Elawyers Elawyers
Washington| Change

Clearon Corp. v. United States, Consol. 17-00171 (2020)

Court: United States Court of International Trade Number: Consol. 17-00171 Visitors: 14
Judges: Eaton
Filed: Oct. 08, 2020
Latest Update: Oct. 08, 2020
Summary: Consol. Court No. 17-00171 Page 2 United States, 43 CIT _, 359 F. Supp. 3d 1344 (2019) (“Clearon I”).1 See Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Order (May 16, 2019), P.R.R.2 5 (“Remand Results”). Jurisdiction lies pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1581(c) (2012) and 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iii) (2012). In the final results under review in Clearon I, Commerce used adverse facts available, pursuant to its authority under 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a)-(b),3 to determine a countervailing duty rate for
More
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                   Page 2


United States, 43 CIT __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
1344 (2019) (“Clearon I”).1 See Final Results of

Redetermination Pursuant to Court Order (May 16, 2019), P.R.R.2 5 (“Remand Results”).

Jurisdiction lies pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1581(c) (2012) and 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iii) (2012).

       In the final results under review in Clearon I, Commerce used adverse facts available,

pursuant to its authority under 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a)-(b),3 to determine a countervailing duty rate

for Consolidated Plaintiff and Defendant-Intervenor Heze Huayi Chemical Co., Ltd. (“Heze”),4 a

mandatory respondent. The Department found that the use of adverse facts available was

warranted, even though Heze had been cooperative, because the Government of China (“China”)

failed to provide information that Commerce requested about the operation of a governmental loan

program called the Export Buyer’s Credit Program.5 See Chlorinated Isocyanurates From the



       1
               This case involves the first administrative review of the countervailing duty order
on chlorinated isocyanurates from the People’s Republic of China. See Chlorinated Isocyanurates
From the People’s Rep. of China, 79 Fed. Reg. 67,424 (Dep’t Commerce Nov. 13, 2014)
(countervailing duty order); Chlorinated Isocyanurates From the People’s Rep. of China, 82 Fed.
Reg. 27,466 (Dep’t Commerce June 15, 2017) (final results) and accompanying Issues and Dec.
Mem. (June 9, 2017), P.R. 117. Chlorinated isocyanurates are “derivatives of cyanuric acid,
described as chlorinated s-triazine triones” that are used for water treatment, among other uses.
See Clearon I, 43 CIT at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1346 n.2 (citation omitted).
       2
               References to the public record are designated as “P.R.” and to the public remand
record as “P.R.R.”
       3
               The statute provides that, when necessary information is missing from the record,
Commerce must use “facts otherwise available.” 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a). The statute also permits
Commerce to use an adverse inference when selecting from among the facts available, if “an
interested party or any other person,” including a foreign government, fails to cooperate with
Commerce’s requests for information to “the best of its ability.” 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a), (b); see
Fine Furniture (Shanghai) Ltd. v. United States, 
748 F.3d 1365
, 1371 (Fed. Cir. 2014).
       4
             Heze is the plaintiff in Heze Huayi Chemical Co. v. United States, Court No.
17-00185, which is consolidated under the lead case, Consolidated Court No. 17-00171.
       5
                As discussed infra, the Export Buyer’s Credit Program “provides credit at
preferential rates to foreign purchasers of goods exported by Chinese companies” through the
state-owned China Export Import Bank. Clearon I, 43 CIT at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1347.
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                    Page 3


People’s Rep. of China, 82 Fed. Reg. 27,466 (Dep’t Commerce June 15, 2017) (“Final Results”)

and accompanying Issues and Dec. Mem. (June 9, 2017), P.R. 117 (“Final IDM”). Without this

information, Commerce found it could not fully understand the program, and therefore could not

verify Heze’s declarations of non-use of the program; thus, Commerce found the declarations

unreliable. Using adverse facts available, Commerce then concluded that Heze had used and

benefitted from the program during the period of review. In other words, it used adverse facts

available to find that the statutory requirement, that a respondent receive a “benefit” from a

“financial contribution” (e.g., a government loan), was satisfied. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677(5)(B)

(defining subsidy). Commerce found that Heze used and benefitted from the program,

notwithstanding uncontroverted declarations on the record stating that neither Heze nor its

customers had used or benefitted from the program during the period of review.

       Thereafter, the Department selected an adverse facts available subsidy rate for the Export

Buyer’s Credit Program by applying its hierarchical method for administrative reviews. The

Department selected a 0.87 percent rate, which had been determined for a governmental loan

program (the Export Seller’s Credit Program) in a prior segment of the same proceeding. See

Clearon I, 43 CIT at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1360-62; 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(d) (Supp. III 2015).

       When calculating the net countervailing duty rate for Heze, Commerce included the ad

valorem subsidy rate of 0.87 percent as a part of its calculation (i.e., as an adverse facts available




Commerce asked China to provide information regarding: (1) whether the China Export Import
Bank used third-party banks to disburse/settle export buyer’s credits; (2) interest rates during the
period of review; (3) whether export buyer’s credits were limited to business contracts exceeding
$ 2 million; and (4) suspected 2013 amendments to the bank’s internal procedures for the Export
Buyer’s Credit Program. See
id., 43
CIT at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1355-56.
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                   Page 4


rate for the Export Buyer’s Credit Program).6 With the addition of subsidy rates for electricity

provided for less than adequate remuneration, and for self-reported grants, Heze received a net

countervailing duty rate of 1.91 percent,7 which it appealed to this Court. See Final Results, 82

Fed. Reg. at 27,467; Final IDM at 7.

       In Clearon I, the court held that Commerce’s use of adverse facts available could not be

sustained because the agency had failed to explain, and support with record evidence, its finding

that the operational information that was missing from the record was “necessary”—a statutory

requirement that must be satisfied before Commerce may apply an adverse inference to the missing

information. See 19 U.S.C.§ 1677e(a)-(b). In particular, the court found, Commerce had failed to

“tie its facts available determination (and therefore its adverse facts available determination) to

Heze, its products, or its customers,” and remanded the matter for further action. See Clearon I,

43 CIT at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1360.

       In the Remand Results, now before the court, Commerce again found that necessary

information was missing from the record. For Commerce, information about the operation of the

Export Buyer’s Credit Program was necessary because without it, verification of Heze’s claims

that neither it, nor its customers, used or benefitted from the program during the period of review

would be “unreasonably onerous, if not impossible.” See Remand Results at 19. The “unreasonably

onerous” finding was made without an actual attempt to verify the claims of non-use.



       6
                Commerce calculates “an ad valorem subsidy rate by dividing the amount of the
benefit allocated to the period of [review] . . . by the sales value during the same period of the
product or products to which [it] attributes the subsidy . . . .” 19 C.F.R. § 351.525(a).
       7
               Although the parties do not dispute the Commerce’s computation of Heze’s final
net subsidy rate of 1.91 percent ad valorem, it is not clear how the agency arrived at this figure,
when it determined a 0.91 percent rate for electricity provided for less than adequate remuneration
and a 0.55 percent rate for self-reported grants. See Final IDM at 7. Together with the 0.87 percent
rate for the Export Buyer’s Credit Program, the sum of these figures equals 2.33 percent.
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                    Page 5


       For the reasons below, Commerce’s explanation, that the missing operational information

was necessary to permit verification of the evidence supporting Heze’s claims of non-use, lacks

the support of substantial evidence and is otherwise not in accordance with law. This matter is

remanded again for Commerce to at least attempt to verify this evidence, which is pertinent to the

statutory inquiry of whether a “benefit” was received by Heze. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677(5)(B). Based

on the results of verification, Commerce must then determine whether “the manufacture,

production, or export of” Heze’s merchandise was unlawfully subsidized. See 19 U.S.C.

§ 1671(a)(1). The parties are directed to confer and agree upon a procedure that will allow

Commerce to verify Heze’s declarations of non-use. Alternatively, Commerce may find, based on

the existing record evidence, that neither Heze nor its customers used or received a benefit under

the program.



                                         BACKGROUND

I.     Summary of Relevant Statutory Background

       Under the countervailing duty statute, Commerce is tasked with determining whether “the

government of a country or any public entity within the territory of a country is providing, directly

or indirectly, a countervailable subsidy with respect to the manufacture, production, or export of a

class or kind of merchandise imported, or sold (or likely to be sold) for importation, into the United

States.” 19 U.S.C. § 1671(a)(1). A subsidy is countervailable when (1) a foreign government

provides a financial contribution, such as a loan, (2) to a specific industry, and (3) a recipient

within the industry receives a benefit as a result of that contribution. See
id. § 1677(5)(A), (B),
(D). If Commerce determines that each of these elements is satisfied, then it must impose a duty

equal to the amount of the net countervailable subsidy.
Id. § 1671(a)(1). Consol.
Court No. 17-00171                                                                    Page 6


       Under the adverse facts available statute, if Commerce determines that “necessary

information is not available on the record,” or a party withholds information that has been

requested by Commerce, Commerce must use “facts otherwise available” to fill in the gaps in the

record. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a). If Commerce determines that the use of facts otherwise available

is warranted, and makes the additional finding that a party “has failed to cooperate by not acting

to the best of its ability to comply with a request for information,” it may use an adverse inference

“in selecting from among the facts otherwise available.” 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(b).

       The aim of the adverse facts available statute is to encourage future compliance with

Commerce’s requests for information, not to punish. See Bio-Lab, Inc. v. United States, 44 CIT

__, __, 
435 F. Supp. 3d 1361
, 1368 (2020) (citation omitted). In countervailing duty cases, where

a foreign government is the primary possessor of information about, e.g., governmental loan

programs, courts have found permissible Commerce’s use of adverse facts available even when it

has an adverse impact on a cooperative respondent. See Fine Furniture (Shanghai) Ltd. v. United

States, 
748 F.3d 1365
, 1371, 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2014). “The rationale for permitting the application

of [adverse facts available] to cooperative respondents is that ‘a remedy that collaterally reaches

[a cooperative respondent] has the potential to encourage the [foreign government] to cooperate

so as not to hurt its overall industry.’” Bio-Lab, 44 CIT at __, 435 F. Supp. 3d at 1368 (quoting

Fine 
Furniture, 748 F.3d at 1373
).



II.    Factual Background

       The factual background of this case is set out in detail in Clearon I, familiarity with which

is presumed. The facts pertinent to the issues discussed in this opinion are summarized here.
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                    Page 7


        The China Export Import Bank, a state-owned entity, administers the Export Buyer’s

Credit Program, through which it extends “mid- to long-term credit loans issued to foreign

borrowers used for importers to make payments to Chinese exporters for goods, thereby promoting

the export of Chinese goods and technical services.” Clearon I, 43 CIT at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at

1347.

        Here, Commerce sought information about the program by issuing questionnaires to Heze

and China. Commerce asked Heze, inter alia, whether the company or its customers used or

benefitted from the program during the period of review. Heze answered that neither it nor its

customers used or benefitted, directly or indirectly, from the program, and filed customer

declarations certifying their non-use of the program. See
id., 43
CIT at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1347.

The company submitted a total of forty-four declarations of non-use by its U.S. and non-U.S.

customers during the review.
Id., 43
CIT at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1347. Its responses regarding

non-use were confirmed by China. See
id., 43
CIT at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1348 & n.5.

        By questionnaires to China, Commerce sought information about the Export Buyer’s

Credit Program, including (1) whether the China Export Import Bank uses third-party banks to

disburse/settle export buyer’s credits; (2) the interest rates8 the bank used during the period of

review; (3) whether the bank limits the provision of export buyer’s credits to business contracts

exceeding $2 million; and (4) suspected 2013 amendments to the internal procedures for the Export

Buyer’s Credit Program. Clearon I, 43 CIT at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1355-56. China, however,

withheld the information requested, deeming it “not applicable” because neither Heze nor its




        8
              Under Commerce’s regulations, “[i]n the case of a loan, a benefit exists to the extent
that the amount a firm pays on the government-provided loan is less than the amount the firm
would pay on a comparable commercial loan(s) that the firm could actually obtain on the market.”
19 C.F.R. § 351.505(a)(1).
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                  Page 8


customers had received buyer’s credits during the period of review.
Id., 43
CIT at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1349.

       As observed by the court in Clearon I, with respect to the information withheld by China,

“[a]t no point . . . did Commerce say why it needed this information or connect its request with

respondents, respondents’ products, or their customers.” Clearon I, 43 CIT at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1349.

       Notwithstanding the absence of a clear connection between the requested operational

information that China withheld, and Heze, its products, or its customers, the Department found,

as adverse facts available, that the company used and benefitted from the Export Buyer’s Credit

Program. It determined, under the two-step analysis required by the statute that: (1) the use of

“facts otherwise available” was required because China withheld necessary information requested

by Commerce, 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a); and (2) the use of an adverse inference was warranted

because, by withholding information that was in its possession, China failed to act “to the best of

its ability” to comply with Commerce’s requests for information. 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(b).

       Further, based on its adverse facts available determination, Commerce found unreliable the

declarations by Heze and its customers indicating that they neither used nor benefitted from the

Export Buyer’s Credit Program, because, for the Department, without the information that China

withheld, it was “unable to analyze fully how the Export Buyer’s Credits flow to/from foreign

buyers and the China Ex-Im,” and, thus, it could not verify the accuracy of Heze’s claims of non-

use. See Final IDM at 6, 13.
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                    Page 9


III.   The Court’s Findings and Remand Order in Clearon I

       In Clearon I, the court found that Commerce’s use of adverse facts available could not be

sustained because the Department had failed to explain, and support with record evidence, its

finding that “necessary” information was missing from the record—a statutory requirement that

must be satisfied before Commerce may consider applying an adverse inference to the missing

information. See 19 U.S.C.§ 1677e(a)-(b). That is, the Department failed to explain why the

information it sought from China, which it failed to provide, about the operation of the Export

Buyer’s Credit Program was necessary to its determination that the “manufacture, production, or

export” of Heze’s merchandise had been subsidized. See 19 U.S.C. § 1671(a); Clearon I, 43 CIT

at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1363. The court thus remanded the matter, directing Commerce to:

       (1)     explain how the information it sought as to (a) whether the China Export Import

Bank uses third-party banks to disburse/settle export buyer’s credits; (b) the interest rates the bank

used during the period of review; (c) whether the bank limits the provision of export buyer’s credits

to business contracts exceeding $2 million; and (d) suspected amendments to the internal

procedures for the Export Buyer’s Credit Program, is necessary to make a determination of

whether the “manufacture, production, or export” of Heze’s merchandise has been subsidized,

pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1671(a). In doing so, Commerce was directed that it “shall tie its inquiries

to Heze, its products, and/or its customers”;

       (2)     either provide an adequate answer relating to why the information it seeks “to fully

understand the operation of the program” fills a gap as to Heze’s products and their sale, or rely

on the information it has on the record;

       (3)     comply with the statute by tying its facts available and adverse facts available

determinations to Heze, its products, or its customers; and
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                   Page 10


        (4)     support with substantial evidence its necessary conclusion that there were gaps in

the record evidence that could only be filled with China’s responses to its questionnaires. See
id. The court also
held that if, on remand, Commerce continued to use adverse facts available,

and the court sustained that use, it could apply the 0.87 percent rate that it selected as the adverse

facts available rate for the Export Buyer’s Credit Program to calculate Heze’s final net subsidy

rate. Clearon I, 43 CIT at __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1361.



IV.     The Remand Results Now Before the Court

        In the Remand Results, Commerce continued to find that without the information that

China withheld about the operation of the Export Buyer’s Credit Program, the use of facts available

was required because “necessary” information was missing from the record, under 19 U.S.C.

§ 1677e(a). It further found that the application of an adverse inference was justified because China

failed to cooperate with Commerce’s information requests to “the best of its ability.” 19 U.S.C.

§ 1677e(b); Remand Results at 40.

        Using adverse facts available, the Department thus determined that Heze used and

benefitted from the Export Buyer’s Credit Program, and it continued to use 0.87 percent as the

adverse facts available rate for the program. See Remand Results at 40. For Commerce, the

information that China withheld was “necessary” because without a complete understanding of

how the program operates Commerce could not, without undue burden, verify the declarations by

Heze and its customers that they did not use or benefit from the program during the period of

review. See Remand Results at 24. In its decisional memorandum, Commerce addressed each of

the court’s instructions in turn.
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                    Page 11


           1.     Commerce’s Response to Instruction 1

                  (a) Third-Party Banks

           Commerce responded to the court’s instruction to explain why it is necessary to know

whether the China Export Import Bank uses third-party banks to disburse/settle export buyer’s

credits:

           [K]nowing the bank that disbursed the loan, which may have changed with the
           [2013] amendments, is necessary information because Commerce needs to know
           which bank names to look for in the books and records during verification of
           [Heze]’s customers. Without having knowledge of the banks that disburse funds or
           how those funds are disbursed to [Heze]’s customers, Commerce is unable to
           decipher which loans could be attributed to receiving export buyer’s credits. Thus,
           a thorough verification of [Heze]’s customers’ non-use of this program without
           understanding the identity of these correspondent banks would be unreasonably
           onerous, if not impossible. Without knowing the identities of these banks,
           Commerce’s second step of its typical non-use verification procedure (i.e.,
           examining the company’s subledgers for references to the party making the
           financial contribution) could not by itself demonstrate that the U.S. customers did
           not use the program (e.g., no correspondent banks in the subledger). Nor could this
           second step of Commerce’s typical non-use verification procedure be used to
           narrow down the company’s lending to a subset of loans likely to be the export
           buyer’s credit (i.e., loans from the corresponding banks). Furthermore, the third
           step of Commerce’s typical non-use verification procedures (i.e., selecting specific
           entries from the subledger and requesting to see underlying documentation such as
           applications and loan agreements) likewise would be of no value without knowing
           which banks disburse the loans. This step might serve merely to confirm whether
           banks were correctly identified in the subledger – not necessarily whether those
           banks were correspondent banks participating in the Export Buyer’s Credit
           Program. This is especially true given [China]’s failure to provide other requested
           information, such as the 2013 revisions, a sample application, and other documents
           making up the “paper trail” of a direct or indirect export credit from the China Ex-
           Im Bank.

Remand Results at 27-28.

                  (b) Interest Rates

           Next, Commerce addressed why it needed to know about interest rates during the period

of review:
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                               Page 12


       [K]nowing the interest rates for [Heze]’s customers during the [period of review]
       is not only necessary for verifying whether a loan was received under this program
       by matching the reported interest rate for this program with interest rates in the
       books and records of [Heze]’s customers during verification, but is also necessary
       for calculating a benefit.

Remand Results at 28.

               (c) Minimum Contract Size

       Commerce then addressed why it needs to know whether the Export Buyer’s Credit

Program is limited to specified business contracts:

       [K]nowing the size of the business contracts for which export buyer’s credits flow
       from foreign buyers and the China Ex-Im Bank, or other Chinese banks, is
       necessary to narrow the scope of the verification and identify which export buyer’s
       credit loans are being examined during verification proceedings. A thorough
       understanding of the extent of the export buyer’s credits afforded to [Heze]’s
       customers would have allowed Commerce to further determine whether a loan was
       provided under the Export Buyer’s Credit Program. Thus, verifying non-use of the
       programs without knowledge of the correspondent banks and the limits on the size
       of business contracts that would be subject to export buyer’s credits would require
       Commerce to view the underlying documentation for all entries from the subledger
       to attempt to confirm the origin of each loan (i.e., whether the loan was provided
       from the China Ex-Im Bank via an intermediary bank). This would be an
       unreasonably onerous undertaking for any company. Therefore, answers to all these
       questions make up the framework which is used at verification, so Commerce
       knows which documents to request for review and then what information to use for
       confirming non-use in the books and records (i.e., which bank names, interest rate
       amounts, etc.). Without this information, Commerce lacks the requisite roadmap
       for verification. Specifically, answers to these questions were necessary before
       Commerce could verify [Heze]’s U.S. customers’ claims of non-use in this review.

Remand Results at 28-29. Thus, Commerce found:

       [I]t could not accurately and effectively verify usage at [Heze]’s customers, even
       were it to attempt the unreasonably onerous examination of each of the customers’
       loans. To conduct verification at the customers without the information requested
       from [China] would amount to looking for a needle in a haystack with the added
       uncertainty that Commerce might not even be able to identify the needle when it
       was found.

Remand Results at 21.
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                 Page 13


             (d) Suspected 2013 Amendments to the Export Buyer’s Credit Program

      Finally, with respect to why Commerce needs to know what amendments were made to the

Export Buyer’s Credit Program in 2013, Commerce stated:

      [China] has refused to provide the requested information or any information
      concerning the 2013 program revision, which is necessary for Commerce to analyze
      how the program functions. We requested all documents related to revisions to the
      program, including the 2013 revisions, because our prior knowledge of this
      program (as established in the Citric Acid Verification Report on the record of this
      segment of the proceeding) demonstrates that the 2013 revisions affected [sic]
      important program changes. For example, in the Citric Acid Verification Report we
      stated that “EXIM officials indicated the Administrative Measures was revised in
      2013 and eliminated the {USD 2 million} contract minimum.” We, therefore,
      sought the 2013 revisions in this proceeding to review this change in program
      requirements and any other revisions. Specifically, the 2013 revisions (which
      [China] refers to as “internal guidelines”) appear to be significant and have
      impacted a major condition in the provision of loans under the program.

      This information is necessary and critical to our understanding of the program and
      for any determination of whether the “manufacture, production, or export” of
      [Heze]’s merchandise has been subsidized. For instance, if the program continues
      to be limited to USD 2 million contracts between a mandatory respondent and its
      customer, this is an important limitation to the universe of potential loans under the
      program and can assist us in targeting our verification of non-use. However, if the
      program is no longer limited to USD 2 million contracts, this increases the difficulty
      of verifying loans without any such parameters, as discussed further below.
      Therefore, by refusing to provide the requested information, and instead providing
      unverifiable assurances that other rules regarding the program remained in effect,
      [China] impeded Commerce’s understanding of how this program operates and
      how it can be verified. Further, to the extent [China] had concerns regarding the
      non-public nature of the 2013 revisions, Commerce has well-established rules
      governing the handling of business proprietary information in its proceedings.

Remand Results at 13-14.

      2.     Commerce’s Response to Instructions 2 and 4

      Commerce addressed the court’s second and fourth instructions together:

      [T]he Court ordered Commerce to provide an adequate answer, supported by the
      record, as to why it needed the requested information to fill a gap as to [Heze]’s
      products and their sale. These issues have the same underlying rationale as the first
      issue in that Commerce does not know what to look for in [Heze]’s books and
      records if it does not know the bank names or interest rates. This program has gaps
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                 Page 14


       on the record because [China] refused to provide requested information about the
       Export Buyer’s Credit Program’s bank disbursement, interest rates, or possible
       limitations regarding business contracts.

Remand Results at 29.

       3.     Commerce’s Response to Instruction 3

       As to instruction three, directing Commerce to tie the application of adverse facts available

to Heze, Commerce stated:

       [B]y refusing to provide information regarding the operation, disbursement, and
       allocation of funds of the Export Buyer’s Credit Program after it implemented [the
       2013] changes, [China] withheld information requested by Commerce pursuant to
       [19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a)(2)(A)]. As a result, [China] significantly impeded the review
       pursuant to section [19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a)(2)(C)]. Accordingly, Commerce
       continued to determine that application of facts available to [Heze] regarding this
       program is warranted pursuant to [19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a)(1) and (2)(A), (C)] because
       we are unable to rely on the information provided by [Heze] due to our lack of an
       understanding of the Export Buyer’s Credit Program. Further, by failing to provide
       the necessary information after repeated requests, [China] failed to cooperate to the
       best of its ability to comply with Commerce’s request for information because it
       refused to provide information regarding the operation, disbursement, and
       allocation of funds of the Export Buyer’s Credit Program after it implemented
       changes. Accordingly, the application of an adverse inference to facts available to
       [Heze] is warranted pursuant to [19 U.S.C. § 1677e(b)(2)]. As noted . . . ,
       Commerce may allow an adverse inference against a government to impact an
       otherwise cooperative respondent, when the government is the holder of the
       missing necessary information, as is the case here.

Remand Results at 29-30.

       Consolidated Plaintiff and Defendant-Intervenor Heze filed comments on the Remand

Results. See Heze’s Cmts., ECF No. 49 (“Heze’s Br.”). Plaintiffs Clearon Corp. and Occidental

Chemical Corp., U.S. domestic producers of the subject chemicals and the petitioners in this

proceeding (collectively, “Clearon” or “Plaintiffs”) and Defendant the United States

(“Defendant”), on behalf of Commerce, have filed responses to Heze’s comments. See Clearon’s

Resp. to Cmts., ECF No. 53 (“Clearon’s Br.”); Def.’s Resp. to Cmts., ECF No. 50 (“Def.’s Br.”).
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                    Page 15


       Heze disputes Commerce’s use of adverse facts available in the Remand Results. For Heze,

it was unreasonable for Commerce to use adverse facts available to make a finding that conflicts

with uncontroverted record evidence showing that neither the company nor its customers used or

benefitted from the Export Buyer’s Credit Program during the period of review. Moreover, it

maintains that Commerce could have verified the declarations of non-use placed on the record,

even without the information that China withheld. See generally Heze’s Br.

       For their part, Clearon and Defendant urge the court to sustain the Remand Results. See

Clearon’s Br. 2; Def.’s Br. 7.



                                    STANDARD OF REVIEW

       The court will sustain a determination by Commerce unless it is “unsupported by

substantial evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 19 U.S.C.

§ 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i).



                                     LEGAL FRAMEWORK

       Where the Department lacks the information it needs to make a countervailing duty

determination, it must use “facts otherwise available.” 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a). If Commerce

determines that the use of facts otherwise available is warranted, and makes the additional finding

that a party “has failed to cooperate by not acting to the best of its ability to comply with a request

for information,” it may use an adverse inference “in selecting from among the facts otherwise

available.” 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(b)(1); see also Nippon Steel Corp. v. United States, 
337 F.3d 1373
,

1381 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (discussing the two-step analysis that applies to the use of facts available

and adverse inferences under 19 U.S.C. § 1677e).
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                Page 16


       A foreign government may be found to be a non-cooperating party. See Fine 
Furniture, 748 F.3d at 1371
(“[O]n its face, the statute authorizes Commerce to apply adverse inferences

when an interested party, including a foreign government, fails to provide requested

information.”). Under such circumstances, the application of adverse facts available “may

adversely impact a cooperating party, although Commerce should seek to avoid such impact if

relevant information exists elsewhere on the record.” Archer Daniels Midland Co. v. United States,

37 CIT __, __, 
917 F. Supp. 2d 1331
, 1342 (2013) (citation omitted). When making an adverse

inference, Commerce may rely upon information derived from the petition, a final determination

in the investigation, any previous review or determination, or any other information placed on the

record. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(b)(2)(A)-(D).



                                         DISCUSSION

       Central to Commerce’s argument in support of its use of adverse facts available in the

Remand Results is that without the information that it requested from China,9 it would be

unreasonably onerous, if not impossible, to verify Heze’s claims that neither it nor its U.S.

customers used or benefitted from the program. See Remand Results at 21; 19 U.S.C.

§ 1677(5)(B). That is, for Commerce, the missing information was “necessary” to carry out

verification of the claims according to its usual non-use verification method. Commerce described

this method in the Remand Results:

       If Commerce were attempting to confirm whether a respondent exporter had
       received any loans from a state-owned bank, for example, its first step would be to


       9
               As noted, this information included (1) whether the China Export Import Bank uses
third-party banks to disburse/settle export buyer’s credits; (2) the interest rates the bank used
during the period of review; (3) whether the bank limits the provision of export buyer’s credits to
business contracts exceeding $2 million; and (4) suspected 2013 amendments to the internal
procedures for the Export Buyer’s Credit Program.
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                 Page 17


       examine the company’s balance sheets to derive the exact amount of lending
       outstanding during the period of examination. Second, once that figure was
       confirmed, Commerce would then begin examining subledgers or bank statements
       providing the details of all individual loans. Because Commerce could tie the
       subledgers or bank statements to the total amount of outstanding lending derived
       from the balance sheets, it could be assured that the subledgers were complete and
       that it therefore had the entire universe of loan information available for further
       scrutiny. After examining the subledgers for references to the state-owned banks
       (for example, “Account 201-02: Short-term lending, Industrial and Commercial
       Bank of China”), Commerce’s third step would be to select specific entries from
       the subledger and request to see underlying documentation, such as applications
       and loan agreements, in order to confirm the accuracy of the subledger details.
       Thus, confirmation that a complete picture of relevant information is in front of the
       verification team, by tying relevant books and records to audited financial
       statements or tax returns, is critical.

Remand Results 7-8.

       Heze urges the court to reject Commerce’s claim that it cannot rely on the information in

Heze’s questionnaire responses because it cannot verify that information. The company maintains

that its responses are fully verifiable using Commerce’s usual verification methods:

       [T]he Department can verify [Heze’s] customer’s non-receipt of funding through
       the China Ex-Im Bank by using its normal verification methodologies to tie the
       customer’s reported receipt of loans and financing to the customer’s books and
       records. The Department can also verify [Heze]’s non-use of Export Buyer’s Credit
       funding by reviewing [Heze]’s books and records for reported payment of goods
       sold to its U.S. customers and reported financing and loans.

Heze’s Br. 13. Heze also points out that it fully cooperated with Commerce’s requests for

information, and that the record evidence shows that neither Heze nor its U.S. customers used the

Export Buyer’s Credit Program during the period of review. See Heze’s Br. 10.

       Further, Heze contends that Commerce has failed to comply with the court’s remand order

because is it has failed to demonstrate that the operational information about the program that

Commerce desires (i.e., the role of third-party banks, interest rates, minimum contract values, and

2013 amendments to the program) is necessary to make a determination of whether the

“manufacture, production, or export” of Heze’s merchandise has been subsidized, pursuant to 19
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                 Page 18


U.S.C. § 1671(a). See Heze’s Br. 1-2. Indeed, for Heze, Commerce has failed to tie its inquiries to

Heze, its products, and/or its customers, or answered the question why the missing information

“would fill a gap as to [Heze’s] products and sales.” Heze’s Br. 2; see 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a).

       Commerce’s use of adverse facts available to fill in purported gaps in the factual record of

proceedings in which China has failed to provide requested information about the operation of the

Export Buyer’s Credit Program has been the subject of several opinions by this Court. On similar

factual records, the Court has rejected Commerce’s position that information about the operation

of the Export Buyer’s Credit Program is necessary for it to verify a respondent’s claimed non-use

of the program. See, e.g., the line of cases captioned Guizhou Tyre Co. v. United States10; the line




       10
                See Guizhou Tyre Co. v. United States, 42 CIT __, __, 
348 F. Supp. 3d 1261
, 1270
(2018) (remanding to Commerce, noting that although “information as to the functioning of the
Program was missing, this finding was rendered immaterial by responses from both Guizhou and
[China] as to the Program’s use. This defect proves fatal to Commerce’s imposition of [adverse
facts available].”); Guizhou Tyre Co. v. United States, 43 CIT __, __, 
399 F. Supp. 3d 1346
, 1353
(2019) (remanding, noting that “Commerce has failed to demonstrate why the 2013 [Export
Buyer’s Credit Program] rule change [allegedly impacting the functioning of the program] is
relevant to verifying claims of non-use, and how that constitutes a ‘gap’ in the record.”); Guizhou
Tyre Co. v. United States, 43 CIT __, __, 
415 F. Supp. 3d 1402
, 1405 (2019) (sustaining
Commerce’s conclusion that “Plaintiffs did not use the [Export Buyer’s Credit Program] based on
the record evidence”); see also Guizhou Tyre Co. v. United States, 43 CIT __, __, 
389 F. Supp. 3d 1315
, 1329 (2019) (remanding, noting that “the Department’s decision to apply [adverse facts
available] as to the Export Buyer’s Credit Program based on an alleged lack of cooperation was
unlawful because Commerce demonstrated no gap in the record, the respondents submitted
evidence of non-use of the Program, and the Department’s findings of unverifiability of necessary
information [were] unsupported by record evidence.”); Guizhou Tyre Co. v. United States, 43 CIT
__, __, 
415 F. Supp. 3d 1335
, 1343 (2019) (remanding, noting that “[t]here is evidence in the
record that squarely detracts from Commerce’s inference that Plaintiffs used and benefited from
the [Export Buyer’s Credit Program]. Commerce may not simply declare that the evidence cannot
be verified and therefore, a gap exists. That is not how it works. Commerce must attempt
verification in order to conclude that a gap exists related to that inquiry.”); Guizhou Tyre Co. v.
United States, No. 18-00100, 
2020 WL 3033244
, at *2 (CIT June 5, 2020) (sustaining Commerce’s
conclusion “that the factual record in this case indicates that there was no use of the [Export
Buyer’s Credit Program] by Guizhou.”).
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                   Page 19


of cases captioned Changzhou Trina Solar Energy Co. v. United States11; and the line of cases

captioned Jiangsu Zhongji Lamination Materials Co. v. United States.12

       The court finds Guizhou Tyre Co. v. United States, 43 CIT __, 
415 F. Supp. 3d 1335
(2019)

particularly instructive. There, the Court reviewed an explanation by Commerce, as to why it could

not verify the respondent’s claims of non-use of the Export Buyer’s Credit Program, that is similar

to that found in the Remand Results. As summarized by the Court:

       Commerce continues to find that there is a gap in the record because the Department
       cannot verify the submitted non-use declarations without additional information


       11
                See Changzhou Trina Solar Energy Co. v. United States, 42 CIT __, __, 352 F.
Supp. 3d 1316, 1326 (2018) (remanding where “Commerce provided reasoning as to why
[China]’s failure to respond adequately made it impossible for it to understand fully the operation
of the [Export Buyer’s Credit Program] [i.e., which would pertain to the “financial contribution”
element of the statute], but it failed to show why a full understanding of the [Export Buyer’s Credit
Program]’s operation was necessary to verify non-use certifications [which would pertain to the
“benefit conferred” element].”); Changzhou Trina Solar Energy Co. v. United States, No.
17-00198, 
2019 WL 5856438
, at *4 (CIT Nov. 8, 2019) (remanding, where “[a]lthough Commerce
has shown that [China] failed to answer certain questions regarding the [Export Buyer’s Credit
Program]’s operation, it is still not entirely clear to the court that the missing information is
required to effectively verify respondent’s non-use of the program.”); Changzhou Trina Solar
Energy Co. v. United States, No. 17-00198, 
2020 WL 4464258
, at *4 (CIT Aug. 4, 2020)
(sustaining “Commerce’s decision to accept the certifications of non-use”); see also Changzhou
Trina Solar Energy Co. v. United States, No. 17-00246, 
2018 WL 6271653
, at *3 (CIT Nov. 30,
2018) (remanding where Commerce had “not explain[ed] why it was necessary for it to fully
understand the [Export Buyer’s Credit Program] in order to ascertain claims of non-use.”);
Changzhou Trina Solar Energy Co. v. United States, No. 17-00246, 
2019 WL 6124908
, at *3 (CIT
Nov. 18, 2019) (remanding to Commerce, noting that although “[China] failed to answer certain
questions regarding the [Export Buyer’s Credit Program]’s operation, it is still not entirely clear to
the court that the missing information is required to effectively verify respondent’s non-use of the
program.”); Changzhou Trina Solar Energy Co. v. United States, No. 17-00246, 
2020 WL 4464251
, at *3 (CIT Aug. 4, 2020) (sustaining “Commerce's decision to accept [the plaintiffs’]
claims of non-use on remand in this instance [as] supported by substantial evidence”).
       12
               See Jiangsu Zhongji Lamination Materials Co. v. United States, 43 CIT __, __, 
405 F. Supp. 3d 1317
, 1333 (2019) (remanding because “Commerce again does not explain why a
complete understanding of the operation of the program is necessary to verify non-use of the
program.”); Jiangsu Zhongji Lamination Materials Co. v. United States, No. 18-00089, 
2020 WL 1456531
, at *3 (CIT Mar. 24, 2020) (sustaining Commerce’s uncontested remand results, in which
Commerce decided to recalculate plaintiff’s final net countervailing duty rate excluding the Export
Buyer’s Credit Program).
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                   Page 20


       surrounding the 2013 revisions to the [Export Buyer’s Credit Program]. One of the
       revisions involved routing [Export Buyer’s Credit Program] loans through
       (undisclosed) third-party banks, and not through the Export-Import Bank of China
       . . . as Commerce originally thought. As in the previous administrative review, the
       Department reiterated that “[China] once again refused to provide the sample
       application documents or any regulations or manuals governing the approval
       process [for the Program].” Without this information, Commerce concluded that it
       could “not verify non-use of export buyer’s credits” “in a manner consistent with
       its verification methods, which are primarily the methods of an auditor, attempting
       to confirm usage or claimed non-usage by examining books and records which can
       be reconciled to audited financial statements, or other documents.” Commerce
       asserts that the “completeness” principle is “an essential element of Commerce’s
       verification methodology,” . . . and without the allegedly “missing” information,
       the Department’s verification “would amount to looking for a needle in a haystack
       with the added uncertainty that Commerce might not even be able to identify the
       needle when it was found.” Therefore, Commerce continues to impute usage of the
       [Export Buyer’s Credit Program] based on the application of adverse facts
       available.

Guizhou Tyre, 43 CIT at __, 415 F. Supp. 3d at 1341 (internal record citations omitted). The Court

rejected Commerce’s explanation, noting that “[t]he Department’s (flawed) reasoning has

remained unwavering” despite many opinions issued by the Court “urging Commerce to correct

the repeated blatant deficiencies in its adverse facts available analyses of the [Export Buyer’s

Credit Program].”
Id. Specifically, the Court
found that Commerce had failed to make a finding

that a “gap” in the record existed with respect to the required statutory elements of a countervailing

duty determination:

       In its redetermination, Commerce again invoked the authority to use an adverse
       inference based on the finding that [China] did not act to the best of its ability in
       responding to the Department’s request for “the 2013 administrative rules, as well
       as other information concerning the operation of the [Export Buyer’s Credit
       Program].” Here, the Department’s investigation relates to whether the [Export
       Buyer’s Credit Program] provides a countervailable subsidy to Plaintiffs. Under the
       [countervailable duty] statute, this requires a finding that a specific financial
       contribution occurred, and a benefit was therefore conferred. See 19 U.S.C.
       § 1677(5). The gap then, must relate to either element of this inquiry. Just because
       Commerce resorted to adverse facts available “does not obviate the need for
       Commerce to affirmatively find that the elements of the statute have been satisfied.”
       [Changzhou Trina Solar Energy Co. v. United States, 43 CIT __, __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
1329, 1338 (2019)]. But as it currently stands, the Department has assumed the
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                    Page 21


       conclusion—that a gap in the record exists as a result of [China]’s failure to
       cooperate—without addressing what “constitutes a ‘gap’ in the record,” [Zhejiang
       DunAn Hetian Metal Co. v. United States, 
652 F.3d 1333
, 1347 (Fed. Cir. 2011)],
       and by pointedly closing its eyes on the evidence provided by Guizhou that would
       “fairly detract[ ]” from its ultimate conclusion, CS Wind Vietnam Co. v. United
       States, 
832 F.3d 1367
, 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2016). The law does not permit Commerce
       to circumvent the statutory requirements of the [countervailable duty] statute just
       because a respondent fails to cooperate; nor is Commerce “relieve[d] [ ] from
       relying on some facts to make the requisite determinations to satisfy the elements
       of 19 U.S.C. § 1677(5).” Changzhou Trina Solar Energy Co., 43 CIT [at] __, 
359 F. Supp. 3d
at 1340 (emphasis added). Stripped away of its misconceptions
       surrounding the [adverse facts available] statute, the Department is left with the
       most compelling facts placed on the record: that Plaintiffs did not use the Program,
       and therefore, no specific benefit was conferred.
Id., 43
CIT at __, 415 F. Supp. 3d at 1342-43 (internal record citation omitted). The Guizhou Tyre

Court found compelling that

       [t]here is evidence in the record that squarely detracts from Commerce’s inference
       that Plaintiffs used and benefited from the [Export Buyer’s Credit Program].
       Commerce may not simply declare that the evidence cannot be verified and
       therefore, a gap exists. That is not how it works. Commerce must attempt
       verification in order to conclude that a gap exists related to that inquiry.
Id., 43
CIT at __, 415 F. Supp. 3d at 1343. Accordingly, the Court remanded with instructions that

Commerce “attempt verification of the submitted non-use declarations from Plaintiffs’ U.S.

customers, using all reasonable tools at its disposal, including methods suggested by Plaintiffs and

by this court;” and “detail its process in its remand redetermination as it relates to its verification

of the non-use declarations.”
Id., 43
CIT at __, 415 F. Supp. 3d at 1344.

       After remands in the Guizhou Tyre case, as well as the Changzhou and Jiangsu lines of

cases, Commerce ultimately determined (under protest13) that the Chinese respondents in each case

had not used or benefitted from the Export Buyer’s Credit Program.




       13
                It is worth noting that, despite Commerce’s respectful protest, the United States
elected not to file an appeal in any of the aforementioned cases.
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                                 Page 22


       Here, Commerce’s duty was to determine whether the Export Buyer’s Credit Program

provided a benefit to Heze. Under the statute, that determination required a finding as to whether

“a specific financial contribution occurred, and a benefit was therefore conferred.” Guizhou Tyre,

43 CIT at __, 415 F. Supp. 3d at 1342 (citing 19 U.S.C. § 1677(5)). Evidence pertinent to this

inquiry was on the record. Heze’s declarations and questionnaire responses show that neither the

company nor its customers used or benefitted from the program. Rather than attempt to verify this

information, however, Commerce concluded it would be too onerous to do so without the

information withheld by China, and therefore it could not be used (creating a gap). In other words,

Commerce did not analyze whether the missing information actually created a gap that mattered

to Heze’s case.

       It is worth noting that in its questionnaire response, Heze has maintained that it did not

“qualify for funding through the Export Buyer’s Credit Program because the China Ex-Im Bank

funds large capital projects and contracts for mechanical and electronic products, complete sets of

equipment, and high-tech products and services that are valued at more than $2 million.” Heze’s

Br. 3. “Furthermore, [Heze] would have been required to purchase export credit insurance, which

it did not.” Heze’s Br. 6 (record citations omitted). These statements are based on the requirements

of the program found in information that China placed on the record in response to Commerce’s

questionnaires. For Heze, “[t]he Department is able to verify each of these criteria through its on-

site verification methodologies that the Department describes in its [Remand Results],” but it

unreasonably failed to do so. Heze’s Br. 3.

       As in Guizhou Tyre, Commerce used adverse facts available against a cooperative

respondent to fill an alleged gap that it concluded existed without first attempting to verify the

information pertinent to its “benefit” inquiry under the statute. Although Commerce, in the
Consol. Court No. 17-00171                                                               Page 23


Remand Results, takes the court through why it wanted this information, as has been found in other

cases in this Court, it is not clear that any of the missing information was “necessary” to

Commerce’s central statutory inquiry, i.e., to determine whether the Export Buyer’s Credit

Program provided a benefit to Heze. Thus, it appears that, as in Guizhou Tyre, “the Department has

assumed the conclusion—that a gap in the record exists as a result of [China’s] failure to

cooperate—without addressing what ‘constitutes a “gap” in the record,’ and by pointedly closing

its eyes on the evidence provided by [Heze] that would ‘fairly detract[ ]’ from its ultimate

conclusion.” Guizhou Tyre, 43 CIT at __, 415 F. Supp. 3d at 1342 (internal citations omitted).

“The law does not permit Commerce to circumvent the statutory requirements of the

[countervailable duty] statute just because a respondent fails to cooperate; nor is Commerce

‘relieve[d] [ ] from relying on some facts to make the requisite determinations to satisfy the

elements of 19 U.S.C. § 1677(5).’”
Id. (citation omitted). The
Remand Results set out the steps of Commerce’s usual non-use verification method.

Remand Results at 7-8. The parties are instructed to confer and jointly devise a procedure, which

may include modifications of the usual method, by which the Department can conduct verification

of the declarations of non-use. Alternatively, Commerce may find, based on the existing record

evidence, that neither Heze nor its customers used or received a benefit under the program.



                                 CONCLUSION and ORDER

       Based on the foregoing, it is hereby

       ORDERED that the Remand Results are remanded to Commerce; it is further


Can't find what you're looking for?

Post a free question on our public forum.
Ask a Question
Search for lawyers by practice areas.
Find a Lawyer