OPINION AND ORDER
RESTANI, Judge:
Plaintiff, Sonco Steel Tube Division, Fer-rum, Inc. (Sonco) brings this action challenging the final determination by the Department of Commerce, International Trade Administration (ITA) that oil country tubular goods (OCTG) from Canada are being sold in the United States at less than fair value.
Oil Country Tubular Goods from Canada,
51 Fed.Reg. 15,029 (Apr. 22, 1986), as amended, 51 Fed.Reg. 29,579 (Aug. 19, 1986). In its opinion of August 18, 1988,
Sonco Steel Tube Div., Ferrum, Inc. v. United States,
12 CIT -, 694 F.Supp. 959 (1988), the court remanded this action to ITA for (1) a reconsideration and a fuller explanation of the agency’s reasons for treating limited service OCTG as a fully-costed co-product of prime OCTG in its calculations of constructed value, (2) an explanation of why certain U.S. sales, which appeared unrepresentative of plaintiff’s selling practices in the U.S., were
included in the fair value comparison, and (3) a fuller explanation of why early payment discounts provided to Sonco’s customers were treated as reductions in U.S. price while no adjustments for such discounts were made to foreign market value. In its remand determination, dated November 1, 1988, ITA determined that the sales which plaintiff alleged were unrepresentative of its selling practices in the U.S. were in fact unrepresentative and excluded such sales from the fair value comparison. As a result of this exclusion, ITA calculated a new less than fair value margin of 3.18%. Upon remand, ITA adhered to its previous determination with regard to the remaining two issues. Plaintiff presently challenges these remand results.
I. ITA’S TREATMENT OF LIMITED SERVICE OCTG
Plaintiff’s arguments concerning ITA’s treatment of limited service OCTG are essentially identical to those made by Ipsco, Inc., another Canadian producer of OCTG subject to this same investigation, in its challenge to ITA’s final determination. Accordingly, the court’s views on plaintiff’s proposed by-product accounting methodology and on the accounting methodology actually employed by ITA as expressed in
Ipsco, Inc. v. United States,
13 CIT-, 714 F.Supp. 1211 (1989) are equally applicable in this case and need not be repeated in detail here.
In summary, the court found Ipsco’s proposed methodology which simply assigns limited service OCTG a cost of production and/or constructed value equal to its actual net realizable value or estimated market value to be contrary to both the statute and ITA regulations. Additionally, the court found the methodology employed by ITA to be unreasonable because it failed to account for significant differences in value between the prime and limited service product in its calculations of foreign market value. In this case, as in
Ipsco,
this matter is remanded to ITA so that the agency may adopt a methodology for calculating foreign market value which eliminates the unfairness of failing to account for significant differences in value between the two types of simultaneously produced products subject to investigation.
II. ITA’S TREATMENT OF EARLY PAYMENT DISCOUNTS
In the previous opinion, the court questioned ITA’s decision to treat early payment discounts provided to Sonco’s U.S. customers as reductions in U.S. price while making no adjustments to foreign market value to account for similar discounts offered on home market sales of the same general class of merchandise as OCTG. Specifically, ITA was ordered to:
clarify whether it is agency policy to account for differing early payment discounts in the respective markets using a circumstances of sale adjustment, and if so under what circumstances. If a circumstances of sale adjustment could have been made here, ITA should indicate why plaintiff has not demonstrated entitlement to such an adjustment. If it is not agency policy to make circumstances of sale adjustments for early payment discounts, ITA must explain why it has made no other adjustment to constructed value.
Sonco,
12 CIT at-, 694 F.Supp. at 965. In connection with its clarification of these points, ITA was directed to explain its decision in
Tool Steel from the Federal Republic of Germany,
51 Fed.Reg. 10071 (Mar. 24,1986), a previous determination in which the agency permitted early payment discount adjustments to foreign market value based on constructed value.
In the remand determination, ITA has provided the clarification requested by the court, stating that it does not have a policy of treating early payment discounts as circumstances of sale for which adjustments to foreign market value may be made and that it has been substantially consistent in following a policy of treating such discounts as reductions in price. In response to the court’s concerns regarding the
Tool Steel
determination, ITA states,
inter alia,
“[t]o the extent that the case does indicate that the Department treated a discount as a circumstances of sale adjustment, the
case is simply wrong.” Remand Determination at 13. On the other hand, plaintiff argues that ITA’s statements to the contrary notwithstanding, the agency does have a policy of granting circumstances of sale adjustments for early payment discounts and that ITA’s actions in this case were unreasonable.
Initially, it should be noted that discounts generally provided to customers in either the U.S. or home market do lower the final price to such customers and it is therefore not
per se
unreasonable for ITA to treat certain discounts as reductions in price in its calculations of foreign market value and U.S. price.
Although it remains unclear as to whether the adjustment made in
Tool Steel
was, in fact, a circumstances of sale adjustment,
ITA in its remand determination clearly repudiates the treatment of early payment discounts in this manner.
See
Remand Determination at 13. Furthermore, it is clear that ITA’s policy of treating early payment discounts as reductions in price has been followed in most of its determinations.
See
Remand Determination at 13 n. 10 (listing previous determinations in which ITA treated early payment discounts as reductions in price).
Given ITA’s definitive statement of its present
policy and the extent of its consistent past practice, the court does not find that ITA acted unreasonably or arbitrarily in this case based on the existence of the relatively few previous determinations cited in which the department may appear to have acted inconsistently.
The court also notes an additional problem with plaintiff’s request that the ITA grant a circumstances of sale adjustment for the difference between “the discounts provided by Sonco in the United States and the discounts that Sonco provided in Canada on the same class or kind of merchandise.” Plaintiffs Comments on the Remand Determination at 22.
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OPINION AND ORDER
RESTANI, Judge:
Plaintiff, Sonco Steel Tube Division, Fer-rum, Inc. (Sonco) brings this action challenging the final determination by the Department of Commerce, International Trade Administration (ITA) that oil country tubular goods (OCTG) from Canada are being sold in the United States at less than fair value.
Oil Country Tubular Goods from Canada,
51 Fed.Reg. 15,029 (Apr. 22, 1986), as amended, 51 Fed.Reg. 29,579 (Aug. 19, 1986). In its opinion of August 18, 1988,
Sonco Steel Tube Div., Ferrum, Inc. v. United States,
12 CIT -, 694 F.Supp. 959 (1988), the court remanded this action to ITA for (1) a reconsideration and a fuller explanation of the agency’s reasons for treating limited service OCTG as a fully-costed co-product of prime OCTG in its calculations of constructed value, (2) an explanation of why certain U.S. sales, which appeared unrepresentative of plaintiff’s selling practices in the U.S., were
included in the fair value comparison, and (3) a fuller explanation of why early payment discounts provided to Sonco’s customers were treated as reductions in U.S. price while no adjustments for such discounts were made to foreign market value. In its remand determination, dated November 1, 1988, ITA determined that the sales which plaintiff alleged were unrepresentative of its selling practices in the U.S. were in fact unrepresentative and excluded such sales from the fair value comparison. As a result of this exclusion, ITA calculated a new less than fair value margin of 3.18%. Upon remand, ITA adhered to its previous determination with regard to the remaining two issues. Plaintiff presently challenges these remand results.
I. ITA’S TREATMENT OF LIMITED SERVICE OCTG
Plaintiff’s arguments concerning ITA’s treatment of limited service OCTG are essentially identical to those made by Ipsco, Inc., another Canadian producer of OCTG subject to this same investigation, in its challenge to ITA’s final determination. Accordingly, the court’s views on plaintiff’s proposed by-product accounting methodology and on the accounting methodology actually employed by ITA as expressed in
Ipsco, Inc. v. United States,
13 CIT-, 714 F.Supp. 1211 (1989) are equally applicable in this case and need not be repeated in detail here.
In summary, the court found Ipsco’s proposed methodology which simply assigns limited service OCTG a cost of production and/or constructed value equal to its actual net realizable value or estimated market value to be contrary to both the statute and ITA regulations. Additionally, the court found the methodology employed by ITA to be unreasonable because it failed to account for significant differences in value between the prime and limited service product in its calculations of foreign market value. In this case, as in
Ipsco,
this matter is remanded to ITA so that the agency may adopt a methodology for calculating foreign market value which eliminates the unfairness of failing to account for significant differences in value between the two types of simultaneously produced products subject to investigation.
II. ITA’S TREATMENT OF EARLY PAYMENT DISCOUNTS
In the previous opinion, the court questioned ITA’s decision to treat early payment discounts provided to Sonco’s U.S. customers as reductions in U.S. price while making no adjustments to foreign market value to account for similar discounts offered on home market sales of the same general class of merchandise as OCTG. Specifically, ITA was ordered to:
clarify whether it is agency policy to account for differing early payment discounts in the respective markets using a circumstances of sale adjustment, and if so under what circumstances. If a circumstances of sale adjustment could have been made here, ITA should indicate why plaintiff has not demonstrated entitlement to such an adjustment. If it is not agency policy to make circumstances of sale adjustments for early payment discounts, ITA must explain why it has made no other adjustment to constructed value.
Sonco,
12 CIT at-, 694 F.Supp. at 965. In connection with its clarification of these points, ITA was directed to explain its decision in
Tool Steel from the Federal Republic of Germany,
51 Fed.Reg. 10071 (Mar. 24,1986), a previous determination in which the agency permitted early payment discount adjustments to foreign market value based on constructed value.
In the remand determination, ITA has provided the clarification requested by the court, stating that it does not have a policy of treating early payment discounts as circumstances of sale for which adjustments to foreign market value may be made and that it has been substantially consistent in following a policy of treating such discounts as reductions in price. In response to the court’s concerns regarding the
Tool Steel
determination, ITA states,
inter alia,
“[t]o the extent that the case does indicate that the Department treated a discount as a circumstances of sale adjustment, the
case is simply wrong.” Remand Determination at 13. On the other hand, plaintiff argues that ITA’s statements to the contrary notwithstanding, the agency does have a policy of granting circumstances of sale adjustments for early payment discounts and that ITA’s actions in this case were unreasonable.
Initially, it should be noted that discounts generally provided to customers in either the U.S. or home market do lower the final price to such customers and it is therefore not
per se
unreasonable for ITA to treat certain discounts as reductions in price in its calculations of foreign market value and U.S. price.
Although it remains unclear as to whether the adjustment made in
Tool Steel
was, in fact, a circumstances of sale adjustment,
ITA in its remand determination clearly repudiates the treatment of early payment discounts in this manner.
See
Remand Determination at 13. Furthermore, it is clear that ITA’s policy of treating early payment discounts as reductions in price has been followed in most of its determinations.
See
Remand Determination at 13 n. 10 (listing previous determinations in which ITA treated early payment discounts as reductions in price).
Given ITA’s definitive statement of its present
policy and the extent of its consistent past practice, the court does not find that ITA acted unreasonably or arbitrarily in this case based on the existence of the relatively few previous determinations cited in which the department may appear to have acted inconsistently.
The court also notes an additional problem with plaintiff’s request that the ITA grant a circumstances of sale adjustment for the difference between “the discounts provided by Sonco in the United States and the discounts that Sonco provided in Canada on the same class or kind of merchandise.” Plaintiffs Comments on the Remand Determination at 22. As stated in ITA’s remand determination, ITA “does not consider discounts to be actual expenses borne by a manufacturer, and as such did not include them in figure for general expenses when calculating constructed value.” Remand Determination at 16 n. 11. Had ITA treated these discounts as expenses, the agency presumably would have utilized discount rates provided by Sonco in the home market on “merchandise of the same general class or kind as the merchandise under consideration,” pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(e)(l)(B), in its calculation of constructed value. It might be argued that in such a situation, a circumstances of sale adjustment would be appropriate to factor out differences between the United States discount rate and the home market discount rate utilized in the constructed value calculation. This is precisely the method by which ITA calculated differences in credit expenses provided in each market for which a circumstances of sale adjustment was granted. Remand Determination at 16 n. 11. Because, however, ITA determined that discounts are not expenses to be included in its calculation of constructed value, and because plaintiff has failed to demonstrate that this decision was in any way contrary to law,
ITA was not obligated to consider discounts made on sales of the same general class or kind of merchandise in the home market or make the sort of adjustment requested here by plaintiff, but rather could treat the discounts as reductions in price.
Having found that ITA may treat the early payments discounts at issue here as reductions in price and that ITA is not required to make the requested circum
stances of sale adjustment under the facts of this case, there remains the question of whether some other type of adjustment or deduction to foreign market value to account for the early payment discounts was necessary. Neither defendant’s nor plaintiff’s comments on the
Tool Steel
case have convinced the court that an adjustment of any type to foreign market value was necessary to account for the early payment discounts under the facts of this case. In fact, plaintiff has not explained what the statutory basis for such an adjustment to constructed value might be, other than a circumstances of sale adjustment, and the necessity of such an adjustment has already been rejected as a basis for relief.
Accordingly, the court does not find that ITA erred in failing to make an adjustment to foreign market value to account for early payment discounts.
CONCLUSION
This matter is remanded. ITA shall issue a determination on remand within thirty days utilizing a methodology which eliminates the unfairness of failing to account for substantial differences in value of the two types of simultaneously produced products subject to investigation. Within ten days thereafter the parties shall advise the court whether post-remand briefing is necessary, in which case a briefing schedule shall be proposed by plaintiff after consultation with opposing counsel. If ITA finds it necessary to reopen the investigation it shall so advise the court within 20 days hereof and shall, after consultation with the parties, propose a new schedule.
SO ORDERED.