Slip Op. 01-65
UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
_______________________________________________
:
BETHLEHEM STEEL CORPORATION, U.S. STEEL
GROUP, A UNIT OF USX CORPORATION, ISPAT :
INLAND INC., LTV STEEL COMPANY, INC. and
NATIONAL STEEL CORPORATION, :
Plaintiffs, :
v. :
UNITED STATES, : Court No. 99-08-00524
Defendant, :
and :
USINAS SIDERÚRGICAS DE MINAS GERAIS S/A, :
COMPANHIA SIDERÚRGICA PAULISTA and
COMPANHIA SIDERÚRGICA NACIONAL, :
_______________________________________________ :
Defendant-Intervenors.
[Determination of U.S. Department of Commerce’s International Trade Administration on
antidumping duty suspension agreement remanded for action consistent with this opinion.]
Decided: May 29, 2001
Dewey Ballantine LLP (Alan Wm. Wolff, Michael H. Stein, and Michael Castellano) and
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP (Robert E. Lighthizer, John J. Mangan and Worth S.
Anderson), for Plaintiffs.
Stuart E. Schiffer, Acting Assistant Attorney General; David M. Cohen, Director,
Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice; Lucius B. Lau, Attorney,
Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice; Rina Goldenberg and
David R. Mason, Attorneys, Office of the Chief Counsel for Import Administration, U.S. Department
of Commerce, Of Counsel; for Defendant.
Willkie Farr & Gallagher (Christopher Dunn, Robert L. LaFrankie, and Karl von Schriltz),
for Defendant-Intervenors.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 2
OPINION
RIDGWAY, Judge:
This action challenges a July 1999 agreement between the U.S. Department of Commerce
(“Commerce”) and three Brazilian steel exporters (“Brazilian Exporters”),1 suspending at the
eleventh hour the investigation into the alleged dumping in the United States of certain steel products
from Brazil. See Hot-Rolled Flat-Rolled Carbon-Quality Steel Products from Brazil, 64 Fed. Reg.
38,792 (Dep’t Commerce 1999) (suspension of antidumping investigation and entry of suspension
agreement) (Public Administrative Record Document (“P.R. Doc.”) No. 295) (“Notice of
Suspension” or “Agreement”).2 That investigation was initiated at the behest of, among others, the
plaintiff domestic steel producers here (“Domestic Producers”).3 See Certain Hot-Rolled Flat-Rolled
Carbon-Quality Steel Products From Brazil, Japan, and the Russian Federation, 63 Fed. Reg. 56,607
1
The three Brazilian exporters who are parties to the challenged agreement – Usinas
Siderurgicas de Minas Gerais S/A (“USIMINAS”), Companhia Siderurgica Paulista (“COSIPA”),
and Companhia Siderurgica Nacional (“CSN”) – were among the respondents in the underlying
antidumping investigation, and are Defendant-Intervenors in this action.
2
Adopting the convention used in the parties’ briefs, citations to the Public Administrative
Record are designated “P.R. Doc. No.” followed by the number of the particular record as indicated
under the handwritten “Doc. #” column in the administrative record which the Department of
Commerce filed with the Court.
3
Plaintiffs are Bethlehem Steel Corporation; U.S. Steel Group, a unit of USX Corporation;
Ispat Inland Inc.; LTV Steel Company, Inc.; and National Steel Corporation. Plaintiffs constitute
roughly half of the industry overall, and well over half of the industry that participated in the
underlying investigation. See Antidumping Duty Petition: Certain Hot-Rolled, Carbon Steel Flat
Products from Brazil (Sept. 30, 1998) (Non-Public Administrative Record Document No. 1).
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 3
(Dep’t Commerce 1998) (initiation of antidumping investigations). The Domestic Producers
contend that the July 1999 Suspension Agreement is the product of a high stakes “bait and switch”
maneuver (Tr. at 26),4 and that the Agreement is unlawful.
As the Domestic Producers have observed, a suspension agreement is essentially a unique
form of settlement agreement: a settlement agreement to which the complainant – that is, the
domestic industry – is not a signatory. Tr. at 4; see also 125 Cong. Rec. 20,168 (1979).5 While
Congress has authorized Commerce to enter into suspension agreements, Congress has emphasized
the limited circumstances in which such agreements are appropriate, and has established rigorous
procedural safeguards to ensure that they are not abused to the detriment of domestic interests.6
The law on suspension agreements requires, among other things, that Commerce afford the
domestic industry the opportunity to review and comment on any proposed agreement. 19 U.S.C.
§ 1673c(e)(1994). But the Domestic Producers note that the Proposed Agreement that Commerce
proffered for review and comment in this case was materially different from the final Suspension
Agreement that Commerce executed. See Proposed Agreement Suspending the Antidumping
Investigation on Hot-Rolled Flat-Rolled Carbon-Quality Steel from Brazil (June 6, 1999) (P.R. Doc.
No. 267) (“Proposed Agreement”).
4
Transcript of oral argument on Plaintiffs’ Motion for Judgment on the Agency Record (cited
as “Tr. at ___”).
5
In a colloquy immediately preceding the Senate vote on the Trade Agreements Act of 1979,
Senator Heinz observed: “When the committee discussed this concept [of suspension agreements]
there was some suggestion that it was analogous to settling a case out of court . . . In fact there is
a major difference. In a suit any settlement is between plaintiff and defendant. In this bill any
settlement is effectively between defendant and judge, a very different relationship, especially when
the judge is not always neutral.” 125 Cong. Rec. 20,168 (1979).
6
See section I.A, infra.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 4
The Domestic Producers argue that Commerce’s “bait and switch” of agreements failed to
satisfy its notice, comment and consultation obligations under the applicable law. The Domestic
Producers further assert that, under the facts of this case, Commerce cannot make the substantive
determinations required to justify the Suspension Agreement.7
Pending before the Court is Plaintiffs’ Motion for Judgment on the Agency Record (filed
under USCIT Rule 56.2), in which the Domestic Producers request that the Court declare the
Suspension Agreement null and void, and instruct Commerce to enter an antidumping duty order on
the subject merchandise. Plaintiffs’ motion is opposed by Defendant, the United States (“the
Government”), as well as the Brazilian Exporters, who argue that Commerce’s determination to
suspend the antidumping investigation should be sustained in all respects.8
Plaintiff’s motion is granted in part. For the reasons discussed below, this case is remanded
to the Department of Commerce to enable it to comply with the notice, comment and consultation
requirements of the statute (19 U.S.C. § 1673c(e) ), to enable it to articulate a legal standard for
making its public interest determination or otherwise explain the connection between the facts found
and the choice made pursuant to the statute (19 U.S.C. § 1673c(d)(1)), and – if appropriate (i.e., in
the case of a subsection (c) agreement, which requires a finding by Commerce that the investigation
7
Specifically, the Domestic Producers contend that the Agreement does not comply with the
15% limitation on dumping required of subsection (c) agreements; that effective monitoring of the
Agreement is not practicable; that there are no “extraordinary circumstances” in this case (i.e., that
the Agreement was not more beneficial to the domestic industry than continuation of the
investigation, and that the investigation was not complex); that the Agreement is not in the public
interest; and that the Agreement does not prevent the suppression or undercutting of domestic prices.
8
Two companion cases are also pending before the Court – Court No. 99-08-00525, in which
the Domestic Producers challenge the suspension agreement in a parallel countervailing duty
investigation; and Court No. 99-08-00528, in which the Brazilian Exporters challenge Commerce’s
final affirmative countervailing duty determination.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 5
is “complex”) – to enable it to interpret the phrase “large number” of transactions or adjustments in
the context of the “extraordinary circumstances” requirement of the statute (19 U.S.C. §
1673c(c)(2)(B)(i)).
I. Background
A. The Suspension Agreement Statute
The statutory provisions authorizing suspension agreements in antidumping duty cases were
added to the Tariff Act of 1930 as part of the Trade Agreements Act of 1979 (“the Act”), as a means
of limiting the Government’s discretion to suspend investigations. Although there was no specific
statutory authorization for doing so, it was the practice of the Secretary of the Treasury – prior to
the Act – to discontinue antidumping duty investigations at any time if it was determined that (1)
possible margins of dumping were minimal relative to export volume, price revisions had been made
to eliminate any likelihood of less than fair value (“LTFV”) sales, and there were assurances that
there would be no LTFV sales in the future; (2) sales to the United States had terminated and there
were assurances that they would not resume; or (3) there were other circumstances making it
inappropriate to continue the investigation. H. Rep. No. 96-317 at 67; see also S. Rep. No. 96-249
at 67, reprinted in 1979 U.S.C.C.A.N. 381 at 453 (1979) (briefly summarizing Treasury Department
practice at the time). See generally Letter from Dewey Ballantine to Clerk of Court of International
Trade (March 9, 2001) at 1 (summarizing use of suspension agreements prior to Trade Agreements
Act).
The suspension agreement provisions were adopted to impose “strict limits on discontinuing
or suspending investigations pursuant to deals with foreign governments or producers.” 125 Cong.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 6
Rec. 20,163 (1979).9 The provisions were intended to make “major changes in . . . [the then-
existing] law and practice concerning the suspension of an investigation based on exporter
agreements” by, inter alia, replacing certain general, subjective criteria then in use (e.g., “minimal”
dumping margins) with “specific criteria and requirements”; eliminating the Secretary’s “unfettered
discretion” to terminate investigations; and “improv[ing] the procedural safeguards . . . by providing
increased participation by the petitioner.” H. Rep. No. 96-317 at 63, 67.
With the Trade Agreements Act, Congress expressly authorized Commerce to suspend an
antidumping duty investigation in certain circumstances where foreign exporters of the merchandise
agree to take remedial action. 19 U.S.C. §§ 1673c(b)-(m) (1994). In doing so, Congress recognized
the potential advantages of suspension agreements, as a “means of achieving the remedial purposes
of the [antidumping] law in as short a time as possible and with a minimum expenditure of resources
by all parties involved.” H. Rep. No. 96-317 at 63. Accord, S. Rep. No. 96-249 at 71 (suspension
agreements “permit rapid and pragmatic resolutions of antidumping duty cases”).10
9
Legislative history is particularly instructive where, as here, Congress considered the statute
at issue as “fast track” legislation. As a general rule, the “plain meaning” doctrine of statutory
construction and its corollaries constrain resort to extrinsic aids (such as committee reports and
remarks during floor debates), on the theory that the language of the statute as adopted expresses all
that Congress intended to say on the subject (though – even then – a widely accepted exception to
the doctrine allows recourse to extrinsic aids to confirm or elucidate a statute’s language). See 2A
Norman J. Singer, Sutherland on Statutes and Statutory Construction §§ 46:03, 48:01 (6th ed. 2000).
But that logic has little force where “fast track” legislation is concerned. “Fast track” is a procedural
device (now known as “trade promotion authority”) which shields trade legislation from amendment
once the bill has been formally introduced in Congress. Because legislators are precluded from
amending the language of a “fast track” statute to clarify and amplify its meaning, its legislative
history is entitled to special weight.
10
See also H. Rep. No. 96-317 at 65 (advantages of suspension agreements under 19 U.S.C.
§1673c(c) include “the expenses saved because of prompt settlement of a case”); Statements of
Administrative Action for Trade Agreements Act of 1979, H.R. Doc. No. 96-153, Part II at 420,
reprinted in 1979 U.S.C.C.A.N. 665 at 689 (suspension agreements under 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(c) have
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 7
But Congress was equally mindful of the potential for abuse of suspension agreements. To
ensure that such agreements are not entered into to the disadvantage of a petitioning domestic
industry (for foreign policy or other political reasons), the statute is replete with stringent
requirements that must be met before an agreement can be concluded. Congress emphasized that
“the authority to suspend investigations [is to] be exercised within the carefully circumscribed
limits” set forth in the law. H. Rep. 96-317 at 63; see also S. Rep. No. 96-249 at 71 (to ensure that
suspension agreements are used only in those cases where they “serve[ ] the interest of the public and
the domestic industry affected,” agency authority to suspend investigations is “narrowly
circumscribed”); 125 Cong. Rec. 20,168-69 (Senator Heinz’s understanding that suspension
agreements permitted only “under certain narrowly constrained circumstances” confirmed by bill
managers Senators Ribicoff and Roth). Congress further cautioned that “suspension is an unusual
action which should not become the normal means for disposing of [antidumping] cases.” S. Rep.
No. 96-249 at 71.
There are two distinct types of suspension agreements, both of which are relevant here – so-
called “subsection (b) agreements” and “subsection (c) agreements.”11 Subsection (b) agreements
eliminate all sales at less than fair value. Under such agreements, exporters must agree either to
cease all exports, or to revise their prices to eliminate completely LTFV sales. 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(b).
“the value of settling the case quickly. . .”).
11
Suspension agreements with non-market economy producers are governed by 19 U.S.C.
§ 1673c(1) (1994), and must (1) be in the public interest, (2) be susceptible to effective monitoring,
and (3) prevent suppression or undercutting of price levels. Such an agreement was the subject of
U.S. Steel v. United States, ____ CIT ____, 123 F. Supp.2d 1365 (2000).
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 8
In contrast, subsection (c) agreements do not completely eliminate dumping; rather, they eliminate
only its injurious effect. 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(c).
Prior to accepting either a subsection (b) or (c) agreement, Commerce must find both that
“suspension of the investigation is in the public interest,” and that “effective monitoring of the
agreement by the United States is practicable.” 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(d). Commerce is also required
to notify petitioners of, and consult with them concerning, its intention to suspend the investigation.
In addition, Commerce must provide petitioners with a copy of the proposed agreement, and accord
them an opportunity to comment. 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(e).
But there are additional requirements for subsection (c) agreements. Because such
agreements, by definition, may permit exporters to continue to engage in a certain amount of
dumping, Congress restricted subsection (c) agreements to cases involving “extraordinary
circumstances” – cases where the suspension of the investigation is more beneficial to the domestic
industry than its continuation, and where the investigation is “complex.” See S. Rep. No. 96-249
at 68 (discussing the extraordinary circumstances requirement set out in19 U.S.C. § 1673c(c)(2)).
Moreover, subsection (c) agreements must limit the margin by which normal value exceeds the
export price, and prevent the suppression or undercutting of price levels of domestic products by
imports. 19 U.S.C. § 1673(c)(1).
As Congress intended, Commerce has invoked the suspension agreement provisions of the
trade laws relatively infrequently – at least until recently. Notably, prior to the suspension of the
investigation at issue here, Commerce had accepted only two other subsection (c) agreements in
antidumping cases. See Potassium Chloride from Canada, 53 Fed. Reg. 1393 (Dep’t Commerce
1988) (suspension of antidumping investigation and entry of suspension agreement); Fresh Tomatoes
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 9
from Mexico, 61 Fed. Reg. 56618 (Dep’t Commerce 1996) (suspension of antidumping investigation
and entry of agreement).
B. The Facts of This Case
On September 30, 1998, the Domestic Producers who are plaintiffs here – among others12
– petitioned Commerce and the International Trade Commission (“ITC”), seeking the imposition
of antidumping duties on certain steel products from Brazil. See Letter from
Dewey/Schagrin/Skadden to Commerce and ITC, and enclosed Petition (Sept. 30, 1998) (P.R. Doc.
No. 1). That same day, the same petitioners filed a parallel petition, seeking the imposition of
countervailing duties on the same products. See Certain Hot-Rolled Flat-Rolled Carbon-Quality
Steel Products from Brazil, 63 Fed. Reg. 56,623 (Dep’t Commerce 1998) (initiation of
countervailing duty investigation) (referring to petition); Certain Hot-Rolled Steel Products From
Brazil, Japan, and Russia, 63 Fed. Reg. 53,926 (ITC 1998) (institution of countervailing duty and
antidumping investigations) (referring to petition).
Both the antidumping and countervailing duty petitions were accepted, and the requested
investigations were initiated on October 15, 1998. See Certain Hot-Rolled Flat-Rolled Carbon-
Quality Steel Products From Brazil, Japan, and the Russian Federation, 63 Fed. Reg. 56,607 (Dep’t
Commerce 1998) (initiation of antidumping investigations); Certain Hot-Rolled Flat-Rolled Carbon-
Quality Steel Products From Brazil, 63 Fed. Reg. 56,623 (Dep’t Commerce 1998) (initiation of
countervailing duty investigation).
12
The original petitioners also included California Steel Industries, Gallatin Steel Company,
Geneva Steel, Gulf States Steel Inc., IPSCO Steel Inc., Steel Dynamics, Weirton Steel Corporation,
the Independent Steelworkers Union, and the United Steelworkers of America.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 10
One month later, the ITC notified Commerce of its preliminary determination, finding in both
investigations that “there [was] a reasonable indication that an industry in the United States [was]
threatened with material injury by reason of imports” of the Brazilian steel. See Certain Hot-Rolled
Steel Products From Brazil, Japan, and Russia, 63 Fed. Reg. 65,221 (ITC 1998) (preliminary injury
determinations in antidumping and countervailing duty investigations).
On February 12, 1999, Commerce made its preliminary determination in the antidumping
duty investigation, finding that the Brazilian steel was being, or was likely to be, sold in the United
States at less than fair value. See Hot-Rolled Flat-Rolled Carbon-Quality Steel Products from Brazil,
64 Fed. Reg. 8,299 (Dep’t Commerce 1999) (P.R. Doc. No. 184). Simultaneously, in the
countervailing duty investigation, Commerce made a preliminary determination that countervailable
subsidies were being provided to the Brazilian Exporters. See Certain Hot-Rolled Flat-Rolled
Carbon-Quality Steel Products From Brazil, 64 Fed. Reg. 8,313 (Dep’t Commerce 1999)
(preliminary determination of sales at LTFV).
On June 6, 1999, literally one month to the day before the deadline for its final
determinations, Commerce sent the Domestic Producers (among others) initialed proposed
agreements to suspend both the antidumping and countervailing duty investigations, and requested
their comments by June 28, 1999. The proposed agreement in the antidumping investigation – the
investigation directly at issue in this case – was a subsection (b) agreement. See Letters from
Commerce to Interested Parties (June 6, 1999) (P.R. Doc. No. 267) (requesting comments on
enclosed Proposed Agreement).
The Domestic Producers filed timely comments, detailing their many objections to the
proposed suspension agreements. See Letter from Dewey/Skadden/Schagrin to Commerce (June 28,
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1999) (P.R. Doc. No. 270); Certain Hot-Rolled Flat-Rolled Carbon-Quality Steel Products From
Brazil, 64 Fed. Reg. 38,797 (Dep’t Commerce 1999) (suspension of countervailing duty
investigation and entry of suspension agreement) (acknowledging petitioners’ comments on
proposed suspension agreement in countervailing duty case).
Nevertheless, on July 6, 1999, the deadline for its final determinations in both the
antidumping and countervailing duty investigations, Commerce entered into final agreements
suspending those investigations. See Hot-Rolled Flat-Rolled Carbon-Quality Steel Products From
Brazil, 64 Fed. Reg. 38,792 (Dep’t Commerce 1999) (suspension of antidumping investigation and
entry of suspension agreement); Certain Hot-Rolled Flat-Rolled Carbon-Quality Steel Products from
Brazil, 64 Fed. Reg. 38,797 (Dep’t Commerce 1999) (suspension of countervailing duty
investigation and entry of suspension agreement).
The final suspension agreement in the antidumping duty investigation was based not on
subsection (b), but on subsection (c).13 That final agreement thus permits a certain amount of
continued dumping – in contrast to the proposed agreement, which would have either required the
complete elimination of dumping, or cut off exports altogether. In short, not only were the
suspension agreements in general an eleventh hour development; there was also a last minute
substitution of a different type of suspension agreement in the antidumping duty case.
Under the terms of the final agreement suspending the antidumping duty investigation (the
agreement at issue here), the Brazilian Exporters are prohibited from exporting the steel at issue to
13
In the course of oral argument, counsel for Plaintiffs advised that the Assistant Secretary
of Commerce called him on July 5, 1999 to inquire whether his clients would consent to a subsection
(c) agreement. Tr. at 8-9. However, there is no record evidence of that conversation or any other
consultation with the Domestic Producers here concerning the subsection (c) agreement. See section
III.A, infra.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 12
the United States for less than the negotiated Reference Price.14 Agreement, Part IV, 64 Fed. Reg.
at 38,794. In addition, the Brazilian Exporters agree to limit dumping to 15% (as required under 19
U.S.C. § 1673c(c)(1)(B)). Agreement, Part IV, at id.
The Agreement obligates the Brazilian Exporters to report certain data concerning U.S. sales,
and includes a “catch-all” requirement that each Brazilian Exporter “supply to [Commerce] 30 days
after the end of each Quarter all information that [Commerce] determines is necessary to ensure that
the [Exporter] is in full compliance with the terms of [the] Agreement.” Agreement, Part V, 64 Fed.
Reg. at 38,794. The Agreement also authorizes Commerce to share business propriety information
obtained from the Brazilian Exporters with the domestic parties to the underlying antidumping duty
investigation, under appropriate administrative protective orders. Agreement, Part VI, 64 Fed. Reg.
at 38,794.
The monitoring provisions of the Agreement provide that Commerce is to ensure compliance
with the Agreement by reviewing, inter alia, “publicly-available data and other official import data,
including, as appropriate, records maintained by the U.S. Customs Service.” Agreement, Part VII,
64 Fed. Reg. at 38,794. In addition, Commerce is authorized to require any Brazilian Exporter to
provide documentation to confirm that the price received on any sale was not less than the
established Reference Price. The Agreement also permits Commerce to obtain from each Brazilian
14
For example, the Reference Price varies product-by-product, and was fixed for the fourth
quarter of 1999 at $327/metric ton for the most basic type of untreated hot-rolled steel (“Category
One” steel). Under the Agreement, Reference Prices are adjusted on the last day of each quarter.
For Category One steel, the Reference Price must be the higher of the average U.S. market price for
that quarter (less six percent), or $327. The prices for other categories of steel are adjusted
accordingly. Agreement, Part IV, 64 Fed. Reg. at 38,794. The Agreement precludes the Brazilian
Exporters from exporting to the United States any steel products for which Reference Prices have
not been established, and sets forth a procedure for including such additional products under the
Agreement. Id.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 13
Exporter a report of each sale of steel subject to the Agreement (including each adjustment
applicable to each sale). Finally, the Brazilian Exporters consent to permit “review and on-site
inspection of all information deemed necessary” by Commerce to verify the reported information.
Agreement, Part VII, 64 Fed. Reg. at 38,794.
The Agreement further provides that Commerce may conduct administrative reviews (upon
request or at its own initiative), and includes certain provisions designed to ensure that the
Agreement is not circumvented. Agreement, Parts VIII, IX, 64 Fed. Reg. at 38,794-95.
In the event of suspected noncompliance or violation of the Agreement, Commerce is
authorized to request that the subject Brazilian Exporter provide “all information relating to the
allegation, including all sales information pertaining to covered and non-covered merchandise [that
the Exporter has] manufactured or sold.” Agreement, Part X, 64 Fed. Reg. at 38,795. Any party to
the underlying antidumping duty investigation may then submit comments on that information. Id.
If Commerce determines that the Agreement is being or has been violated or no longer meets the
relevant requirements of the suspension agreement statute, the Agreement provides that Commerce
“shall take whatever action it deems appropriate” under the relevant provision of the suspension
agreement statute (i.e., 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(i) ) and the applicable regulations. Agreement, Part XI,
64 Fed. Reg. at 38,795.15
Concurrent with its execution of the suspension agreements in the parallel antidumping duty
and countervailing duty proceedings, Commerce separately circulated three decision memoranda
15
Commerce’s regulations provide that, in a case such as this, if Commerce finds that the
suspension agreement has been violated, it will immediately order suspension of liquidation and
issue an antidumping duty order. Commerce must then require immediate posting of estimated duty
deposits for all future entries and publish a notice of cancellation of the suspension agreement. See
generally 19 C.F.R. § 351.209(b) (2000).
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 14
setting forth the bases for the determinations supporting its decision to suspend the two
investigations. See Memoranda from ITA Office of Policy to Ass’t Sec. for Import Administration
(July 6, 1999) (P.R. Doc. Nos. 281, 282, and 283) (addressing, respectively, the prevention of price
suppression and undercutting, the existence of extraordinary circumstances, and the public interest).16
That same day, Commerce also issued final affirmative determinations in both the
antidumping duty investigation and the countervailing duty investigation. See Certain Hot-Rolled
Flat-Rolled Carbon-Quality Steel Products From Brazil, 64 Fed. Reg. 38,756 (Dep’t Commerce
1999) (final determination of sales at LTFV); Certain Hot-Rolled Flat-Rolled Carbon-Quality Steel
Products From Brazil, 64 Fed. Reg. 38,742 (Dep’t Commerce 1999) (final affirmative countervailing
duty determination). Both investigations were continued, notwithstanding the suspension
agreements, pursuant to the request of petitioners in the underlying proceedings. See Letter from
Skadden/Dewey/Schagrin to Commerce and ITC (July 2, 1999) (P.R. Doc. No. 271) at 1.
Commerce found the final dumping margins for CSN, USIMINAS/COSIPA, and all others to be
41.27%, 43.40%, and 42.12%, respectively. Similarly, the net subsidy rates for CSN,
USIMINAS/COSIPA, and all others were determined to be 6.35%, 9.67%, and 7.81%, respectively.
The ITC’s final determinations – issued August 24, 1999 – confirmed its affirmative
preliminary findings on material injury in both the antidumping duty and countervailing duty cases.
See Certain Hot-Rolled Steel Products From Brazil and Russia, 64 Fed. Reg. 46,951 (ITC 1999)
(final injury determinations in antidumping and countervailing duty investigations).
16
The “Extraordinary Circumstances Memo” and the “Public Interest Memo” were issued in
support of both suspension agreements; in contrast, the “Price Suppression Memo” relates only to
the antidumping suspension agreement.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 15
II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
Jurisdiction in this matter is predicated on 28 U.S.C. § 1581(c) (1994). Commerce’s decision
to suspend the antidumping duty investigation at issue is reviewable pursuant to 19 U.S.C. §
1516a(a)(2)(B)(iv) (1994), and must be sustained 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) (1994).
“Substantial evidence” is “something less than the weight of the evidence.” Consolo v.
Federal Maritime Comm’n, 383 U.S. 607, 620 (1966). Moreover, the possibility of drawing two
inconsistent conclusions from the same evidence does not mean that substantial evidence is lacking.
Id. In other words, Commerce’s determination cannot be overturned merely because the plaintiff
“is able to produce evidence . . . in support of its own contentions and in opposition to the evidence
supporting the agency’s determination.” Torrington Co. v. United States, 14 CIT 507, 514, 745 F.
Supp. 718, 723 (1990) (internal quotation omitted), aff’d, 938 F.2d 1276 (Fed. Cir. 1991).
Nevertheless, Commerce’s decision must be supported by “such relevant evidence as a
reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” Consolidated Edison v. NLRB,
305 U.S. 197, 229 (1938); accord, Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. United States, 750 F.2d 927, 933
(Fed. Cir. 1984). Its determination must be supported by the record as a whole, including whatever
fairly detracts from the substantiality of the evidence. Tianjin Mach. Imp. & Exp. Corp. v. United
States, 16 CIT 1020, 1023 (1992) (citing Atlantic Sugar, Ltd. v. United States, 744 F.2d 1556, 1561
(Fed. Cir. 1984) ). Commerce’s conclusions must be “reached by ‘reasoned decisionmaking,’
including an examination of the relevant data and a reasoned explanation supported by a stated
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 16
connection between the facts found and the choice made.” Electricity Consumers Resource Council
v. Federal Energy Regulatory Comm’n, 747 F.2d 1511, 1513 (D.C. Cir. 1984), citing Burlington
Truck Lines, Inc. v. United States, 371 U.S. 156, 168 (1962).
In determining whether Commerce’s interpretation and application of the antidumping statute
is “in accordance with law,” “[f]irst, always, is the question whether Congress has directly spoken
to the precise question at issue. If the intent of Congress is clear, that is the end of the matter; for
the court, as well as the agency, must give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of
Congress.” Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, 467 U.S. 837, 842-43
(1984).
If the statute is silent or ambiguous, the degree of respect accorded an agency’s interpretation
depends on whether that interpretation is the product of a process that gives it “the force of law” –
for example, a formal adjudication or notice-and-comment rulemaking. See Christensen v. Harris
County, 120 S. Ct. 1655, 1662 (2000). If it is, the court must accord Chevron deference, and uphold
any reasonable agency interpretation. Id.; see also Chevron, 467 U.S. at 842-43.
In contrast, agency “[i]nterpretations . . . in opinion letters – like interpretations contained
in policy statements, agency manuals, and enforcement guidelines, all of which lack the force of law
– do not warrant Chevron-style deference.” Christensen, 120 S. Ct. at 1662. Agency interpretations
which lack the force of law are “entitled to respect . . . but only to the extent that those interpretations
have the ‘power to persuade’.” Id. at 1663, citing Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 323 U.S. 134, 140
(1944).
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 17
III. Discussion
A. Notice, Comment and Consultation
The Domestic Producers here argue that Commerce failed to comply with the notice,
comment and consultation requirements of the suspension agreement statute because they were
denied a meaningful opportunity to submit comments and information for the record prior to the
suspension of the antidumping investigation. In essence, the Domestic Producers contend that
affording them an opportunity to comment on a proposed subsection (b) agreement cannot satisfy
the notice and comment obligations as to the subsection (c) agreement that Commerce and the
Brazilian Exporters executed. Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Plaintiffs’ Rule
56.2 Motion for Judgment Upon the Agency Record (“Plaintiffs’ Memo”) at 24-26.
The notice, comment and consultation provisions of the statute require that, before entering
into a suspension agreement, Commerce must:
(1) notify the petitioner of, and consult with the petitioner concerning, its intention
to suspend the investigation . . . not less than 30 days before the date on which it
suspends the investigation.
(2) provide a copy of the proposed agreement to the petitioner . . . together with an
explanation of how the agreement will be carried out and enforced, and of how the
agreement will meet the requirements of subsections (b) and (d) or (c) and (d) of [the
statute], and
(3) permit all interested parties . . . to submit comments and information for the
record before the date on which notice of suspension of the investigation is published
....
19 U.S.C. § 1673c(e). The legislative history of the statute highlights the importance of those
provisions, emphasizing that “the requirement that the petitioner be consulted will not be met by pro
forma communications. Complete disclosure and discussion is required.” S. Rep. No. 96-249 at 71.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 18
The Government argues that the procedure that Commerce followed complied fully with the
letter of the law: Commerce provided the petitioners below with a copy of the proposed agreement;
Commerce afforded the petitioners an opportunity to comment on that proposed agreement; and
Commerce responded directly to the petitioners’ comments on the proposed agreement – albeit by
executing a subsection (c) agreement in place of the subsection (b) agreement that Commerce had
proposed. Defendant’s Response in Opposition to Plaintiffs’ Motion for Judgment Upon the Agency
Record (“Defendant’s Memo”) at 55-57. See also Defendant-Intervenors’ Memorandum of Points
and Authorities (“Defendant-Intervenors’ Memo”) at 42-44 (asserting that “[t]he notice and
comment provisions, in short, worked: they caused the Department to alter the basis of the
agreement to accommodate Petitioners’ concerns”).
The Government maintains that Commerce “is not required to afford interested parties an
unlimited opportunity to comment on each modification of the agency’s practice or procedure.”
Defendant’s Memo at 57, citing British Steel, PLC v. United States, 19 CIT 176, 255, 879 F. Supp.
1254, 1317 (1995), aff’d in part, rev’d on other grounds, 174 F.3d 1359 (Fed. Cir. 1999).17 True
enough. But, in this case, the Domestic Producers had no opportunity to comment on several of the
17
Citing British Steel and invoking the specter of “an unending cycle of notices, comments,
and responses,” the Government asserts that “the additional procedure advocated by [the Domestic
Producers] (whereby Commerce must re-submit agreements for comment whenever re-negotiation
occurs) defeats finality.” Defendant’s Memo at 57. But the Government greatly overstates the
Domestic Producers’ point. See Plaintiffs’ Reply Brief (“Reply Memo”) at 27 (acknowledging that
there is no requirement to consult “on each and every modification to a proposed suspension
agreement”). In any event, in a case as clear as this one, there is no need to draw the line as to
precisely when a renegotiated agreement must be resubmitted for comment. Wherever that line
might be, in this case it was crossed. Given the significant differences between the requirements for
the two types of agreements, the statute requires that petitioners be afforded notice and an
opportunity to comment whenever a subsection (c) agreement is substituted for a proposed
subsection (b) agreement. To hold otherwise would render the notice, comment and consultation
requirements an empty formality.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 19
most important aspects of the Agreement that Commerce actually executed – a subsection (c)
agreement.
As outlined in section I.A above, the requirements for subsection (b) agreements differ from
those for subsection (c) agreements. In addition to the requirements applicable to both (b) and (c)
agreements – i.e., the requirements that an agreement be in the public interest and able to be
effectively monitored, a subsection (b) agreement requires only that the agreement provide either for
the complete cessation of exports of the subject merchandise or the total elimination of dumping.
19 U.S.C. § 1673c(b).
In contrast, because such agreements may permit a limited amount of dumping to continue,
the requirements for subsection (c) agreements are more stringent. Specifically, a subsection (c)
agreement requires not only the complete elimination of the injurious effects of dumping, the
prevention of suppression or undercutting of domestic price levels, and a 15% dumping limitation,
but also the presence of “extraordinary circumstances” (which are, in turn, defined as circumstances
where the investigation is complex and where suspension of the investigation will be more beneficial
to the domestic industry than its continuation). 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(c). Because the proposed
agreement offered to the Domestic Producers for comment was a subsection (b) agreement, they had
no opportunity to comment on those requirements which are unique to subsection (c) agreements.
Indeed, even as to those requirements which are common to both subsection (b) and (c)
agreements – i.e., the §1673c(d) conditions (1) that suspension of the investigation be in the public
interest, and (2) that effective monitoring be practicable – a petitioner’s analysis might differ,
depending on the type of agreement. It is thus impossible to say, even as to those factors, that the
Domestic Producers here had adequate notice and opportunity to comment.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 20
Similarly, the statute mandates that Commerce explain to petitioners how a proposed
agreement will meet the requirements of either subsections (b) and (d) or subsections (c) and (d),
prior to suspending an investigation. 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(e). Because the Proposed Agreement here
was a subsection (b) agreement, the explanation accompanying it addressed only the requirements
of subsections (b) and (d). See Letters from Commerce to Interested Parties (June 6, 1999) (P.R.
Doc. No. 267) (requesting comments on enclosed Proposed Agreement). Commerce made no
attempt to explain to the Domestic Producers how the Agreement would meet the requirements of
subsection (c) until after it had suspended the investigation. See Notice of Suspension, 64 Fed. Reg.
at 38,793 (citing Extraordinary Circumstances Memo and Price Suppression Memo).
Moreover, Commerce’s explanation as to how the Proposed Agreement would satisfy the
requirements of subsection (d) was rendered moot when Commerce decided to enter into a
fundamentally different suspension agreement – the subsection (c) Agreement. Again, Commerce
offered its first explanation of the application of subsection (d) to that subsection (c) Agreement only
after the investigation was suspended. See Notice of Suspension, 64 Fed. Reg. at 38,793 (citing
Price Suppression Memo). In short, Commerce defaulted on its obligation to explain to the
Domestic Producers – in advance – how the Agreement meets the applicable requirements of the
statute.18
18
As discussed above, the statute imposes on Commerce three notice, comment and
consultation requirements. In addition to (i) affording petitioners notice of and an opportunity to
comment on a proposed suspension agreement and (ii) explaining to petitioners “how the agreement
will be carried out and enforced, and . . . how the agreement will meet [the applicable requirements
of the statute],” Commerce also must (iii) “consult” with petitioners “concerning [ ] its intention to
suspend the investigation.” 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(e). The nature, scope and extent of the required
consultation is not clear; but, in any event, the Domestic Producers have not separately challenged
Commerce’s compliance with that requirement here.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 21
In essence, Commerce’s actions in this case “stacked the deck.” Judicial review is limited
to the administrative record; but, here, that record was compiled selectively. Commerce effectively
deprived the Domestic Producers of any opportunity for meaningful comment on any agreement
which remotely resembled the suspension agreement that Commerce actually signed19 – and thus
limited the very record on which Commerce now seeks to stand.
As a result of Commerce’s failure to comply with the notice, comment and consultation
requirements of 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(e), the existing record in this matter cannot serve as the basis for
a “substantial evidence” review of Commerce’s factual findings. Even as to the legal issues
presented, the considerations of judicial economy and deference to agency autonomy and expertise
that undergird the related doctrines of exhaustion and ripeness counsel remand here.20
19
The Government and the Brazilian Exporters emphasize various statements on the record,
such as Commerce’s assertion that it “consulted extensively with domestic producers and unions,
explaining what the agreements will do, how they will work, and how they will be enforced” –
statements which they contend must be presumed to be the truth. See generally Defendant-
Intervenors’ Memo at 44-45; Tr. at 49-52, 96-97. But reliance on such conclusory assertions is
misplaced where, as here, they are contravened by the record.
The record speaks for itself – and, as discussed above, it is essentially barren of any evidence
of consultation concerning a subsection (c) agreement. The only record evidence to that effect is a
letter from a group of petitioners who did not appear in this forum (i.e., the steel companies
identified in footnote 21 above), indicating that “this agreement [apparently the subsection (c)
agreement] remedies the problems with the June 6 proposed agreement as addressed in our
comments filed on June 26th.” See Letter from Schagrin Associates to Commerce (July 6, 1999)
(P.R. Doc. No. 272). Even if some petitioners below had notice of and an opportunity to comment
on the subsection (c) agreement at some point prior to its execution (as the letter seems to suggest),
there is no record evidence to indicate that Commerce accorded the Domestic Producers who are
plaintiffs here the same opportunity. See generally Tr. at 86-87, 94.
20
There is an inherent irony in relying on the doctrine of exhaustion in cases where, as here,
the actions of the agency itself effectively deprived parties of the opportunity to avail themselves of
their administrative remedies.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 22
Remand will allow all parties to fully exhaust their administrative remedies, and will afford
Commerce the opportunity to consider the Domestic Producers’ comments, find facts, apply its
expertise to the record, and explain the bases for its action. Remand also will protect agency
autonomy, and allow Commerce to exercise the discretion granted it by Congress. Finally, by
affording Commerce an opportunity to correct any errors it may have made, remand conceivably may
obviate entirely the need for further judicial review. See generally 2 K. Davis & R. Pierce, Jr.,
Administrative Law Treatise §§ 15.2 (citing McKart v. United States, 395 U.S. 185, 193-95 (1969)),
15.12 (3d ed. 1994).
Accordingly, for the reasons set forth and discussed above, and more fully below, this case
must be remanded to allow Commerce to develop a complete record in accordance with the
mandates of the statute and to reconsider its action.
B. The 15% Dumping Limitation
While the suspension agreement statute expressly contemplates that subsection (c)
agreements may permit some dumping to continue, that dumping cannot exceed 15% of the weighted
average amount by which the home market price (or cost) exceeded the U.S. market price for the
goods. Specifically, the statute requires that:
for each entry of each exporter the amount by which the estimated normal value
exceeds the export price . . . will not exceed 15 percent of the weighted average
amount by which the estimated normal value exceeded the export price . . . for all
less-than-fair-value entries of the exporter examination [sic; examined] during the
course of the investigation.
19 U.S.C. § 1673c(c)(1)(B). The Domestic Producers contend that the Agreement fails to comply
with the 15% limit because – to effectively enforce that limitation – Commerce must obtain and
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 23
verify information that permits it to determine normal value, so that normal value can be compared
to prices in the United States. However, the Agreement says nothing about the reporting or
systematic collection of Brazilian market price and cost data – the components of normal value.21
Plaintiffs’ Memo at 9-11; Reply Memo at 7-9, 13-14.
The Brazilian Exporters contend that the Agreement on its face complies with the 15% limit,
emphasizing that it not only invokes, but indeed mirrors, the exact wording of the statute:
In order to satisfy the requirements of section 734(c)(1)(B) of the Act, each Signatory
agrees that, for each entry of Hot-Rolled Steel subject to this Agreement, the amount
by which the estimated normal value exceeds the export price (or the constructed
export price) will not exceed 15 per cent of the weighted average amount by which
the estimated normal value exceeded the export price (or the constructed export
price) for all less-than-fair-value entries of the Signatory examined during the
investigation.
Agreement, Part IV.E, 64 Fed. Reg. at 38,794. Defendant-Intervenors’ Memo at 35. See also
Defendant’s Memo at 34.
Moreover, while the Government concedes that the Agreement does not specifically provide
for the reporting and collection of Brazilian price and cost data, it points to something that it claims
is even better: a catch-all provision requiring the Brazilian Exporters to provide “all information that
the Department determines is necessary to ensure that [each signatory] is in full compliance.”
Defendant’s Memo at 28-32 (citing Agreement, Part V.A, 64 Fed. Reg. at 38, 794).
The Domestic Producers argue that the catch-all reporting provision is insufficient to satisfy
the statute, because Commerce may never require the Brazilian Exporters to provide the necessary
information. Reply Memo at 9-12. And the Domestic Producers take no comfort in their ability to
21
The Domestic Producers note that the only two mandatory reporting requirements in the
Agreement instead address the collection of data concerning sales in the United States. Plaintiffs’
Memo at 10-11 (citing Agreement, Part V, 64 Fed. Reg. at 38,794).
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 24
enforce the 15% limit by requesting an administrative review, which is – they note – cumbersome
and expensive. In any event, they assert, it is the responsibility of Commerce in the first instance to
ensure compliance with the 15% limit. Reply Memo at 13. For similar reasons, they contend that
it is not enough that the Brazilian Exporters have committed in the Agreement to comply with the
15% limit. According to the Domestic Producers, Commerce’s reliance on that commitment
amounts to an impermissible delegation of the agency’s duty to establish compliance with the
mandates of the statute. Reply Memo at 12-13.
The Domestic Producers assert that Commerce does not ordinarily leave compliance with
pricing requirements unenforced. Plaintiffs’ Memo at 11. Indeed, they note, the Proposed
Agreement required that the Brazilian Exporters provide detailed home market information to permit
Commerce to satisfy itself that dumping would be eliminated (as required for a subsection (b)
agreement). Plaintiffs’ Memo at 11; Proposed Agreement, Part V.
The crux of the problem here is that, while the Domestic Producers had notice of and an
opportunity to comment on the Proposed Agreement’s provisions for reporting and collection of data
to verify the elimination of dumping, they had no such notice or opportunity as to the provisions for
verifying compliance with the 15% dumping limit, because that limit applies only to subsection (c)
agreements.
Although the issue of the 15% limit has now been fully briefed before the Court, the Court
is obligated to decide the case on the basis of the administrative record – a record which is presently
defective. As discussed in section III.A above, the case must be remanded to Commerce for further
proceedings. On remand, assuming that Commerce issues a subsection (c) agreement for comment,
the Domestic Producers will have the opportunity to make their case on the 15% limit directly to
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 25
Commerce, and Commerce will have the benefit of the Domestic Producers’ comments on the
administrative record in making its findings.
C. The Practicability of Effective Monitoring
The statute permits suspension agreements only where “effective monitoring of the
agreement by the United States is practicable.” 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(d)(2). The statute’s legislative
history underscores the importance of effective monitoring provisions:
The committee intends that no agreement be accepted unless it can be effectively
monitored by the United States. This will require establishment of procedures under
which entries of merchandise covered by an agreement can be reviewed by the
authority and by interested parties. Adequate staff and resources must be allocated
for monitoring to insure that relief under the agreement occurs.
S. Rep. No. 96-249 at 71 (1979), reprinted in 1979 U.S.C.C.A.N. 381, 457.
The four relevant monitoring provisions appear in Part VII of the Agreement. Under the first,
Commerce is to monitor entries covered by the agreement utilizing, among other means, official
import data and records to determine whether there have been imports that are inconsistent with the
agreement. Second, Commerce is authorized to require – and the Brazilian Exporters have agreed
to provide – confirmation that the price on any sale covered by the Agreement is not less than the
established reference price. Third, Commerce is authorized to require – and the Brazilian Exporters
have agreed to provide – information concerning each sale on computer disk, including each
adjustment applicable to each sale. Finally, the Brazilian Exporters have agreed to permit onsite
inspection of all information for purposes of verification, as Commerce deems necessary.
Agreement, Part VII, 64 Fed. Reg. at 38,794.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 26
The Domestic Producers mount two attacks on the monitoring provisions of the Agreement.
Their first challenge generally echoes their arguments concerning the Agreement’s provisions
concerning the 15% limitation on dumping, outlined in section III.B above. Specifically, the
Domestic Producers argue that, in the absence of specific provisions requiring the reporting of
Brazilian cost and price data, it is impossible for Commerce to monitor compliance with the 15%
limit on dumping. Plaintiffs’ Memo at 23. The Domestic Producers also criticize Commerce’s
failure both to define the term “estimated normal value” in the Agreement and to explain how that
value should be calculated. According to the Domestic Producers, the Brazilian Exporters’
“agreement” to comply with the 15% limit is meaningless in the absence of such a definition.
Plaintiffs’ Memo at 23.
The Government defends the decision not to define “estimated normal value” in the
Agreement, emphasizing that the statute does not define the term either. The Government further
contends that, should Commerce determine that it needs normal value data, it is entitled to obtain
that data from the Brazilian Exporters under Part V of the Agreement (which requires the Brazilian
Exporters to provide “all information that the Department determines is necessary” to verify
compliance). Defendant’s Memo at 28-32, 52-53.22
The Domestic Producers’ second attack on the monitoring provisions of the Agreement
targets the provisions for disclosure, comment on and verification of domestic sales prices.
Dissatisfied with Parts VI and VII.B. of the Agreement, which provide that Commerce “may” make
22
The Brazilian Exporters assert that, under PPG Industries, Inc. v. United States, the
monitoring requirements of the statute may be satisfied even in the absence of routine reporting
requirements. See Defendant-Intervenors’ Memo at 41, citing 11 CIT 344, 358, 662 F.Supp. 258,
270 (1987). The Domestic Producers have not responded to that claim.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 27
information available to them, the Domestic Producers assert that “[f]undamental fairness and public
interest” instead require that any Agreement expressly permit their participation in the monitoring
and enforcement process. Plaintiffs’ Memo at 24.
The Government dismisses the Domestic Producers’ argument out of hand, pointing to the
language of the statute, which requires the practicability of “effective monitoring of the agreement
by the United States.” Defendant’s Memo at 53-54 (citing 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(d)(2)) (emphasis in
the original). Moreover, the Government notes, the Domestic Producers are free to enhance their
“participation in the enforcement and monitoring of Brazilian exports” by requesting an
administrative review. Defendant’s Memo at 54 (quoting Plaintiff’s Memo at 24, which actually
refers to “Brazilian exporters”).
Although the requirement for practicable, effective monitoring is common to both types of
suspension agreements, it seems clear that the nature of the monitoring required to ensure
compliance might vary depending on whether the agreement provides for the complete cessation of
exports or the total elimination of dumping (a subsection (b) agreement) or merely the elimination
of its injurious effects (a subsection (c) agreement). Thus, affording the Domestic Producers in this
case the opportunity to review and comment on the monitoring provisions of the proposed subsection
(b) agreement did not obviate the need to give them the same opportunity to review and comment
on the monitoring provisions in any subsection (c) agreement that Commerce decided to consider
as an alternative.23
23
This is an easy case because, as discussed passim, subsection (b) and (c) agreements are
fundamentally different. Accordingly, there is no need here to reach the more difficult question –
If Commerce makes significant changes to the provisions of a proposed agreement but does not
change the type of agreement (i.e., subsection (b) vs. subsection (c) agreement), must Commerce
afford petitioners the opportunity to comment on the revised proposed agreement?
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 28
It may be that the monitoring provisions in the Agreement at issue here – e.g., the parroting
of the 15% limit and the “catch all” provision – are a product of the timing of Commerce’s decision
to substitute a subsection (c) agreement for the proposed subsection (b) agreement, and the absence
of input from the Domestic Producers. The Domestic Producers point out, for example, that the
proposed subsection (b) agreement required the Brazilian Exporters to provide detailed home market
information to permit Commerce to verify that dumping would be eliminated. Plaintiffs’ Memo at
11; Proposed Agreement, Part V. Indeed, as the Domestic Producers note, Commerce has routinely
included requirements for the systematic reporting of home market sales and cost data in subsection
(b) agreements. Reply Memo at 10.24
Assuming that Commerce on remand does not abandon the concept of using a suspension
agreement in this case, Commerce will have the opportunity – if it wishes – to explore the possibility
of another suspension agreement with different monitoring requirements that may be more
responsive to the Domestic Producers’ concerns. At a minimum, the Domestic Producers will have
an opportunity to make their case on monitoring requirements directly to Commerce, and Commerce
24
Every subsection (b) agreement entered in an antidumping case since 1986 has required
quarterly reports of both sales and cost data necessary to determine normal value. See Erasable
Programmable Read Only Memory Semiconductors From Japan, 51 Fed. Reg. 28,253 (Dep’t
Commerce 1986); Dynamic Random Access Memory Semiconductors of 256 Kilobits and Above
From Japan, 51 Fed. Reg. 28,396 (Dep’t Commerce 1986); Gray Portland Cement and Clinker From
Venezuela, 57 Fed. Reg. 6,706 (Dep’t Commerce 1992); Certain Portable Electric Typewriters From
Singapore, 58 Fed. Reg. 39,786 (Dep’t Commerce 1993); Color Negative Photographic Paper
(CNPP) and Chemical Components Thereof From the Netherlands, 59 Fed. Reg. 43,539 (Dep’t
Commerce 1994); Sodium Azide From Japan, 62 Fed. Reg. 973 (Dep’t Commerce 1997); Certain
Cut-to-Length Carbon Steel Plate From South Africa, 62 Fed. Reg. 61,751 (Dep’t Commerce 1997);
Steel Wire Rod From Venezuela, 63 Fed. Reg. 8,948 (Dep’t Commerce 1998).
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 29
will have to confront the Domestic Producers’ comments and build a proper administrative record
on its interpretation of the monitoring provisions of the statute and their application to the facts of
this case.
D. Extraordinary Circumstances
Subsection (c) agreements are limited to cases involving “extraordinary circumstances” –
that is, “circumstances in which – (i) suspension of an investigation will be more beneficial to the
domestic industry than continuation of the investigation, and (ii) the investigation is complex.” 19
U.S.C. § 1673c(c)(1), (c)(2). The Domestic Producers contest both parts of Commerce’s
determination that extraordinary circumstances are present in this case.
1. Whether the Agreement Is More Beneficial
to the Domestic Industry than Continuation of the Investigation
As a threshold matter, the Domestic Producers contend that allowing any dumping to
continue “means that the Agreement is not more beneficial” to the domestic industry than would be
an antidumping order. Plaintiffs’ Memo at 12 (emphasis in the original). But, as both the
Government and the Brazilian Exporters note, that proposition cannot be squared with the very
existence of subsection (c), which – by definition – contemplates suspension agreements that permit
a limited amount of dumping to continue. Defendant’s Memo at 38-39; Defendant-Intervenors’
Memo at 13-15.
Commerce’s determination in this case that suspension is more beneficial to the domestic
industry than continuation of the investigation rests on its findings that the Agreement provides
greater relief and greater certainty than would an antidumping order. Defendant’s Memo at 35
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 30
(citing Extraordinary Circumstances Memo). In making those findings, Commerce relied solely on
the analysis set out in its Public Interest Memorandum. See Defendant’s Memo at 35 n. 25 (citing
Public Interest Memo).
According to Commerce, the Agreement affords the Domestic Producers greater relief than
an antidumping duty order because it protects them from “future exchange rate-driven surges of
Brazilian hot-rolled steel.” Defendant’s Memo at 35 (citing Public Interest Memo). But the
Domestic Producers dispute the fundamental premise of Commerce’s analysis. The Domestic
Producers maintain that the surges of Brazilian steel are attributable not to exchange rate
fluctuations, but rather to excess production in Brazil and the unavailability of other markets for the
steel. Tr. at 10, 16. In short, the Domestic Producers charge, Commerce purports to have been
trying to solve a problem that does not exist.
Pressed for record evidence that exchange rate fluctuations result in surges of Brazilian steel,
the Government argues that Commerce properly made “logical assumptions and extrapolations”
flowing from petitioners’ comments on the proposed subsection (b) agreement, which referred to
“the sudden decrease in the value of the real that occurred during the first few months of 1999.”
Defendant’s Memo at 36 (citing Letter from Dewey/Skadden/Schagrin to Commerce) (June 28,
1999) (P.R. Doc. No. 270) at 10-12 and Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. United States,750 F.2d 927,
933 (Fed. Cir. 1984)).
But, as the Domestic Producers note, the comment on which Commerce relies does not
suggest that surges in Brazilian steel result from exchange rate fluctuations. Rather, the comment
is a complaint about the exchange rate mechanism in the proposed subsection (b) agreement,
advocating greater flexibility in light of exchange rate fluctuations (particularly the sudden
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 31
devaluation of the Brazilian currency, the real).25 Tr. at 94-95. That is indeed a slender reed on
which to base “assumptions and extrapolations” concerning the causal relationship (if any) between
exchange rate fluctuations and dumping.
“[A]ssumptions and extrapolations” are also the basis for Commerce’s finding that the
Agreement provides greater certainty – i.e., “a set level of relief that would be unavailable pursuant
to an antidumping duty order” – and is thus more beneficial to the domestic industry. Defendant’s
Memo at 36-37 (citing Public Interest Memo). The Government maintains that, under an
antidumping duty order, “the foreign signatories would be free to set their prices below the
prevailing U.S. market price.” Defendant’s Memo at 37. In contrast, under the Agreement, they
have agreed not to sell below reference prices. Defendant’s Memo at 37; Agreement, Part IV, 64
Fed. Reg. at 38,794. See also Defendant-Intervenors’ Memo at 17-20.
But there is a certain unassailable logic to the Domestic Producers’ observation that certainty
is not, in and of itself, a virtue – that is, that certainty is not always better than uncertainty.26 See Tr.
at 14-15. Moreover, any suspension agreement will, by definition, provide certainty. Thus, if mere
certainty suffices to make a suspension agreement “more beneficial” to the domestic industry than
continuation of an investigation, a suspension agreement would be permissible in any antidumping
25
Specifically, petitioners objected to the use of a fixed exchange rate, rather than “a six-
month moving average exchange rate – to take account of the lag between the incurrence of
production costs and sales.” Letter from Dewey/Skadden/Schagrin to Commerce (June 28, 1999)
(P.R. Doc. No. 270) at 10-12. By emphasizing the rapidly fluctuating real/dollar exchange rate,
petitioners were concerned with securing an exchange rate mechanism that would accurately reflect
the Normal Value in dollars, in the event that Commerce finalized a subsection (b) agreement. Id.
at 11.
26
The Domestic Producers also argue that any asserted “certainty” is largely illusory, since
the Brazilian Exporters may terminate the Agreement at any time with only 60 days’ notice. Reply
Memo at 17. See Agreement, Part XIII.B, 64 Fed. Reg. at 38,795.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 32
proceeding. Clearly, that was not the intent of Congress. See S. Rep. No. 96-249 at 71 (“suspension
is an unusual action which should not become the normal means for disposing of cases”).
Subsection (c) agreements, in particular, are reserved for cases involving “extraordinary
circumstances.” 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(c)(2); S. Rep. No. 96-249 at 71 (subsection (c) agreements to be
accepted only “rarely”). In short, Commerce cannot logically rely on a fact that is true with respect
to any investigation as a basis for its determination that a particular case involves extraordinary
circumstances.
The same criticism can be leveled at Commerce’s finding that the Agreement is “more
beneficial” because it provides “a set level of relief” compared to an antidumping duty order. See
Tr. at 14-15 (referring to Public Interest Memo). Commerce’s statement simply proves too much.
It is true as to every antidumping duty order, because duties always are assessed retroactively (and
thus are not “set”). If a “set level of relief” were enough to make a suspension agreement “more
beneficial” than an order, the “more beneficial” test would be read out of the statute, because it
would be met in every antidumping case. Tr. at 14-15.27 As the House Committee on Ways and
Means emphasized:
[T]he [“more beneficial”] provision is not intended to be so general as to be
meaningless. For example, the expenses saved because of prompt settlement of a
case or the certainty of prompt relief may make settlement more beneficial than
continuation of the investigation. However, every suspension of an investigation
results in prompt, certain relief and reduced expenses. The Committee does not
intend that for this reason every agreement be deemed more beneficial to domestic
industry.
H.R. Rep. No. 96-317 at 65 (1979) (emphasis supplied).
27
Similarly, the Domestic Producers point out that all currency exchange rates fluctuate. As
counsel noted, “If the extraordinary circumstances requirement is one that can be met only rarely,
a justification that applies in every single case is not a justification.” Tr. at 21.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 33
Finally, the Domestic Producers condemn as pure post hoc rationalization by counsel the
Government’s assertion that, under an antidumping order, “the foreign signatories would be free to
set their prices below the prevailing U.S. market price.” The Domestic Producers argue that
Commerce itself made no such finding, and that there is nothing in the administrative record which
would support such a finding. Tr. at 15-16 (referring to Defendant’s Memo at 37).
In addition to the benefits alleged by Commerce as bases for its “more beneficial”
determination, the Brazilian Exporters tout certain other asserted benefits to the domestic industry
(see generally Defendant-Intervenors’ Memo at 20-24), which the Domestic Producers basically
dismiss. See generally Reply Memo at 17-18. For example, while the Brazilian Exporters
emphasize that the Agreement limits the types of Brazilian hot-rolled steel products that can be
exported to the United States to those for which reference prices have been fixed, the Domestic
Producers contend that Commerce has “already expanded the coverage of the Agreement to [include]
. . . additional products” and likely will continue to do so “quite possibly at reference prices which
are well below U.S. market levels.” Reply Memo at 17-18 (footnotes omitted). Compare
Defendant-Intervenors’ Memo at 20-22. The Domestic Producers also contend that “there have
been several instances in which the Brazilian signatories appear to have sold hot-rolled products in
the U.S. market at prices below the reference prices stipulated in the Agreement.” Reply Memo at
18.28
Whatever the merits of the Brazilian Exporters’ arguments, it is well-settled law that “[t]he
grounds upon which an administrative order must be judged are those upon which the record
28
The Government objects to the Domestic Producers’ reliance on events that postdate the
Agreement, and thus are not part of the administrative record underlying Commerce’s decision to
suspend the investigation and enter into the Agreement. Tr. at 39-41.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 34
discloses that its action was based.” Securities and Exchange Comm’n v. Chenery Corp., 318 U.S.
80, 87 (1943). Commerce’s “more beneficial” determination therefore could not be sustained on the
basis of asserted benefits on which it did not rely.
In any event, as discussed in section III.A above, the existing administrative record on the
“more beneficial” issue – like the other issues in this case – is insufficient to serve as a basis for
judicial review. The Domestic Producers simply had no opportunity to build a record on the “more
beneficial” requirement. Because the Proposed Agreement was a subsection (b) agreement, the
“more beneficial” requirement was irrelevant; accordingly, the Domestic Producers did not address
it in their comments. And they had no notice of the subsection (c) Agreement, and thus no
opportunity to comment on whether or not it was more beneficial than continuation of the
investigation.
For the reasons set forth in section III.A, this matter is being remanded to remedy
Commerce’s failure to comply with the notice, comment and consultation requirements of the
suspension agreement statute. All parties then will have the opportunity to develop a proper
administrative record.29 For example, assuming that Commerce issues for comment a subsection (c)
29
The Domestic Producers also contend that Commerce’s “extraordinary circumstances”
determination impermissibly relied upon the interaction of the antidumping and countervailing duty
suspension agreements. Plaintiffs’ Memo at 17-18. The Domestic Producers argue that Commerce
must judge whether or not the Agreement here at issue is “more beneficial” to the domestic industry
without regard to the provisions of the suspension agreement in the countervailing duty case,
because the suspension agreement in that case may be modified or terminated independent of the
Agreement here. Plaintiffs’ Memo at 17-18. See generally Tr. at 12-13, 97-98.
The Government’s position on whether, as a legal matter, Commerce is entitled to rely on
the CVD suspension agreement in making its “more beneficial” finding on the Agreement here is
less than crystal clear – as is its position on whether, as a factual matter, Commerce did so in this
case. Defendant’s Memo at 42-44; Tr. at 53-57, 101-04. Cf. Defendant-Intervenors’ Memo at 22-
24. Indeed, the Government conceded in the course of oral argument that it would have been
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 35
agreement, the Domestic Producers may seek to put on the record for Commerce’s consideration any
information they may have concerning the Brazilian Exporters’ compliance to date with the terms
of the existing Agreement. Commerce, for its part, will have ample opportunity to make a proper
factual record, to preclude (or at least minimize) the need to rely on “assumptions and
extrapolations,” and to avoid the risk of being accused of engaging in “post hoc rationalization.”
Commerce also may, if it wishes, adopt – or reject – any or all of the Brazilian Exporters’ analysis
of the existing Agreement’s benefits to the domestic industry. Most importantly, Commerce will
have the opportunity to detail precisely why its agreement is “more beneficial” to the domestic
industry than an antidumping order – even though a substantial majority of the domestic industry
believes that it is not.30
In doing so, Commerce should bear in mind the history and intent of the “more beneficial”
requirement. Subsection (c) agreements are intended for use only in rare cases such as those where
“the value of settling the case quickly or the certainty of prompt relief the settlement provides”
preferable, for the sake of clarity, for Commerce to have prepared separate extraordinary
circumstances memoranda in the two cases. Tr. at 103. On remand, Commerce will have the
opportunity to prepare a separate memorandum for this case.
30
The Government and the Brazilian Exporters emphasize that the Domestic Producers’
opposition to the Agreement is not the unanimous view of the domestic industry. Defendant’s
Memo at 38; Defendant-Intervenors’ Memo at 16-17. As discussed in section III.A above, seven
U.S. Steel producers sent a letter to Commerce on July 6, 1999 – the date that the Agreement was
signed – expressing their views that the Agreement meets the 15% limitation on dumping and will
prevent the suppression or undercutting of domestic price levels. Letter from Schagrin Associates
to Commerce (July 6, 1999) (P.R. Doc. No. 272). However, as the Domestic Producers note, that
letter conspicuously stops well short of stating that the Agreement is more beneficial than would be
an antidumping duty order. Reply Memo at 18-19; Tr. at 17-19.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 36
outweighs the benefits of continuing the investigation. See, e.g., Statements of Administrative
Action for Trade Agreements Act of 1979, H.R. Doc. No. 96-153, Part II at 420 (1979). As the
Domestic Producers note:
A suspension agreement is a tool to be used in lieu of completing an investigation,
without taking the time and resource-consuming burdens of completing an
extraordinarily complex investigation. In this case, the Department had completed
its investigation by the time that it signed the Agreement, and issued its final
determination simultaneously with the Agreement. In fact, the final determination
identified, addressed at length, and resolved all issues. The Department did not use
the suspension agreement in the manner intended by . . . the Administration . . . , or
by the Congress.
Plaintiffs’ Memo at 13.31
Moreover, while it is true that Congress entrusted the “more beneficial” determination to
Commerce,32 and did not expressly accord the domestic industry a veto power,33 any decisionmaker
should be chary of concluding that a particular course of action is in the best interests of an industry
that generally opposes it. As Senator Heinz observed during floor debate on the suspension
agreement statute, “I would find it very difficult to believe a judgment that the domestic industry
31
Commerce emphasizes that the ITC had not yet rendered its final determination when the
Agreement was executed. Defendant’s Memo at 39-40. But, again, Commerce’s argument proves
too much. An affirmative determination from the ITC is a prerequisite to the issuance of an
antidumping duty order. If the fact that a final ITC determination had not yet issued sufficed to make
a suspension agreement “more beneficial” to the domestic industry, the “more beneficial”
requirement would be satisfied in every investigation, and thus every investigation would be a
candidate for a subsection (c) suspension agreement.
32
See Defendant’s Memo at 37 and Defendant-Intervenors’ Memo at 12, citing 19 U.S.C. §
1673c(c)(1) (“If the administering authority determines that extraordinary circumstances are present
. . .”).
33
See generally Tr. 29-30, 58-59, 61-63, 65-66, 84-85, 93-94, 98-99.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 37
would benefit more from a suspension than a completed investigation if that industry had expressed
its opposition to such an action.” 125 Cong. Rec. 20,168 (July 23, 1979).34
2. Whether the Investigation Was Complex
Even if Commerce properly concluded that the Agreement is more beneficial to the domestic
industry than continuation of the investigation, that would not be enough to constitute the
“extraordinary circumstances” required to justify a subsection (c) agreement. Commerce must also
determine that the investigation is “complex.” 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(c)(2)(A)(ii). The Domestic
Producers vigorously dispute that determination in this case.
For purposes of the suspension agreement statute, an investigation is deemed “complex” if
“(i) there are a large number of transactions to be investigated or adjustments to be considered, (ii)
the issues raised are novel, or (iii) the number of firms involved is large.” 19 U.S.C. §
1673c(c)(2)(b). Commerce relied on the first two criteria in determining that the investigation here
at issue was complex. See Extraordinary Circumstances Memo.
34
Indeed, Commerce’s Chief Counsel for Import Administration conceded that the “more
beneficial” requirement presented a “serious obstacle” in another case where industry opposition to
a subsection (c) agreement was anticipated. See Tr. 30, 93-94, referring to Memorandum from
Chief Counsel for Import Administration to Ass’t Sec. for Import Administration, re: “Uranium
Investigation: Legal Options For Settlement,” Investigation A-461-801 (May 7, 1992) at 1, 4 (“The
legislative history of this [“more beneficial”] provision indicates that Congress arguably intended
it to require that the domestic industry consent to this type of agreement”).
Moreover, as discussed in section I.A above, there were only two subsection (c) suspension
agreements in antidumping duty investigations prior to the Agreement in this case – and in both of
those cases, Commerce obtained petitioners’ consent to the agreements. Tr. at 31 (discussing
Potassium Chloride from Canada, 53 Fed. Reg. 1393 (Dep’t Commerce 1988) and Fresh Tomatoes
From Mexico, 61 Fed. Reg. 56,618 (Dep’t Commerce 1996) ).
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 38
All parties agree that the investigation involved numerous transactions and adjustments.
Plaintiffs’ Memo at 15; Defendant’s Memo at 40-41; Defendant-Intervenor’s Memo at 26. However,
the Domestic Producers contend that, in the context of the statute’s “extraordinary circumstances”
requirement, “large” means large relative to other investigations, “i.e., an unusual number which is
so burdensome and which renders the investigation so complex that the domestic industry is better
served by an agreement suspending the investigation.” Plaintiffs’ Memo at 15; Reply Memo at 22.35
The statute itself is silent on this point. While “large” is a relative term, it is unclear whether
it should be interpreted to mean a large number of transactions and adjustments relative to other
antidumping duty investigations generally, or large in relation to other antidumping duty
investigations involving the steel industry, or large in some other way. In light of that ambiguity,
analysis would normally proceed to the second prong of the Chevron/Christensen test, to evaluate
the reasonableness or persuasiveness of Commerce’s interpretation of the phrase “large number.”
However, Commerce here simply asserted that the investigation “involves a large number of
transactions and multiple adjustments.” Extraordinary Circumstances Memo. Absent any
explanation of Commerce’s interpretation of the statute, it would be impossible to determine whether
“the agency has exercised a reasoned discretion, with reasons that do not deviate from or ignore the
35
The Brazilian Exporters argue that the case “involved a total of 211,138 transactions!” and
claim that “[u]nder any definition of the term, 211,138 is a large number,” and that “[e]leven
adjustments, times six responding companies, is a large number of adjustments.” Defendant-
Intervenors’ Memo at 25-28 (footnotes omitted) (emphasis in the original). The Domestic Producers
maintain that “large” is, by definition, a relative term, and that the investigation here was “in fact,
wholly unexceptional in comparison to myriad other antidumping investigations, and particularly
those numerous investigations involving flat-rolled steel, with respect to the number of transactions
investigated or adjustments considered. There is, in short, nothing extraordinary, complex, or
unusual in the number of transactions investigated or adjustments considered in this investigation.”
Plaintiffs’ Memo at 15.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 39
ascertainable legislative intent.” See Greater Boston Television Corp. v. FCC, 444 F.2d 841, 850
(D.C. Cir. 1970).
For the reasons discussed in section III.A above, this entire case is being remanded to allow
the parties to develop a proper administrative record. Assuming that, on remand, Commerce issues
this or some other proposed subsection (c) agreement for comment, the Domestic Producers will be
able to make their case on this criterion directly to the agency (for the first time, since it is unique
to subsection (c) agreements); and Commerce will have the opportunity – with the benefit of the
Domestic Producers’ comments – to explain the rationale for whatever decision it may make.
As an alternative ground for its determination that the investigation here was “complex,”
Commerce found that the investigation involved “novel issues.” Extraordinary Circumstances
Memo. The Government argues that the “affiliation/collapsing analysis” in the investigation was
novel because certain aspects of the analysis must be resolved on a case-by-case basis. Defendant’s
Memo at 41-42. While it may be true that “the unique facts before it required [Commerce] to visit
the issue anew,” it does not follow that the issue is “novel.”36 Id. Every investigation involves
unique facts. Commerce has considered the affiliation/collapsing issue in many other
investigations,37 and it failed to make any findings as to why the investigation at issue in this case
is distinguishable. See Plaintiffs’ Memo at 16.
36
As the Domestic Producers note, “the standard for whether an issue is ‘novel’ cannot be
whether or not the issue involves case-specific factors; otherwise, nearly every issue addressed in
nearly every investigation would be classified as ‘novel.’ ” Reply Memo at 24 (emphasis in the
original).
37
The Government concedes that “[Commerce] has addressed the affiliation and collapsing
issues in the past.” Defendant’s Memo at 41-42. According to the Domestic Producers, “A LEXIS
search of Department determinations discussing affiliation and collapsing found more than 200 and
more than 30 instances, respectively, of discussion of those issues since January 1998.” Plaintiffs’
Memo at 16.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 40
Assuming that a proposed subsection (c) agreement is issued for comment on remand, the
Domestic Producers will have an opportunity for the first time to make a record before the agency
on the novelty of the issues presented in the investigation, and Commerce will have the opportunity
to explain its findings on the matter.
E. The Public Interest
In addition to satisfying all other applicable requirements, a suspension agreement must
serve the public interest as well. 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(d)(1). In its Public Interest Memorandum,
Commerce cited three reasons as bases for its determination that the Agreement in this case is in the
public interest.
First, Commerce found that the Agreement will ensure that Brazilian hot-rolled steel is fairly
traded on the U.S. market. Public Interest Memo. Second, Commerce found that the Agreement will
completely eliminate the injurious effects of such imports on the domestic industry. Public Interest
Memo. Commerce asserted that these first two factors were “[m]ost important[ ],” because they
would permit domestic producers to make investments in new plants and equipment, worker training
and retraining, and research and development that would benefit producers, workers, and the market
as a whole. Id. Finally, Commerce stated that the Agreement will provide greater certainty to all
parties. Specifically, Commerce found that consumers would benefit because they would have
continued access to Brazilian steel at a known level; that domestic producers would benefit from
having a set level of relief over the life of the Agreement; and that importers and consumers would
benefit by not facing the risk and uncertainty associated with retroactive antidumping duty
assessments. Id.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 41
The Domestic Producers dispute each of Commerce’s public interest findings (Reply Memo
at 25-26) and, further, argue that “loopholes and ambiguities” in the Agreement “serve to eviscerate
compliance with and operation of” the trade laws and are not in the public interest. Plaintiffs’ Memo
at 20-22.
Like the requirement for practicable, effective monitoring (discussed in section III.C above),
the public interest requirement is common to both subsection (b) and subsection (c) suspension
agreements. But, again, as with the monitoring requirement, it seems clear that analysis of the public
interest might vary depending on whether the agreement provides for the complete cessation of
exports or the total elimination of dumping (a subsection (b) agreement) or merely the elimination
of its injurious effects (a subsection (c) agreement). Thus, the fact that Commerce afforded the
Domestic Producers here the opportunity to review and comment on the public interest vis-a-vis the
proposed subsection (b) agreement did not relieve it of the obligation to give them the same
opportunity as to the subsection (c) Agreement which it decided to substitute.
Assuming that Commerce on remand does not abandon the concept of a suspension
agreement in this case, Commerce will have the opportunity – if it wishes – to explore the possibility
of another agreement that may be more responsive to the Domestic Producers’ concerns. At a
minimum, the Domestic Producers will have an opportunity to make their case on the public interest
directly to Commerce, and Commerce will have to confront the Domestic Producers’ comments and
build a proper administrative record on its interpretation of the public interest requirement of the
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 42
statute38 and its application to the facts of this case.39
38
The Court in U.S. Steel Group v. United States noted:
In evaluating Commerce’s determination that the Agreement is in the public interest,
the court would, in a normal case, first decide whether Commerce’s interpretation of
the statute is in accordance with law. Here, however, Commerce has not articulated
an interpretation of the statute in the Public Interest Memorandum itself. Only in
subsequent briefing does Commerce interpret the public interest standard . . . .
Rather than articulate a legal standard in the Public Interest Memorandum,
Commerce makes a finding of fact [that the market certainty resulting from the
Agreement will benefit traders and consumers]. . . . Without more explanation,
however, this conclusion is not reviewable, because Commerce has not provided a
legal standard for what is “in the public interest,” or otherwise articulated how its
factual finding is related to the statutory standard.
___CIT___, Slip Op. No. 00-156 at 9-10 (Nov. 21, 2000). Those observations apply with equal
force here.
Unlike the statute governing Commerce’s authority to terminate an investigation when a
petition is withdrawn pursuant to an agreement restricting the volume of imports into the United
States, the suspension agreement statute does not define the factors to be considered in evaluating
public interest. Compare 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(a)(2)(B) (“public interest” determination to consider
impact on U.S. consumers, impact on international economic interests of U.S., and impact on
competitiveness of domestic industry (including impact on employment and investment) ).
For example, before the Court, the Domestic Producers have asserted that, in determining
public interest, Commerce must consider a suspension agreement’s impact on the competitiveness
of the domestic industry. Plaintiffs’ Memo at 19. While the Government apparently concedes that
point (Defendant’s Memo at 47), the Government contests the Domestic Producers’ claim that they
are in the best position to assess the impact of the Agreement here on the domestic industry.
Defendant’s Memo at 48 (discussing Plaintiffs’ Memo at 20). The Government and the Brazilian
Exporters emphasize the language of the statute, which precludes Commerce from suspending an
investigation “unless it [i.e., Commerce] is satisfied that suspension . . . is in the public interest.”
Defendant’s Memo at 48 and Defendant-Intervenors’ Memo at 38, quoting 19 U.S.C. § 1673c(d)(1)
(emphasis supplied). The Government argues that the term “satisfied” confers “broad discretion
upon Commerce (not the petitioning domestic industry)” in making the public interest determination.
Defendant’s Memo at 49.
On remand, Commerce will have the opportunity to articulate the legal standard for making
its public interest determination, or otherwise explain the “connection between the facts found and
the choice made.” See Electricity Consumers Resource Council v. Federal Energy Regulatory
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 43
F. Prevention of Suppression or Undercutting of Domestic Prices
Commerce may suspend an investigation under subsection (c) only if “the suppression or
undercutting of price levels of domestic products by imports of that merchandise will be prevented.”
19 U.S.C. § 1673c(c)(1)(A). To that end, Commerce included in the Agreement here a provision for
“the implementation of reference prices below which the [Brazilian] signatory producers/exporters
agree they will not sell the subject merchandise.” Price Suppression Memo at 2.
Specifically, Part IV of the Agreement established the reference prices for four categories of
steel products. Future quarterly reference prices for the first category (commercial quality, not
pickled and oiled, not temper-rolled, not edge trimmed hot-rolled steel) are set “at the higher of the
average U.S. Market Price for that Quarter, less six percent or $327.” Agreement, Part IV.C, 64 Fed.
Reg. at 38,794. Under the Agreement, the reference prices for each of the other three categories
increase incrementally based on the reference price for Category One steel. Id. In addition, the
Brazilian Exporters are prohibited from importing other hot-rolled steel products unless and until
reference prices for those products are agreed upon by Commerce and the Brazilian Exporters. Id.
Comm’n, 747 F.2d 1511, 1513 (D.C. Cir. 1984) (citing Burlington Truck Lines, Inc. v. United
States, 371 U.S. 156, 168 (1962) ).
39
Commerce’s Public Interest Memorandum addressed the suspensions of both the
antidumping duty investigation and the countervailing duty investigation. For the sake of clarity,
Commerce may wish to reconsider that approach on remand. See n. 29, supra.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 44
Commerce concluded that the Agreement prevents the suppression or undercutting of
domestic prices, because “the reference price mechanism built into the Agreement ensures that prices
of subject merchandise are comparable to prices of hot rolled steel sold in the U.S. market.” Price
Suppression Memo at 3. The Government asserts that Commerce’s determination is supported by
substantial evidence and is otherwise in accordance with law. Defendant’s Memo at 44-45.40
But the Domestic Producers maintain that the Agreement not only fails to prevent price
undercutting, it actually quantifies the amount of price undercutting that is permitted. According to
the Domestic Producers:
The terms of the Agreement specifically permit sales in the United States of hot-
rolled steel from Brazil at prices below the average U.S. market price. In fact,
whenever the average U.S. market price is above $327/metric ton, the text of the
Agreement guarantees that the Brazilian reference price will undercut the average
U.S. market price. At all average U.S. market prices above $348/metric ton, the
Brazilian reference price will undercut the U.S. market price by six percent.
Reply Memo at 5 (footnotes omitted).41
40
As with the “extraordinary circumstances” analysis, the Brazilian Exporters make a number
of arguments here that appear to go beyond Commerce’s Price Suppression Memorandum. See
Defendant-Intervenors’ Memo at 31-33. But, as discussed in section III.D.1 above, “[t]he grounds
upon which an administrative order must be judged are those upon which the record discloses that
its action was based.” Securities and Exchange Comm’n v. Chenery Corp., 318 U.S. 80, 87 (1943).
Thus, Commerce’s determination on price suppression and undercutting must stand or fall on the
rationale which Commerce itself articulates.
41
Indeed, the Domestic Producers assert that “[t]he possibility of price undercutting, inherent
in the Agreement, is now a fact.” Reply Memo at 6. According to the Domestic Producers, a July
2000 letter from Commerce revising reference prices allows Brazilian producers to sell steel in the
U.S. “more than $20/metric ton less than the average U.S. market price.” Id. But the Government
objects to the Domestic Producers’ reliance on events that postdate the Agreement, and thus are not
part of the administrative record underlying Commerce’s decision to suspend the investigation and
enter into the Agreement. Tr. at 39-41.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 45
The Domestic Producers also challenge the assertion in Commerce’s Price Suppression
Memo that, as U.S. market prices rise, reference prices will rise as well. Reply Memo at 6 (citing
Price Suppression Memo at 3). See also Defendant-Intervenors’ Memo at 31 (asserting that
reference prices will match rising U.S. prices “dollar-for-dollar”). According to the Domestic
Producers:
The reference price will not keep pace with the U.S. market price whenever the latter
rises above $348, but will rise only ninety-four cents for each dollar of increase in the
average U.S. price. Further, . . . while the Brazilian reference price may rise with the
average U.S. market price after it exceeds $348/metric ton (though, as noted, only 94
cents to the dollar), at every average U.S. market price above $327/metric ton, the
Agreement specifically provides for undercutting of price levels of domestic
products. Worse, the greater the amount by which the average U.S. market price
exceeds $348/metric ton, the greater the extent of undercutting, in an absolute sense,
allowed by the Agreement.
Reply Memo at 6 (footnotes omitted).
While the parties have briefed the subject of price suppression and undercutting extensively
before the Court, the existing administrative record on this issue – like the record on the other issues
in the case – is insufficient to serve as a basis for final judicial disposition. The Domestic Producers
simply had no opportunity to build a record on the requirement for prevention of price
suppression/undercutting. Because the Proposed Agreement was a subsection (b) agreement, that
requirement was irrelevant; accordingly, the Domestic Producers did not address it in their
comments. And they had no notice whatsoever of the subsection (c) Agreement, and thus no
opportunity to comment at the agency level on whether or not “the suppression or undercutting of
price levels of domestic products” would be prevented. The Domestic Producers have therefore
made their case on this point for the first time before the Court, and Commerce has heard it here first.
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 46
As discussed in section III.A, this case is being remanded to remedy Commerce’s failure to
comply with the notice, comment and consultation requirements of the suspension agreement statute.
On remand, all parties will have the opportunity to develop a proper administrative record on all
issues, including – in the case of a subsection (c) agreement – the requirement for prevention of
price suppression/undercutting. For example, assuming that Commerce issues for comment a
subsection (c) agreement, the Domestic Producers may seek to put on the record for Commerce’s
consideration the facts underlying their concerns about Commerce’s July 2000 revision of reference
prices. And Commerce may, if it wishes, expressly adopt – or reject – any or all of the Brazilian
Exporters’ analysis of the Agreement on this issue.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, this case is remanded to the Department of Commerce to
enable it to comply with the notice, comment and consultation requirements of the statute (19 U.S.C.
§ 1673c(e) ), to enable it to articulate a legal standard for making its public interest determination
or otherwise explain the connection between the facts found and the choice made pursuant to the
statute (19 U.S.C. § 1673c(d)(1)), and – if appropriate (i.e., in the case of a subsection (c) agreement
there Commerce’s finding that the investigation is “complex” turns on it) – to enable it to interpret
Court No. 99-08-00524 Page 47
the phrase “large number” of transactions or adjustments in the context of the “extraordinary
circumstances” requirement of the statute (19 U.S.C. § 1673c(c)(2)(B)(i)).
A separate order will be entered accordingly.
___________________________________
Delissa A. Ridgway
Judge
Decided: May 29, 2001
New York, New York