SolarWorld Americas, Inc. v. United States
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Opinion
Kelly, Judge:
Before the court is the U.S. Department of Commerce's ("Department" or "Commerce") remand determination in the second administrative review of the antidumping duty ("ADD") order covering crystalline silicon photovoltaic cells, whether
or not assembled into modules, from the People's Republic of China ("China" or "the PRC"), pursuant to the court's order in
SolarWorld Americas, Inc. v. United States
, 41 CIT ----, ----,
For the reasons that follow, the court sustains Commerce's determination to include import data with reported quantities of zero in the surrogate value calculations and remands for further explanation or reconsideration consistent with this opinion Commerce's surrogate value selections for respondent Yingli Green Energy Holding Co., Ltd.'s tempered glass input and respondent Changzhou Trina Solar Energy Co., Ltd.'s scrapped solar cell and module byproduct offset.
BACKGROUND
The court assumes familiarity with the facts of this case as discussed in the previous opinion,
see
SolarWorld Americas, Inc.
, 41 CIT at ----,
id="p1346" href="#p1346" data-label="1346" data-citation-index="1" class="page-label">*1346
Plaintiff, SolarWorld Americas, Inc. ("SolarWorld"), moved for judgment on the agency record, challenging certain aspects of the final determination. See SolarWorld's Mot. J. Agency R., Jan. 26, 2017, ECF No. 44; SolarWorld Americas, Inc.'s Mem. Supp. Rule 56.2 Mot. J. Agency R. Conf. Version, Jan. 26, 2017, ECF No. 44; Summons, July 20, 2016, ECF No. 1 (commencing this action pursuant to section 516A of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iii) (2012) ). 3 Relevant on remand, SolarWorld challenged Commerce's determination to value Trina's scrapped solar cell and module byproduct using Thai data for imports classified under HTS subheading 8548.10 ("Waste and scrap of primary cells, primary batteries and electric accumulators; spent primary cells, spent primary batteries and spent electric accumulators; electrical parts of machinery or apparatus, not specified or included elsewhere in this Chapter: Other").
Mandatory respondents Yingli et al. 4 and Trina et al. 5 each also commenced litigation challenging certain aspects of the final determination; both actions have been consolidated with the present action. See Mem. Points and Authorities Supp. Mot. J. Agency R., Jan. 26, 2017, ECF No. 42 ("Yingli Br."); Mem. Supp. Mot. [Trina et al.] J. Agency R., Jan. 26, 2017, ECF No. 43 ("Trina Br."); Order, Oct. 25, 2016, ECF No.
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Kelly, Judge:
Before the court is the U.S. Department of Commerce's ("Department" or "Commerce") remand determination in the second administrative review of the antidumping duty ("ADD") order covering crystalline silicon photovoltaic cells, whether
or not assembled into modules, from the People's Republic of China ("China" or "the PRC"), pursuant to the court's order in
SolarWorld Americas, Inc. v. United States
, 41 CIT ----, ----,
For the reasons that follow, the court sustains Commerce's determination to include import data with reported quantities of zero in the surrogate value calculations and remands for further explanation or reconsideration consistent with this opinion Commerce's surrogate value selections for respondent Yingli Green Energy Holding Co., Ltd.'s tempered glass input and respondent Changzhou Trina Solar Energy Co., Ltd.'s scrapped solar cell and module byproduct offset.
BACKGROUND
The court assumes familiarity with the facts of this case as discussed in the previous opinion,
see
SolarWorld Americas, Inc.
, 41 CIT at ----,
id="p1346" href="#p1346" data-label="1346" data-citation-index="1" class="page-label">*1346
Plaintiff, SolarWorld Americas, Inc. ("SolarWorld"), moved for judgment on the agency record, challenging certain aspects of the final determination. See SolarWorld's Mot. J. Agency R., Jan. 26, 2017, ECF No. 44; SolarWorld Americas, Inc.'s Mem. Supp. Rule 56.2 Mot. J. Agency R. Conf. Version, Jan. 26, 2017, ECF No. 44; Summons, July 20, 2016, ECF No. 1 (commencing this action pursuant to section 516A of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iii) (2012) ). 3 Relevant on remand, SolarWorld challenged Commerce's determination to value Trina's scrapped solar cell and module byproduct using Thai data for imports classified under HTS subheading 8548.10 ("Waste and scrap of primary cells, primary batteries and electric accumulators; spent primary cells, spent primary batteries and spent electric accumulators; electrical parts of machinery or apparatus, not specified or included elsewhere in this Chapter: Other").
Mandatory respondents Yingli et al. 4 and Trina et al. 5 each also commenced litigation challenging certain aspects of the final determination; both actions have been consolidated with the present action. See Mem. Points and Authorities Supp. Mot. J. Agency R., Jan. 26, 2017, ECF No. 42 ("Yingli Br."); Mem. Supp. Mot. [Trina et al.] J. Agency R., Jan. 26, 2017, ECF No. 43 ("Trina Br."); Order, Oct. 25, 2016, ECF No. 31 (order consolidating all three actions related to this administrative review). Relevant here, Yingli challenged Commerce's use of Thai import data to value Yingli's tempered glass input, contending that the Thai data is aberrational, see Yingli Br. at 9-26, and Trina challenged Commerce's inclusion, in the calculation of surrogate values, values for Thai import categories with reported quantities of zero, contending that doing so resulted in surrogate values that are not supported by substantial evidence. See Trina Br. at 16-19.
In the prior decision, the court sustained in part and remanded in part Commerce's final determination in this review.
6
SolarWorld Americas, Inc.
, 41 CIT at ----,
Commerce filed the
Remand Results
on January 18, 2018. Plaintiff SolarWorld continues to challenge Commerce's selection of Thai data for imports classified under HTS subheading 8548.10 as a surrogate to value Trina's scrapped solar cell and module byproduct.
See
Pl. [SolarWorld]'s Comments on Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Remand at 5-8, Mar. 7, 2018, ECF No. 133 ("SolarWorld Remand Comments"). SolarWorld contends that Commerce on remand continues to insufficiently explain its selection of an HTS category specific to scrapped battery cells, a product with which the scrapped solar cells and modules share no components, making it an unreasonable surrogate value.
JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
The court has jurisdiction pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iii) and
DISCUSSION
I. The Use of Import Data with Reported Quantities of Zero
In the final determination, Commerce included values for import data with reported quantities of zero in the surrogate value calculations.
See
Final Decision Memo at 63-64. Trina argued that the values with zero quantities were not reliable, such that their inclusion results in distorted surrogate values. Trina Br. at 16-19. The court remanded on this issue, determining that Commerce's conclusory explanation that the values are reliable because there was no reason to conclude the zero-quantity values were errors was insufficient given Commerce's acknowledgment that the majority of the zero-quantity values are not within range of other low-quantity import values on the record.
SolarWorld Americas, Inc.
, 41 CIT at ----,
In the final determination, Commerce stated that, in this review, "in most instances, the values for zero quantity import data points are not within the range of other lower quantity and value import data points ...." Final Decision Memo at 64. The court requested that Commerce explain, on remand, how its explanation that there is no indication that the values are unreliable is reasonable in light of this acknowledgment that the values are out of range of other low-quantity values on the record.
See
SolarWorld Americas, Inc.
, 41 CIT at ----,
On remand, Commerce "acknowledge[s] that [the agency] did not directly address the data Trina placed on the record" regarding the zero-quantity values in the final determination. Remand Results at 34. In its remand determination, Commerce analyzes the import data to determine whether the zero-quantity values were in fact reliable. See id. at 33-52. Commerce determined, after examining the data on the record, "that the values of the zero-quantity imports are, in fact, relatively low, especially when the overall trend of the import data reflects that low quantity imports have a higher [average unit value ("AUV") ] than high quantity imports." Id. at 34-35. Based on this determination, Commerce "continue[s] to find that the zero-quantity data are attributable to rounding small quantities down to zero, rather than random errors that might result in unreliable data." Id. at 35.
Commerce summarized and explained the results of the analyses and comparisons it ran on remand to determine whether the zero-quantity values are within range of other low-quantity import values on the record. See Remand Results at 34-38. Commerce concluded that the "comparisons and analysis do indicate a strong correlation between low value and zero quantities," which it determined demonstrates that the data is reliable, reasoning that, if the zero values were the results of random errors, the zero-quantity imports would not be "consistently in the low value range of all imports" as the comparisons demonstrate that they are. Id. at 38. Specifically, one analysis demonstrated that, "of any imported quantity with more than one import ( i.e. , data point), the average value of zero-quantity imports is lower than the AUV of any other quantity of imports." Id. at 35. In another analysis, Commerce "divide[d] the value of each zero-quantity import by the AUV of the HTS category under which the zero-quantity import was classified" and averaged those quantities, which resulted in a quantity for the values that was "nearly 50,000 times less than the average of the quantities of all data points." Id. at 36. Commerce uses this figure to demonstrate that the value of zero-quantity imports is lower than the AUV for other quantities for each import category. Commerce further discovered that more than one-third of the zero-quantity import values "have a value that is less than the AUV of the HTS category under which the zero-quantity import was classified," which Commerce suggests implies a quantity of less than one for those values because "the AUV is the average value of one unit imported under that HTS category[.]" Id. at 36-37. In an additional comparison methodology, Commerce replaced the zero with 0.49, the highest quantity that would be rounded down to zero, and discovered that, "overall, the AUVs for zero-quantity imports are consistent with the AUVs of other low quantity imports." Id. at 37. Based on all of these methods of comparison, Commerce concluded that the zero-quantity import values "exhibit characteristics consistent with other low-quantity imports." Id. at 37. Accordingly, Commerce "continue[s] to find that the zero-quantity data are attributable to rounding small quantities down to zero, rather than random errors that might result in unreliable data." Id. at 35.
Commerce has responded to the court's order. Commerce explained that it had not previously addressed the data thoroughly, and accordingly ran a thorough analysis of the data on remand. The results of that analysis demonstrate that the zero-quantity values are in fact consistent with other low-quantity values on the record. Having confirmed that the values are consistent with other low-quantity values, it is reasonable for Commerce to conclude that the zero-quantity values are not the result of error but are the result of rounding quantities between 0.01 and 0.49 down to zero, and to determine that the data is reliable.
Trina contends that, on remand "Commerce has ignored substantial information that demonstrates that the values of zero quantity Thai entries vary tremendously even within the same HTS classification and therefore cannot reasonably be considered to reflect only small quantity imports," such that these values are unreliable and should not be included. Trina Remand Comments at 5. Commerce's analysis of the data emphasizes that the overall trend of the zero-quantity values suggests that the zero-quantity values are consistent with other low-quantity values on the record. This explanation does not require that the value within each HTS category be unvaried. The determination that the values are generally consistent with other low-quantity values for each HTS category is reasonable despite some variation within each HTS category.
Trina also argues that Commerce's analysis is misleading and inaccurate because the agency has presented an analysis of the figures which relies upon grouping "together completely different imported products with widely divergent import average unit values." Trina Remand Comments at 5. However, in explaining its analysis, Commerce stated that its methodology specifically accounted for the fact that there are differences in the AUVs of individual HTS categories. See Remand Results at 35-36, 46. To account for these differences, Commerce "divid[ed] the total value of each import by the AUV of the HTS category under which the import was classified to normalize for differences in the AUVs of different HTS categories," and then compared the averages that resulted for each distinct import quantity to assess each individual HTS category. Id. at 46. This methodology reasonably assesses the reliability of each individual HTS category, and Trina's argument that the agency erroneously assessed all values together without taking those differences into account is therefore unpersuasive.
II. Tempered Glass
The court remanded Commerce's valuation of Yingli's tempered glass input using Thai import data, requesting that Commerce explain how the selection is reasonable in light of its past practice, record evidence of the disproportionate impact of the Hong Kong input values, and the claim of aberrational benchmarks.
See
SolarWorld Americas, Inc.
, 41 CIT at ----,
Yingli reported tempered glass as a factor of production in this review. In proceedings involving imports from a nonmarket economy country,
7
such as the PRC, Commerce obtains a normal value by adding the value of the factors of production used to produce the subject merchandise with other costs, expenses, and profits.
See
19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1). Pursuant to the statute, Commerce selects "the best available information regarding the values of such factors in a market economy country or countries" as a surrogate with which to value each factor of production.
8
specific to the input; (2) tax and import duty exclusive; (3) contemporaneous with the period of review; (4) representative of a broad market average; and (5) publically available.
See
Import Admin., U.S. Dep't Commerce,
Non-Market Economy Surrogate Country Selection Process
, Policy Bulletin 04.1 (2004),
available at
http://enforcement.trade.gov/policy/bull04-1.html (last visited May 15, 2018) ("
Policy Bulletin 04.1
"). Despite its discretion, Commerce's determination of what constitutes the best available information must be based in the objective of the ADD statute, to calculate accurate dumping margins.
See
Rhone Poulenc, Inc. v. United States
,
As explained in
SolarWorld Americas I
, it is Commerce's practice not to use aberrational values as surrogate values.
Antidumping Duties; Countervailing Duties
,
On remand, Commerce continues to value the tempered glass input using Thai import data, again determining that the import data is not aberrational based on a revised explanation of its practice for determining aberration.
See
Remand Results
at 4-9, 12-33. Commerce clarifies that, in the final determination, the agency erred by citing two cases as current practice which no longer reflect its current practice.
On remand Commerce explains that its current practice is in fact to require interested parties to demonstrate that the import data is aberrational in the aggregate, rather than to evaluate each individual input that forms the overall value for aberrationality. Remand Results at 14-15. Commerce states:
The underlying rationale is that "[w]hen determining whether data are aberrational, [Commerce] has found that evidence of a high or low AUV does not necessarily establish that GTA data for the suspect countries are unreliable, distorted or misrepresentative. Rather, interested parties must provide specific evidence showing whether the value is aberrational." Commerce's current practice considers whether the AUV, in the aggregate , is aberrational for the economically comparable surrogate countries or as compared to historical AUVs of the surrogate country at issue.
Id. at 25-26 (emphasis in original) (citing and quoting Issues and Decision Mem. for the Final Results of the 2012-2013 [ADD] Admin. Review of Multilayered Wood Flooring from the PRC at Comment 11.D, A-570-970 (July 8, 2015) (" Wood Flooring Decision Memo ") ). Commerce emphasizes that this current practice does not require the agency to evaluate whether certain imports with a high or low value have a disproportionate impact on the overall import value, but instead to assess whether the overall AUV "is consistent with surrogate values for the input from other economically comparable countries identified as potential surrogate countries." 9 Id. at 15. Commerce states that this practice is reasonable because it would be administratively burdensome to require the agency to assess the potential aberration of each data point on the record, id. at 16, and would invite interested parties to request "distortive cherry picking of data" to suit their objectives. Id. at 15 (quoting Polyethylene Terephthalate Film, Sheet, and Strip from the [PRC]: Issues and Decision Mem. for the Final Results of the 2010-2011 Admin. Review at 12, A-570-924, (June 5, 2013), available at http://ia.ita.doc.gov/frn/summary/prc/2013-13985-1.pdf (last visited May 15, 2018) (" PET Film Decision Memo ") ). 10 Commerce emphasizes that this practice is grounded in its "judicially-affirmed preference to base surrogate values on broad data that reflect the surrogate country's market as a whole." Id. Commerce contends that, because its practice is to determine whether the overall AUV of the HTS category is aberrational in the aggregate, it is unnecessary to analyze individual data points for aberration. Id. at 28. Commerce explains that its actions in the present case were consistent with this practice, as the agency compared the Thai AUV for tempered glass with AUVs for tempered glass from other potential surrogate countries, which resulted in the determination that the Thai AUV is not aberrational. See id. at 15.
On remand Commerce emphasizes that it followed its current practice here as reflected in the Wood Flooring proceeding. See Remand Results at 13-15, 25-27. In Wood Flooring , although Commerce asserted that it is only concerned with aberrationality in the aggregate, it nevertheless explained why the allegedly aberrational inputs were in fact representative of market-driven prices by assessing the share each input represented of the aggregate data. Wood Flooring Decision Memo at 43 (finding "imports from Taiwan and the United States represent the vast majority of imports into Thailand (77.1%) and, therefore, are a true representation of market-driven prices."). Thus, it is not clear from Wood Flooring whether Commerce's practice is to assess what percentage of the market the allegedly aberrational input data constitutes, to determine whether that data is representative of the market. If that is the case, Commerce must clarify how its practice is relevant here, where the allegedly aberrational Hong Kong data comprises just 1.6% of the overall import data into Thailand and yet constitutes more than 75% of the overall value of the Thai import data. 11 See Yingli Remand Comments at 9; Reply of Pls. [Yingli et al.] Supp. Mot. J. Agency R. at 4-5, June 2, 2017, ECF No. 67 ("Yingli Reply Br."). If Commerce does not have a practice of considering what percentage of market share is made up by the input data in question, Commerce should explain why it focused on market representation in the Wood Flooring Decision Memo . Because Commerce has invoked Wood Flooring here to explain its practice, the agency must clarify what exactly that practice is and why, in light of that practice, its selection of the Thai import data constitutes a reasonable surrogate value for the tempered glass input. 12
Additionally, in the
Remand Results
, Commerce did not respond to the court's request that the agency explain why its selection of the surrogate value for tempered glass is reasonable given the evidence of the Hong Kong data's disproportionate impact on the overall value of the Thai import data.
See
SolarWorld Americas, Inc.
, 41 CIT at ----,
The court acknowledges Commerce's concern regarding the potential administrative burden involved with assessing individual inputs for aberration. Commerce notes that
[i]dentifying and defining what is and what is not aberrational among these thousands of data points spread along a vast spectrum of relatively high and low values is an impossible task. An argument that an import value that is ten times the average value is clearly aberrational may on its face appear plausible, and yet the record in this case contains thousands of such values. Our current practice of only examining whether an entire country's AUV is aberrational prevents what could be a never-ending process of removing allegedly relatively high and low individual data points from our calculations. The second concern with using the proposed analysis is that it undermines the use of broad-market average prices for a particular input. Both concerns relate to Commerce's statutory obligation to rely on the "best information available" to value [factors of production], which the parties recognize.
Remand Results at 26-27 (citations omitted). Commerce claims that "the proposed analysis ... undermines the use of broad-market average prices," id. at 27, but it is unclear how retaining the Hong Kong input, which so disproportionately effects the overall value, serves the objective of using broad market average prices. Further, Commerce asserts that disaggregating inputs that are ten times higher (or lower) than the average value would create an insurmountable administrative burden, as there could be "thousands of such values." Id. at 26. However, here, there is a claim that the Hong Kong input is close to two-hundred times higher than the average unit values from the rest of the import data. See Yingli Remand Comments at 9. Although the administrative burden concern is significant, it does not outweigh the accuracy concerns raised in a case such as this where the Thai data includes unit values from Hong Kong which make up only 1.6% of the import volume yet, at 191 times higher than the average unit values from other countries, quadruple the Thai AUV. See id. ; Yingli Br. at 17-18.
Commerce of course may change its practice; however, its practice must still be reasonable. Here, Commerce has supported its claimed change in practice, stating it will no longer disaggregate data and exclude aberrational values, see Remand Results at 13-15, but Commerce has not explained how its practice supports its stated preference to "base surrogate values on broad data that reflect the surrogate country's market as a whole," id. at 15, where unit values representing 1.6% of the import volume account for more than 75% of the total value of Thai imports of tempered glass. A practice that considers values in the aggregate to avoid administrative burdens may be reasonable in other cases but, without further explanation, does not appear reasonable on this record.
III. Scrapped Solar Cells and Modules
The court remanded Commerce's selection of Thai HTS category 8548.10 to value Trina's scrapped solar cell and module byproduct.
See
SolarWorld Americas, Inc.
, 41 CIT at ----,
To calculate normal value for a nonmarket economy country, Commerce removes the value of reported byproducts from the values calculated for the factors of production, expenses, and profits.
See
19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1). As with factors of production, Commerce selects a surrogate with which to value each byproduct using "the best available information regarding the values of such factors in a market economy country or countries."
There were two potential surrogate values placed on the record of this review with which Commerce could value Trina's scrapped solar cell and module byproduct: the Thai import value for HTS category 8548.10, covering "waste and scrap of primary cells, primary batteries and accumulators; spent primary cells, spent primary batteries, and spent electrical accumulators," and the Thai import value for HTS category 2804.69, covering silicon of less than 99.99 percent purity. Remand Results at 53. On remand, Commerce continues to value the scrapped solar cell and module byproduct using Thai HTS category 8548.10 for scrapped battery cells. See id. at 53-64. Commerce explains that this category constitutes an appropriate surrogate value because "the manufacturing processes and the raw materials used to produce primary cells and batteries are more similar to the processes and inputs used in producing solar cells than those used to extract or produce silicon." Id. at 54. Commerce elaborates upon this similarity by noting that scrapped solar cells and modules, like scrapped battery cells, "are scrap products that were initially assembled together from many different inputs to create negative and positive electronic charges capable of conveying electricity." Id. Commerce asserts that, in contrast, the silicon covered under HTS category 2804.69, SolarWorld's preferred category, is minimally processed and "is not a product that is now scrap or one that was originally manufactured/assembled together from many different inputs for the purpose of producing or conveying electricity." Id. Commerce also emphasizes that it found HTS category 2804.69 not specific to Trina's scrapped solar cells and modules because the polysilicon in a solar cell is of a higher purity than the silicon covered by HTS category 2804.69. 13 Id.
This explanation does not sufficiently explain why, on this record, the category is a reasonable choice for the best available information. Products that are assembled from multiple inputs, convey electricity, undergo certain unspecified manufacturing processes, and are ultimately scrapped do not inherently share a similar value. In emphasizing these similarities, Commerce misses the point of a surrogate value for a byproduct. The surrogate value should be a product that is similarly valued in order to achieve an accurate valuation for the respondent's byproduct and, ultimately, for the respondent's normal value.
See
Nation Ford Chem. Co. v. United States
,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the court sustains Commerce's determination to include import data with reported quantities of zero in the surrogate value calculations. This matter is remanded to Commerce for reconsideration or further explanation consistent with this opinion Commerce's surrogate value selection for Yingli's tempered glass input and Trina's scrapped solar cells and modules byproduct offset. In accordance with the foregoing, it is
ORDERED that Commerce's surrogate value selections for the respondents' tempered glass input and scrapped solar cells and modules byproduct offset are remanded for further explanation or reconsideration consistent with this opinion. Commerce shall file its remand determination with the court within 60 days of this date; and it is further
ORDERED that the parties shall have 30 days thereafter to file comments on the remand determination; and it is further
ORDERED that the parties shall have 30 days thereafter to file a reply to comments on the remand determination.
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