adjustment to Polyplex’s U.S. price under 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(l)(C), because countervailing duties were imposed on Polyplex’s imports on the same date that the Department issued its
Amended Final Determination
and AD order. According to Polyplex, Commerce was required to amend its
Final Determination
and recalculate Polyplex’s dumping margin since the AD and CVD orders issued on the same day. Each of these issues are addressed below.
A. Whether the Department Has Failed to Fully Address Polyplex’s Concerns that Petitioners Can Manipulate the Results of an AD Investigation By Filing Procedural Extension Requests in the CVD Investigation
Polyplex claims that the Department has failed to adequately address its manipulation concerns. Polyplex asserts that “the Department’s interpretation of the statute gives the petitioners an unfair advantage ... to control the outcome of concurrent CVD/AD investigations.” Mem. of Law of Def.-Intervenor Polyplex Corp. Ltd. Opp. Dep’t Commerce’s Second Redeterm, on Remand (“Polyplex Br.”) at 9. Polyplex suggests that, to comply with the court’s instructions in
Dupont Teijin III,
the Department needed to explain why it reads the statute in a manner “that converts a[ ] [petitioner’s] extension request into a make-or-break margin adjustment” when “there is a viable reasonable alternative reading of the same statute” that requires — or, at a minimum, authorizes — Commerce to make an adjustment to a respondent’s U.S. price where, as here, the AD final determination is amended and the AD order issues on or after the date the CVD order is issued.
Id.
at 5-6.
Responding to the Department’s explanation in its
Second Remand Determination
that alignment of concurrent CVD and AD investigations is mandatory if petitioners request it under 19 U.S.C. § 1671d(a)(l), Polyplex states that “the fact that an extension must be granted does not mean that the Department is prohibited from
making a § 1677a(c)(l)(C) adjustment in co-extended cases.”
Id.
at 6. Because the Department has interpreted § 1677a(c)(l)(C) to require a CVD order to be in place prior to the issuance of the AD final determination, Polyplex maintains that “the adjustment to U.S. price for export subsidies is made a nullity in most, if not all, companion AD/CVD investigations. This could not be the intent of Congress in drafting the statute.”
Id.
at 8.
The court finds that Commerce did comply with the court’s remand order to analyze the risks of petitioner manipulation in simultaneous AD and CVD investigations. As the Department explained in the
Second Remand Determination,
its extension of proceedings based on extraordinary complication is discretionary, so that it can analyze the risks of manipulation in such instances on a case-by-case basis. Alignment of the issuance of the orders in simultaneously-filed AD and CVD investigations, however, is required by 19 U.S.C. § 1671d(a)(l) upon a petitioner’s request. Thus, alignment is a statutory right explicitly granted to the domestic industry by Congress. As Commerce pointed out in its determination upon remand, there are legitimate reasons for petitioners to request the alignment of AD and CVD proceedings, such as a desire to simultaneously argue both cases before the ITC.
Nevertheless, the court recognizes that there may be some risk of manipulation given Commerce’s interpretation of “imposed” because, in aligned cases, countervailing duties would never be “imposed” prior to the issuance of a final AD determination. As a result, a respondent like Polyplex would be included in an AD order despite the fact that countervailed subsidies, if accounted for in calculating that respondent’s U.S. price, would obliterate the dumping. As the Department explained, however, the risk of manipulation by petitioners is slight given the uncertainty of an investigation’s final results, coupled with the
extremely
unusual circumstance presented here, where a foreign producer’s countervailed subsidies fully accounted for its less-than-fair-value sales, thereby reducing any AD cash deposits on its imported goods to zero. Thus, this issue will not arise in the overwhelming majority of simultaneous AD/CVD investigations, even if they are aligned. It is, therefore, unlikely that Congress had any such situation in mind in enacting the AD laws, leaving Com
merce free to devise a solution to this problem. Further, “even if the petitioners request an alignment, Commerce will continue to follow its established practice of reducing AD cash deposits for countervailing duties that it
determined
to impose to offset export subsidies.”
Second Remand Determ,
at 12. The court found in
Dupont Teijin III
that this practice, which prevents the actual assessment of double duties when subsidized and LTFV sales are related, keeps the U.S. in compliance with its WTO obligations, a goal presumably desired by Congress.
297 F. Supp. 2d at 1370 n.5. Thus, the court finds that the Department’s determination complied with the court’s instructions to address the potential for unfair petitioner manipulation in companion AD/CVD investigations. As shown, the Department has provided a reasonable explanation for why the risk of manipulation should not impact its interpretation of 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(l)(C) in concurrent investigations.
B. Whether the
Second Remand Determination
Explained How the Department Will Fairly and Consistently Apply Its Interpretation of “Imposed” When a Final or Amended Final AD Determination Issues on the Same Day as a CVD Order on the Same Merchandise
As explained
supra,
Commerce’s determination upon second remand explained that it likely will adjust respondents’ U.S. prices when it simultaneously issues a final AD determination and a CVD order on the same merchandise. The Department explained, however, that it is only permitted to amend its final determinations to correct for ministerial errors and, accordingly, it is not appropriate to amend a final AD determination to account for a subsequently-issued CVD order in calculating dumping margins. Thus, the Department maintained that it correctly included Polyplex in the AD order on PET film from India. In its appeal, Polyplex argues that Commerce is
required
to amend its final AD determination to adjust Polyplex’s U.S. price by the countervailing duties that were subsequently imposed in the CVD order.
The court disagrees.
Commerce’s inclusion of Polyplex in the AD order is consistent with the statute and the court’s rulings in this matter. The court held in
Dupont Teijin I
that Commerce may not exclude Polyplex from the AD order on PET film from India on the basis of a zero cash deposit rate, when its dumping margin is greater than
de minimis.
273 F. Supp. 2d at 1352. It is undisputed that, if Polyplex’s export price is not adjusted for countervailable export subsidies, Polyplex’s dumping margin is 10.34 percent.
Id.
at 1350. It is also undisputed that no adjustment can be made to a respondent’s export price unless countervailing duties have been “imposed” under 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(l)(C), and that, under Commerce’s court-approved interpretation of the statute, countervailing duties are not “imposed” in an AD investigation until a countervailing duty order is issued.
Dupont Teijin III,
297 F. Supp. 2d at 1373. Finally, it is undisputed that no CVD order had issued against Polyplex at the time that Commerce calculated Polyplex’s dumping margin at 10.34 percent and published notice of its final determination in the AD investigation.
Id.
at 1374. Thus, it is clear that the Department’s calculation of Polyplex’s dumping margin was correct as reported in the final AD determination. The only question, then, is whether the Department was required to amend its
Final Determination
to account for the countervailing duties that were “imposed” on Polyplex’s exports on the same day that the antidumping duty order issued.
See id.
(explaining that Commerce simultaneously amended the
Final Determination
to correct a ministerial error in another respondent’s dumping margin, issued the antidumping duty order, and issued the countervailing duty order on PET film from India).
The court finds that such an amendment was not required here. It is a basic rule of administrative law that Commerce must base its determinations on information in the administrative record at the time the determination is made.
See,
e.g.,
Neuweg Fertigung v. United States,
16 CIT 724, 726-27, 797 F. Supp. 1020, 1022 (1992) (“Any information received by [the ITA] after the particular determi
nation at issue is not part of the reviewable administrative record.”). Once a final determination is made, the statute only expressly permits the Department to amend it to correct “ministerial errors” in the original final determination. 19 U.S.C. § 1671d(e). Such errors include “errors in addition, subtraction, or other arithmetic function, clerical errors resulting from inaccurate copying, duplication, or the like, and any other type of unintentional error which the [Department] considers ministerial.”
Id.
It is clear from the language of this provision that it is meant to allow the Department to correct minor, non-substantive errors in its final determinations. It does not authorize the Department to amend a final determination in order to consider a subsequent event, such as the issuance of a CVD order in a parallel proceeding, that would alter the original margin calculation.
These principles were explored in detail in
Badger-Powhatan.
In that case, the court considered whether the Department was required to amend its final AD determination when the products later found by the ITC to be causing material injury were significantly fewer in number than those included in the ITA’s dumping margin calculation and AD order. 10 CIT at 243, 633 F. Supp. at 1367. In addressing the issue of whether Commerce was required to amend its final determination to recalculate the dumping margin, the court stated that “[i]t is now well established that amendment, before or after remand, is appropriate when the agency has utilized a legally improper method in making a determination or when the original determination contains an error of inadvertence or mistake.”
Id.
at 244, 633 F. Supp. at 1368;
see Borlem,
13 CIT at 541, 546, 718 F. Supp. at 46, 49 (holding that, despite time limits and finality concerns, ITC has authority to reconsider a final material injury determination upon remand where, due to an amended LTFV determination, “the ITC made its finding of injury based upon material and significant inaccurate facts”);
see also SKF USA Inc. v. United States,
254 F.3d 1022, 1029 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (“Remand to an agency is generally appropriate to correct simple errors, such as clerical errors, transcription errors, or erroneous calculations.”).
Badger-Powhatan
and
Borlem
are readily distinguishable from the present case. In
Badger-Powhatan,
Commerce knew that the ITC had changed the scope of the final determination before it issued its AD order; it just failed to act upon that information. In
Borlem,
ITC acted upon erroneous information. Here, the AD order issued prior to the CVD order, so that no countervailing duties had been “imposed” on Polyplex’s merchandise as of the final determination, and ITA was aware of all relevant facts. As a result, the Department’s original determination correctly disregarded the countervail-
able export subsidies when calculating Polyplex’s U.S. price. Thus, Commerce did not use a “legally improper method” in arriving at its determination, which would warrant an amendment. Similarly, as Commerce discusses in the
Second Remand Determination,
there was no other “error” in calculating Polyplex’s dumping margin that would be remedied by looking to information already in the administrative record. As a result, Commerce determined that it was not permitted to amend its final AD determination under § 1671d(e). Polyplex seeks to impose upon Commerce the duty to amend its final determinations to take into account a dispositive event — the issuance of the CVD order — which occurred outside the administrative record in the AD proceedings. This is impermissible as a purely administrative act under controlling case law. Thus, the Department’s
Second Remand Determination
reasonably concluded that it was not permitted to amend the final determination here, and that Polyplex must be included in the AD order.
Conclusion
For all of the foregoing reasons, the
Second Remand Determination
is sustained in its entirety. Commerce was not permitted to amend its final determination to account for a subsequently-imposed countervailing duty order on the subject merchandise. As a result, the Department properly determined to include Polyplex in the AD order on PET film from India. While addressing all of the court’s concerns upon remand, Commerce correctly concluded that it was unable to exclude Polyplex from the order. Accordingly, the determination of the Department of Commerce upon second remand is sustained.