OPINION
RIDGWAY, Judge.
In this action, Plaintiff Zhejiang Machinery Import
&
Export Corporation (“ZMC”), a Chinese exporter of tapered roller bearings (“TRBs”), contests the Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Remand in the U.S. Department of
Commerce’s 14th administrative review of the antidumping duty order on TRBs from China (“TRB XIV”).
ZMC challenges both the Commerce Department’s “subsidy suspicion” policy in general, and its application to ZMC in the administrative review at issue. Pursuant to that policy, the agency calculated ZMC’s dumping margin using surrogate prices for steel inputs, rather than the actual prices that ZMC paid to its supplier, which is located in a market economy country.
See
Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Motion of Plaintiff Zhejiang Machinery Import & Export Corp. for Judgment on the Agency Record (“Pl.’s Brief’) at 5-6; Comments of Plaintiff on Final Results Pursuant to Remand (“Pl.’s Remand Comments”) at 14-15.
Pending before the Court is Plaintiffs Motion for Judgment on the Agency Record, in which ZMC urges that this matter be remanded to the agency with instructions to recalculate ZMC’s dumping margin using the actual prices that ZMC paid its market-economy steel supplier.
See generally
Pl.’s Brief; Pl.’s Remand Comments; Plaintiffs Comments on Defendant’s Memorandum in Opposition to Plaintiffs Rule 56.2 Motion for Judgment Upon the Agency Record (“Pl.’s Reply Brief’); Plaintiffs Supplemental Brief (“Pl.’s Supp. Brief’).
ZMC’s motion is opposed by the Government and by Defendant-Intervenor, The Timken Company, who maintain that the Commerce Department’s determination is supported by substantial evidence and is otherwise in accordance with law, and therefore should be sustained in all respects.
See generally
Defendant’s Memorandum in Opposition to Plaintiffs Rule 56.2 Motion for Judgment Upon the Agency Record (“Def.’s Brief’); Defendant’s Supplemental Brief (“Def.’s Supp. Brief’); Opposition of the Timken Company, Defendant-Intervenor, to the Motion of Zhe-jiang Machinery Import
&
Export Corp., Plaintiff, for Judgment upon the Agency Record (“Def.-Int.’s Brief’); The Timken Company’s Supplemental Brief (“Def.Int.’s Supp. Brief’).
Jurisdiction lies under 28 U.S.C. § 1581(c) (2000).
For the reasons set forth below, ZMC’s Motion for Judgment on the Agency Record is denied, and the Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Remand are sustained.
I.
Background
This case involves the 14th administrar-tive review of the antidumping order covering TRBs from China (“TRBs XIV”),
in which the Department of Commerce reviewed,
inter alia,
ZMC’s sale of TRBs for
export to the United States.
See
Pl.’s Brief at 4.
In the administrative review, Commerce treated China as a non-market economy (“NME”),
and selected India as its surrogate market-economy country.
See
Pl.’s Brief at 9; Def.’s Brief at 3; Def.-Int.’s Brief at 4-5. No party objected to Commerce’s choice of India as the surrogate.
In the course of the proceedings, ZMC informed Commerce that it had purchased certain steel inputs at market price from a company located in a market economy.
See
Pl.’s Brief at 3-4; Def.-Int.’s Brief at 5. However, when Commerce issued its preliminary results, it used surrogate data, rather than the market-price-steel-input data provided by ZMC. Commerce justified its rejection of ZMC’s market prices based on the agency’s “subsidy suspicion policy,” finding that there was “reason to believe or suspect” that the prices for the input in question may have been subsidized.
See
Pl.’s Brief at 4-5; Def.’s Brief at 4-6; Def.-Int.’s Brief at 8. Although ZMC objected to the use of surrogate prices in lieu of the market prices paid the inputs in question, Commerce made no change in the Final Results.
See
PL’s Brief at 4; Final Results; Def.’s Brief at 4-6.
ZMC timely filed this action in the Court “challenging Commerce’s determination to reject actual market-economy prices for steel used to make TRBs.” Pl.’s Brief at 5; Complaint ¶ 6. In light of developments in litigation involving the 13th administrative review of TRBs from China (“TRBs XIII”), the Government sought— and the Court granted—a voluntary remand to allow agency “to provide a more thorough explanation of its determination” in the proceeding at issue here. Following the filing of Commerce’s Remand Results, and full briefing by the parties, this matter is ripe for review.
II.
Analysis
ZMC advances two primary claims in this action. ZMC first mounts a full frontal attack on the Commerce Department’s “subsidy suspicion” policy, alleging that it is inconsistent with the applicable statute and regulation. In addition to that challenge to the policy in principle, ZMC also disputes Commerce’s application of the policy to the facts of this case. Specifically, ZMC contends that Commerce erred in rejecting the prices it paid to its market economy supplier of steel. In addition to its' two main issues, ZMC also raises a handful of other arguments. As discussed in greater detail below, however, ZMC’s claims are unavailing.
A.
The Policy’s Consistency With The Applicable Statute and Regulations
The antidumping statute requires Commerce to use “the best available in
formation” on the values for factors of production from a market economy in calculating the Normal Value (“NV”) for products exported from an NME country. 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1). ZMC contends that the statutory mandate to use the best available information requires the agency to value factors of production using actual prices paid to market economy suppliers, whenever available.
See generally
Pl.’s Brief at 8-10.
To support its position, ZMC invokes
Lasko,
which concluded that—where it can be determined that an NME producer’s input prices are market determined—“accuracy, fairness, and predictability are enhanced by using those prices. Therefore, using surrogate values when market-based values are available would, in fact, be contrary to the intent of the law.”
See
Pl.’s Brief at 11
(quoting Lasko Metal Prods., Inc. v. United States,
43 F.3d 1442, 1446 (Fed.Cir.1994)). ZMC’s reliance on
Lasko
is misplaced.
Contrary to ZMC’s implication,
Lasko
does not mandate the use of market prices. Instead, it simply sustained Commerce’s use of market prices under the specific circumstances of that case, where the agency found market prices to be the best available information. As
Lasko
emphasized, Commerce’s overarching duty under the antidumping statute is “to determine margins as accurately as possible, and to use the best information available to it in doing so.”
Lasko,
43 F.3d at 1443. The statute “simply does not say—anywhere— that the factors of production must be ascertained in a single fashion.”
Lasko,
43 F.3d at 1446.
See generally
Def.’s Brief at 10-12; Def.-Int.’s Brief at 5-7, 16-18.
In short, nothing about Commerce’s subsidy suspicion policy is inherently incompatible with the antidumping statute. Indeed, the policy is designed to further the purposes of the statute, by ascertaining dumping margins as accurately as possible.
See generally Luoyang Bearing Corp., et al v. United States,
347 F.Supp.2d 1326,---, 28 CIT-, -, 2004 WL 1146101 *10-11 (2004);
Fu-yao Glass Indus. Group Co., et al. v. United States,
2003 WL 22996904, 27 CIT 1892, 1901 (2003)
(“Fuyao
I”);
Peer Bearing Co.-Changshan v. United States,
298 F.Supp.2d 1328, 1334-36, 27 CIT 1763, 1769-71 (2003);
China Nat’l Mach. Import & Export Co. v. United States,
264 F.Supp.2d 1229, 1236, 27 CIT 255, 261-63 (2003)
(“China Nat’l I”)
(all rejecting argument that subsidy suspicion policy is inconsistent with statute).
ZMC also contends that the Commerce Department’s subsidy suspicion policy contravenes the agency’s own regulations, which—according to ZMC—compel the use of actual market prices over surrogate values. ZMC points to 19 C.F.R. § 351.408(c)(1), which provides that “where a factor is purchased from a market economy supplier and paid for in a market economy currency, [the Commerce Department] normally will use the price paid to the market economy supplier.”
See
PL’s Brief at 9-10.
The language of § 351.408(c)(1) itself refutes ZMC’s claim. The regulation merely states a general rule; the word “normally” hedges the text, and indicates that there are exceptions to the general principle set forth there. In effect, ZMC would read the word “normally” right out of the text.
See generally
Def.’s Brief at 17-21; Def.Int’s Brief at 17. Thus, as other “subsidy suspicion” cases have confirmed, nothing about the subsidy suspicion policy conflicts with § 351.408(c)(1).
See generally China Nat’l I,
264 F.Supp.2d at 1237, 27 CIT at
264-65;
Peer Bearing,
298 F.Supp.2d at 1334-36, 27 CIT 1769-71 (all rejecting argument that subsidy suspicion policy conflicts with regulation).
Indeed, Commerce forged its subsidy suspicion policy as an exception to (or a departure from) the “normal” rule set forth in § 351.408(c)(1), for the express purpose of conforming to Congressional intent as reflected in the legislative history of the antidumping statute. Specifically, the legislative history of 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c) directs the Commerce Department to avoid using—in its NME “normal value” calculations—“any prices” which the agency “has reason to believe or suspect may be dumped or subsidized prices.”
See
H.R. Rep. 100-576, Vol. 4, at 590-91 (1988),
reprinted in
1988 U..S.C.C.A.N. 1547, 1623-24 (“Conference Report”).
See generally
Def.’s Brief at 15-16; Def.-Int’s Brief at 17-18.
ZMC takes strong exception to Commerce’s reliance on the Conference Report. ZMC correctly notes that, read in context, the quoted language refers to the use of surrogate values to determine NY in the NME context, and does not address the selection of surrogate values over market prices.
See
Pl.’s Brief at 20-21. As
Fuyao I
notes, however, that “does not, in turn, mean that Congress’s
instructions
... cannot be used by Commerce when constructing its methodology with respect to market economy purchases.... Commerce is fully justified in relying on those instructions to establish the reasonableness of its methodology in an NME situation.”
Fuyao I,
27 CIT at 1900 (rejecting same argument advanced by ZMC here). “[T]he use of suspect prices to calculate NV, even when paid to a market-economy supplier, would be contrary to Congress’ intent.”
Peer Bearing,
298 F.Supp.2d at 1334, 27 CIT at 1769.
See also China Nat’l I,
264 F.Supp.2d at 1237-38, 27 CIT at 265;
Fuyao I,
27 CIT at 1899-1901 (all recognizing Conference Report as justification for subsidy suspicion policy).
B.
The Application of the Policy to the Facts of This Case
Besides challenging Commerce’s subsidy suspicion challenge in principle, ZMC also contests the application of the policy to ZMC in the administrative review at issue here.
See generally
Pl.’s Brief at 1-2;
see also
Pi’s Brief at 16-19; PL’s Remand Comments at 3; PL’s Reply at 4-7.
Contrary to ZMC’s claims, however, there is ample record evidence to support Commerce’s conclusion that there is “reason to believe or suspect that ZMC’s supplier may have benefited” from subsidies, as set forth more fully below.
See
Remand Results at 15;
see generally
Def.’s Brief at 26-36; Def.-Int.’s Brief at 19-25.
Commerce based its conclusion principally on its analyses of a number of recent countervailing duty cases in which it investigated a wide variety of steel products produced in the country where ZMC’s supplier is located.
See
Remand Results at 5-6 (listing subsidy programs).
Commerce’s analyses of those cases (“the 1999-
2002 cases”) determined that the government in question maintains a range of both (steel) industry-specific subsidy programs and non-industry specific export subsidy programs.
See
Remand Results at 6-7, 10-13.
Commerce further determined that both the industry-specific subsidy programs and the export subsidy programs were in fact actually being used by steel producers, and were available to all in the industry.
See
Remand Results at ll.
Thus, the programs were not limited to certain steel companies, or to particular types of steel.
See
Remand Results at 11-12. And Commerce found no record evidence from which it might infer that ZMC’s supplier would not be eligible to participate in the various subsidy programs.
See
Remand Results at 13.
Based on its analyses of both the various industry-specific programs and the various export subsidy programs, Commerce found that ZMC’s supplier had a range of subsidies available to it, and that there were a number of them from which the supplier— as an exporter and as a member of the subsidized industry—could have benefited.
See
Remand Results at 7-8.
Moreover, based on its review, Commerce found it reasonable to infer that “a market company operating under normal market principles would take advantage of those benefits,” and further, that “given the competitive environment in which ZMC’s supplier operates, it is reasonable to infer that it would have taken advantage of these programs.”
See
Remand Results at 8, 12. Certainly there is no affirmative evidence in the record to establish that ZMC’s supplier did not avail itself of any of the various subsidies.
As Timken observes, the record in this proceeding “contain[s] much of the same evidence” included in the record in TRBs XIII.
See
Def.-Int.’s Brief at 24-25. ZMC offers no sound reason why the same result should not obtain here:
Commerce’s actions [in rejecting ZMC’s price data in favor of surrogate values] are reasonable because a company like [ZMC’s] supplier may have benefited from a generally available subsidy program given the competitive nature of the industry and by virtue of having engaged in foreign trade. Commerce specifically found that such ... program[s] existed and companies like [ZMC’s] supplier did indeed utilize the program[s]. Given the level of deference owed to the agency and the low threshold established by the “reason to believe or suspect standard,” ... [Commerce’s Remand Results must be sustained].
See China Nat’l II,
27 CIT at 1558-59, 293 F.Supp.2d at 1339, aff'd, 104 Fed. Appx. 183 (not cited for precedent) (sustaining Commerce’s application of subsidy suspicion policy in TRBs XIII);
see also Peer Bearing,
298 F.Supp.2d at 1336-38, 27 CIT at 1771-73 (sustaining agency’s application of subsidy suspicion policy in TRBs New Shipper Review for 2000-2001);
Luoyang,
28 CIT -, 2004 WL 1146101 at *12 (sustaining agency’s application of subsidy suspicion policy in TRBs XII).
As discussed below, none of ZMC’s arguments casts doubt on either the correctness of Commerce’s decision to apply its subsidy suspicion policy here, or the exis-tenee of substantial evidence in the record to support that decision.
ZMC first charges that the administrative record lacks “particularized evidence”
that its supplier’s prices were subsidized, and dismisses the Commerce Department’s case as purely “circumstantial.”
See, e.g.,
Pl.’s Brief at 1-2; PL’s Remand Comments at 6-7. ZMC emphasizes that the agency has proffered no proof that ZMC’s supplier actually received any subsidy.
See
Pl.’s Remand Comments at 6-7; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 4. Nor has Commerce identified a specific subsidy program from which it believes ZMC’s supplier benefited.
See
Pl.’s Brief at 5; Pl.’s Remand Comments at 4; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 3. ZMC also seeks to make much of the fact that neither its supplier nor the product at issue is the subject of an order.
See
Pl.’s Brief at 5, 11; Pl.’s Remand Comments at 4; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 3. Moreover, neither its supplier nor the product at issue has been investigated.
See
Pl.’s Brief at 1-2, 15, 17-18. ZMC maintains that without “particularized,” objective evidence that its supplier’s prices may be subsidized, Commerce is obligated to use market prices rather than surrogate values in its calculations.
See, e.g.,
Pl.’s Brief at 6, 11, 14, 18-19; Pl.’s Remand Comments at 3-4.
ZMC’s arguments are a thinly-veiled collateral attack on the fundamental premise of the subsidy suspicion policy. In effect, ZMC contends that the “reason to believe or suspect” standard is satisfied only when there is conclusive evidence that a supplier’s merchandise is, in fact, subsidized. But any such claim is refuted by the legislative history of the statute, which makes it clear that Congress did not intend to require Commerce to conduct formal investigations in situations like this, and did not intend Commerce to definitively determine whether prices actually
are
subsidized.
See
Conference Report (stating that, in valuing factors of production, Commerce is to “avoid using any prices which it has reason to believe or suspect may be dumped or subsidized,” and emphasizing that “the conferees do not intend for Commerce to conduct a formal investigation to ensure that ... prices are not dumped or subsidized, but rather intend that Commerce base its decision on information generally available to it at that time”).
The “reason to believe or suspect” standard is thus a relatively “low threshold”— less demanding than ZMC suggests, and clearly less rigorous than required for an actual finding of subsidies in fact.
See China Nat’l II,
293 F.Supp.2d at 1338-39, 27 CIT at 1558-59,
aff'd,
104 Fed.Appx. 183 (not cite for precedent) (noting “the low threshold established by the ‘reason to believe or suspect’ standard” and that it is “a lower threshold than what is required to support a firm conclusion”); Remand Results at 4, 19-20.
See also China Nat’l II,
293 F.Supp.2d at 1336-37, 1339, 27 CIT at 1555-57,
1559 aff'd,
104 Fed.Appx. 183 (not cited for precedent) (sustaining application of subsidy suspicion policy, even though “neither the subject merchandise in question, nor [respondent’s] supplier was ever specifically investigated” and even though “the level of distortion, if any, in the price of [the product at issue] by reason of subsidies was never determined”);
China Nat’l I,
264 F.Supp.2d at 1240, 27 CIT at 267-68 (acknowledging respondent’s claim that “there are no current or prior countervailing duty orders ... on the material input in question”);
Peer Bearing,
298 F.Supp.2d at 1337 n. 4, 27 CIT at 1772 n. 4.;
Luoyang,
28 CIT -, 2004 WL 1146101 at *11-13.
ZMC also tries to undermine the theoretical underpinnings for the application of the subsidy suspicion policy in this case, by pointing out that, in one recent investigation of a steel product in the country at
issue, Commerce made a negative final determination. ZMC intimates that this negative determination weighs heavily against the premise that there are industry-wide subsidies conferring benefits on all manufacturers of steel products in the subject country.
See
Pl.’s Brief at 1-2, 11-12, 14-15; Pl.’s Remand Comments at 2-3;
see also China Nat’l I,
264 F.Supp.2d at 1240-41, 27 CIT at 268. However, as the Remand Results here note (and as
China Nat’l II
recognized), the determination on which ZMC relies is anomalous—readily explained, and “immaterial” to application of the subsidy suspicion policy to the country in question.
See
Remand Results at 13 -14;
China Nat’l II,
293 F.Supp.2d at 1336-38, 27 CIT at 1555-57,
aff'd,
104 Fed. Appx. 183 (not cited for precedent); Def.’s Brief at 38-39; Def.-Int.’s Brief at 30-31.
ZMC fares no better on its claim that many of the countervailing duty determinations cited by Commerce found only
de minimis
levels of subsidization, and therefore (according to ZMC) cannot be used to justify application of the subsidy suspicion policy here.
See generally
PL’s Brief at 1-2, 5, 13, 16-18; Pl.’s Remand Comments at 2-4, 7-10; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 3;
but see
Remand Results at 13-15, 20-21 (responding to ZMC’s claim). “The statute does not specify a particular level of subsidization at which actual market prices may be discarded.”
China Nat’l II,
293 F.Supp.2d at 1336-39, 27 CIT at 1554-59,
aff'd,
104 Fed.Appx. 183 (not cited for precedent).
It is thus well-settled that “[t]he level of subsidization does not prevent Commerce from determining that it has ‘reason to believe or suspect’ that prices paid are subsidized.
Any level of subsidization
found in the exporting country is enough evidence to support a determination that Commerce has ‘reason to believe or suspect’ that prices are distorted.” Peer
Bearing,
298 F.Supp.2d at 1337, 27 CIT at 1771-72 (emphasis added);
see also China Nat’l II,
293 F.Supp.2d at 1336-39, 27 CIT at 1554-59,
aff'd,
104 Fed.Appx. 183 (not cited for precedent);
Fuyao II,
29 CIT at---, 2005 WL 280437 at *7-9
(quoting Peer Bearing).
C.
ZMC’s Remaining Arguments
ZMC’s few remaining arguments make short work.
ZMC criticizes the Commerce Department’s subsidy suspicion policy as opaque, and asserts that the agency is obligated to issue “memorialized guidance” or to promulgate a regulation on the subject for the benefit of the trade community.
See, e.g.,
Pl.’s Brief at 20; PL’s Remand Comments at 3, 14; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 3, 8;
see also
Remand Results at 21
(quoting
question posed by ZMC in its comments on the Draft Remand Results). According to ZMC, “[t]he failure to articulate a clear standard for finding a reason to believe or suspect prices may be dumped or subsidized ... has led to confusion for respondents in NME antidumping cases and thus denies them fundamental fairness and predictability.” Pl.’s Brief at 20, 22.
' ZMC emphasizes that Commerce promulgated a regulation expressing its preference for market prices a decade ago (19 C.F.R. § 351.408(c)(1)), and observes that Commerce also has “a policy statement on the standard for finding reason to believe or suspect a respondent’s prices may be sold below the cost of production and thus provide the basis for conducting a cost of production (‘COP’) inquiry.” ZMC maintains that something similar is required to document the agency’s subsidy suspicion policy and its “reason to believe or suspect” standard.
See
Pl.’s Brief at 20 n. 68
(citing
Import Administration Policy Bulletin No. 94. 1, Cost of Production—Standards for Initiation of Inquiry (March 25, 1994)); Pl.’s Remand Comments at 14; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 3, 8.
However, ZMC cites no legal authority for its claim that Commerce is required to promulgate a regulation. And, as the Government notes, the absence of such a regulation or guidance in no way undermines Commerce’s reading of 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(e) and 19 C.F.R. § 351.408(c)(1) “as not requiring a finding of subsidies in fact in order for Commerce to have reason to believe or suspect that market prices may be subsidized.”
See
Def.’s Brief at 42.
Indeed, as the Government points out, Commerce has construed the relevant statute and regulation in its February 2002 Office of Policy Memorandum (discussed in note 7 above), “which neither requires Commerce to conduct a formal investigation nor obligates Commerce to uncover subsidies in fact in order to have reason to believe or suspect that a particular supplier’s prices may be subsidized.”
See
Def.’s Brief at 42-43. The Government concludes that—contrary to ZMC’s assertions—both Commerce’s interpretation and its implementation of its subsidy suspicion policy are reasonable and fully consistent with the express language and history of the statute, as well as the regulation.
See
Def.’s Brief at 19-20.
ZMC also characterizes the subsidy suspicion policy as “arbitrary and capricious,” complaining that Commerce has “created a nearly impossible standard for respondents to meet in order to refute any suspicion that their suppliers’ prices may be subsidized.”
See
Pl.’s Brief at 6, 22-24; PL’s Remand Comments at 5. ZMC explains that, in another antidumping investigation involving China, Commerce found that respondents overcame any suspicion that their suppliers’ prices were subsidized, because those suppliers had been previously investigated by Commerce and had been found not to be receiving subsidies above a
de minimis
levels.
See
Pl.’s Brief at 6. ZMC asserts that, because its supplier has never been investigated, ZMC cannot prove that it does not benefit from subsidies.
Id.; see also
Pl.’s Remand Comments at 10 (“absent being ‘cleansed’ through an investigation, Commerce provides no explicit means for an interested party to show its market economy supplier received no subsidy”). Contrary to ZMC’s claim, however, Commerce has expressly recognized that, other than being the subject of an investigation, “there may be additional means of rebutting the presumption” that a supplier’s prices are subsidized or dumped.
See
Remand Results at 20. “[Wjhere there is evidence which counters the Department’s presumption parties may bring it to the Department’s attention.”
Id.
Such evidence might include proof “that the prices paid were market-determined, for example,” or “credible evidence that the supplier did not participate in any subsidies programs.”
Peer Bearing,
298 F.Supp.2d at 1337 n. 5,
27 CIT at 1772 n. 5. Optimally, the evidence would include “financial data” and “other information indicating that the supplier’s prices were not subsidized.”
Peer Bearing,
298 F.Supp.2d at 1337, 27 CIT at 1772-73.
Indeed, in the instant case, ZMC had an opportunity during the administrative review to rebut the presumption that its supplier was subsidized by the subject government. ZMC could have proffered evidence to establish that its supplier’s steel is not subsidized. Commerce would have accepted and considered it. But ZMC elected not to avail itself of the opportunity, and therefore cannot now be heard to complain.
See generally
Def.’s Brief at 41-42.
D.
ZMC’s Challenge to the Validity of Surrogate Values for “Scrap”
ZMC quite belatedly attempts to inject one final issue into this litigation, unrelated to its challenge to the Commerce Department’s use of the subsidy suspicion policy to reject the actual prices that ZMC paid for steel inputs to its market economy supplier (discussed above). In its comments to Commerce on the Draft Remand Results, ZMC—for the very first time— questioned the validity of the
surrogate values
for
scrap
used in the agency’s calculations.
See
Remand Results at 18-19
(quoting
questions posed by ZMC in its comments on Draft Remand Results).
Cloaked as an issue of the “selective application” of the subsidy suspicion policy, ZMC argues that Commerce applies the subsidy suspicion policy to some countries, but not others. ZMC apparently faults Commerce in this case for not rejecting certain values of U.S. exports to India which were allegedly subsidized.
See generally
Pl.’s Remand Comments at 10-12; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 2-3, 4-7.
As ZMC concedes, however, Commerce did not consider this issue in TRBs XIV because no one involved in the administrative review at the agency level—including ZMC itself—questioned the integrity of the Indian statistics.
See
PL’s Remand Comments at 11. Neither the selection of India as the surrogate nor the Indian import values themselves were timely challenged, even in this litigation (much less at the agency level). It is clearly too late to raise such an issue at this advanced stage.
See generally
Def.’s Supp. Brief at 3-6; Def.-Int.’s Supp. Brief at 11-17.
ZMC failed to raise the issue in the underlying administrative proceeding. Nor was the issue included either in the Complaint it filed to commence this action, or in its Motion for Judgment on the Agency Record. As discussed above, the issue first surfaced in ZMC’s comments to Commerce on the Draft Remand Results.
See
Remand Results at 18-19
(quoting
questions posed by ZMC in its comments on Draft Remand Results).
And, incredibly, ZMC asserted for the first time in its Reply Brief that the Court should order a
remand and instruct Commerce to recalculate the surrogate value for “scrap” used in the agency’s NV calculations.
See
Pl.’s Reply Brief at 9 (requesting that the Court instruct Commerce “to disregard [in its calculations] any price for which there is a CVD order from that country that determined there were ‘industry specific’ and/or ‘broadly available, non-industry specific export subsidies’ ”).
Because ZMC failed to raise in a timely fashion the validity of the statistics used to calculate the surrogate values for “scrap,” its attempts to argue the issue now are barred by the doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies.
See generally
Def.’s Supp. Brief at 3-8; Def.-Int.’s Supp. Brief at 12-16.
III.
Conclusion
For all the reasons set forth above, Plaintiffs Motion for Judgment on the Agency Record is denied, and Commerce’s Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Remand are sustained.
Judgment will enter accordingly.
JUDGMENT
This case having been duly submitted for decision; and the Court, after due deliberation, having a rendered a decision herein;
Now, therefore, in conformity with said decision, it is hereby
ORDERED, ADJUDGED, and DECREED that the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Final Results of Redetermi-nation Pursuant to Remand be, and hereby are, sustained.