Court Opinion

ID: 817682
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-02-01 01:56:55.764406+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:13:02.660884
License: Public Domain

Slip Op. 09-16

           UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE

BEFORE: SENIOR JUDGE NICHOLAS TSOUCALAS
________________________________________
                                        :
NUCOR CORPORATION,                      :
                                        :
               Plaintiff,               :       Public
                                        :       Version
               and                      :
                                        :
UNITED STATES STEEL CORPORATION, AK     :       Consol.
STEEL CORPORATION,                      :       Court No.:
                                        :       07-00454
               Plaintiff-Intervenors,   :
                                        :
               v.                       :
                                        :
UNITED STATES,                          :
                                        :
               Defendant.               :
________________________________________:

Held: Plaintiff and Plaintiff-Intervenors’ motions for judgment
upon the agency record is granted in part and denied in part. The
United States International Trade Commission’s final determination
is remanded for redetermination consistent with this opinion.

     Wiley Rein LLP, (Daniel B. Pickard) for Plaintiff, Nucor
Corporation.

     Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom, LLP, (James C. Hecht; John
J. Mangan; Robert E. Lighthizer; Stephen P. Vaughn) for Plaintiff-
Intervenor, United States Steel Corporation.

     King & Spalding, LLP, (Joseph W. Dorn; Elizabeth E. Duall;
Jeffrey M. Telep) for Plaintiff-Intervenor, AK Steel Corporation.

     James M. Lyons, General Counsel; Andrea C. Casson, Assistant
General Counsel, Office of the General Counsel, United States
International Trade Commission (Robin L. Turner), for Defendant,
United States.

                                           Dated: March 9, 2009
Court No. 07-00454                                        Page 2

                             OPINION

     This matter is before the Court on motions for judgment upon

the agency record brought by plaintiff Nucor Corporation (“Nucor”),

plaintiff-intervenor, AK Steel Corporation (“AKS”), and plaintiff-

intervenor United States Steel Corporation (“USS”) (collectively,

“Plaintiffs” or “Domestic Producers”), pursuant to USCIT Rule 56.2.

Plaintiffs challenge the negative determinations by the United

States International Trade Commission (“Commission” or “ITC”) in

the five-year sunset reviews pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1675(c)(1)1 of

the countervailing duty order on hot-rolled steel products from

South Africa and revocation of the antidumping duty orders on hot-

rolled steel products from Kazakhstan, Romania, and South Africa.

                           JURISDICTION

     The Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1581(c)

(2000) and 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(A)(i)(I) and (B)(iii) (2000).

     1
          19 U.S.C. § 1675(c)(1) provides:

          5 years after the date of publication of . . . a
          countervailing duty order . . . an antidumping duty
          order . . . the Commission shall conduct a review
          to determine, in accordance with section 1675a of
          this    title,   whether    revocation    of    the
          countervailing or antidumping duty order . . .
          would be likely to lead to continuation or
          recurrence of dumping or a countervailable subsidy
          . . . and of material injury.
Court No. 07-00454                                                              Page 3

                                         BACKGROUND

       In August and November 2001, the Commission determined that an

industry in the United States was materially injured by reason of

subsidized imports of hot-rolled steel products from Argentina,

India, Indonesia, South Africa, and Thailand, and by reason of less

than       fair   value     imports      from   hot-rolled     steel   products    from

Argentina,         China,       India,    Indonesia,     Kazakhstan,     Netherlands,

Romania, South Africa, Taiwan, Thailand, and Ukraine.                           See Hot

Rolled Steel Products From Argentina and South Africa, Inv. Nos.

701-TA-404 and 731-TA-898 and 905 (Final), USITC Pub. 3446 (Aug.

2001)      (PR    65);    Hot    Rolled    Steel    Products    From   China,    India,

Indonesia, Kazakhstan, The Netherlands, Romania, South Africa,

Taiwan, Thailand, and Ukraine, Inv. Nos. 701-TA-405-408 and 731-TA-

899-904 and 906-908 (Final), USITC Pub. 3468 (Nov. 2001) (PR 66)

(collectively, “Original Determinations”).2                      During the period

September through December 2001, the United States Department of

Commerce (“Commerce”) published countervailing duty (“CVD”) orders

on Argentina, India, Indonesia, South Africa, and Thailand, and

antidumping         duty    (“AD”)       orders    on   Argentina,     China,    India,

Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Netherlands, Romania, South Africa, Taiwan,

Thailand,         and    Ukraine.        See    Hot-Rolled     Steel   Products    From

Argentina, China, India, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Romania, South

       2
          Hereinafter all documents in the confidential record
will be designated “CR” and all documents in the public record
designated “PR.”
Court No. 07-00454                                                   Page 4

Africa, Taiwan, Thailand, and Ukraine, USITC Pub. 3956, Inv. Nos.

701-TA-404-408 and 731-TA-898-902 and 904-908, at I-2 (review)

(Oct. 2007)(PR 453).

     On August 1, 2006, the Commission instituted five-year reviews

of the orders on hot-rolled steel products from Argentina, China,

India, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Netherlands, Romania, South Africa,

Taiwan, Thailand, and Ukraine (“subject countries”).          See 71 Fed.

Reg. 43,521-23 (August 1, 2006) (PR 3).

     The final determinations were issued by the Commission on

October 25, 2007 and were published in the Federal Register on

October 31, 2007.    See Hot Rolled Steel Products From Argentina,

China, India, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Romania, South Africa, Taiwan,

Thailand, and Ukraine, 72 Fed. Reg. 61,676 (Oct. 31, 2007) (PR

441). The determinations and views of the Commission are contained

in   Hot-Rolled   Steel     Products    From   Argentina,   China,    India,

Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Romania, South Africa, Taiwan, Thailand, and

Ukraine (“Final Determination” or “Views”), USITC Pub. 3956, Inv.

Nos. 701-TA-404-408 and 731-TA-898-902 and 904-908 (review) (Oct.

2007)(PR 453)(CR 427).

     In the Final Determination, the Commission determined, inter

alia,   that   revocation    of   the    orders   against   China,    India,

Indonesia, Taiwan, Thailand, and Ukraine would be likely to lead to

the continuation or recurrence of material injury to the domestic
Court No. 07-00454                                                  Page 5

industry within a reasonably foreseeable time.3           See Views at 3 (PR

453).     With respect to the orders against Argentina, Kazakhstan,

Romania, and South Africa, the Commission determined that their

revocation would not be likely to lead to the continuation or

recurrence of material injury to the domestic industry within a

reasonably foreseeable time.        See id.

     In the instant consolidated appeal, each Plaintiff challenges

aspects    of   the   ITC’s   negative   determinations    for   Kazakhstan,

Romania, and South Africa.4       See Pl.’s R. 56.2 Mot. Summ. J. Agency

R. (“Nucor’s Mem.”); Mem. Supp. Mot. J. Agency R. AKS (“AKS’s

Mem.”); Mem. Supp. Mot. J. Agency Rule 56.2 USS (“USS’s Mem.”).

The Commission responds that its negative sunset determinations are

supported by substantial evidence and otherwise in accordance with

law, and requests that the Court affirm them.             See Mem. Def. ITC

     3
          In its final results in the five-year review concerning
the AD order on hot-rolled steel from the Netherlands, Commerce
revoked the order effective November 29, 2006. See Certain
Hot–Rolled Carbon Steel Flat Products from the Netherlands; Final
Results of the Sunset Review of Antidumping Duty Order and
Revocation of the Order, 72 Fed. Reg. 35,220 (June 27, 2007).
Accordingly, the Commission terminated its five-year review of
hot-rolled steel from the Netherlands effective June 27, 2007,
and any imports from the Netherlands were considered nonsubject
imports for these determinations. See Hot-Rolled Steel Products
From the Netherlands, 72 Fed. Reg. 40,322 (July 24, 2007).
     4
          On November 28, 2007, Nucor and U.S. Steel filed
separate appeals to the United States Court of International
Trade (“CIT”), which were assigned case nos. 07-00454 and 07-
00461, respectively. On November 30, 2007, AKS filed its appeal
to the CIT under case no. 07-00463. On March 14, 2008, appeals
brought by U.S. Steel and AKS were consolidated with this action.
Court No. 07-00454                                                     Page 6

Opp’n Pls.’ Mot. J. Agency R. (“ITC Mem.”).

                              STANDARD OF REVIEW

     When reviewing ITC determinations in sunset reviews “[t]he

court shall hold unlawful any determination, finding, or conclusion

found . . . to be unsupported by substantial evidence on the

record, or otherwise not in accordance with law.”                19 U.S.C. §

1516a(b)(1)(B)(i).       “Substantial evidence is more than a mere

scintilla.”     Consol. Edison Co. v. NLRB, 305 U.S. 197, 229 (1938).

“Substantial evidence is ‘such relevant evidence as a reasonable

mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.’”                Huaiyin

Foreign Trade Corp. (30) v. United States, 322 F.3d 1369, 1374

(Fed. Cir. 2003) (quoting Consol. Edison Co., 305 U.S. at 229).                In

determining the existence of substantial evidence, a reviewing

court must consider “the record as a whole, including evidence that

supports   as   well   as    evidence   that    ‘fairly   detracts     from   the

substantiality    of   the    evidence.’”      Huaiyin,   322   F.3d   at     1374

(quoting Atl. Sugar, Ltd. v. United States, 744 F.2d 1556, 1562

(Fed. Cir. 1984)).

                                  DISCUSSION

                            I. Statutory Framework

     The Commission and Commerce are required to conduct sunset

reviews five years after publication of an antidumping duty or
Court No. 07-00454                                                          Page 7

countervailing duty order or a prior sunset review.                  See 19 U.S.C.

§ 1675(c)(1).       In a five-year sunset review of an antidumping duty

or countervailing duty order, the Commission determines “whether

revocation     of   an   order   .   .   .   would   be   likely      to    lead   to

continuation or recurrence of material injury within a reasonably

foreseeable time.”       19 U.S.C. § 1675a(a)(1).

      In making its determination, the ITC must “consider the likely

volume,    price    effect,   and    impact    of    imports    of    the   subject

merchandise on the [domestic] industry if the order is revoked.”

Id.   Specifically, it must take into account:

      (A) its prior injury determinations, including the
      volume, price effect, and impact of imports of the
      subject merchandise on the industry before the order was
      issued . . . ,
      (B) whether any improvement in the state of the industry
      is related to the order . . . ,
      (C) whether the industry is vulnerable to material
      injury if the order is revoked . . . , and
      (D) in an antidumping proceeding under section 1675(c)
      of this title, the findings of the administering
      authority regarding duty absorption under section
      1675(a)(4) of this title.
Id.

                    II. Cumulation In Five-Year Reviews

      In   a   sunset    review,     the     Commission   has    discretion        to

cumulatively assess the volume and effect of subject imports from

several countries for purposes of the material injury analysis, so
Court No. 07-00454                                                   Page 8

long as certain threshold requirements are met.5            See 19 U.S.C. §

1675a(a)(7);     Statement      of     Administrative       Action   (“SAA”)

accompanying H.R. Rep. No. 103-826(II), at 887, reprinted in 1994

U.S.C.C.A.N. 4040, 4212 (noting that the “[n]ew section 752(a)(7)

[1675a(a)(7)] grants the Commission discretion to engage in a

cumulative analysis.”).        Those threshold requirements are that:

(1) the five-year reviews commenced under section 1675(c) are

initiated on the same day,6 (2) the subject imports to be cumulated

would be likely to compete with each other and with domestic like

products in the United States market (“reasonable overlap of

competition prong”); and (3) the Commission has not determined that

the   subject   imports   to   be    cumulated   are   likely   to   have   no

discernible     adverse   impact     on   the    domestic    industry   (“no

      5
          The Commission’s statutory authority for cumulation in
sunset reviews is set out in 19 U.S.C. § 1675a(a)(7), which
provides that:

      [T]he Commission may cumulatively assess the volume and
      effect of imports of the subject merchandise from all
      countries with respect to which reviews under section
      1675(b) or (c) of this title were initiated on the same
      day, if such imports would be likely to compete with each
      other and with domestic like products in the United
      States market.   The Commission shall not cumulatively
      assess the volume and effects of imports of the subject
      merchandise in a case in which it determines that such
      imports are likely to have no discernible adverse impact
      on the domestic industry.

      6
          There is no dispute that this statutory requirement is
satisfied here because all reviews were initiated on the same day
– August 1, 2006. See Views at 11 (PR 453).
Court No. 07-00454                                           Page 9

discernible adverse impact prong”).7    See 19 U.S.C. § 1675a(a)(7);

Allegheny Ludlum Corp. v. United States, 30 CIT 1995, 1998-99, 475

F. Supp. 2d 1370, 1375 (2006).

     Pursuant   to   this   statutory   authority,   the   Commission

determined to cumulate subject imports from Kazakhstan, Romania,

and South Africa (“Mittal Countries”) with each other, and to

separately cumulate subject imports from China, India, Indonesia,

Taiwan, Thailand, and Ukraine (“Other Cumulated Countries”) with

each other.8    See Views at 20 (PR 453).         In so doing, the

Commission made the following subsidiary findings:         (1) the no

discernible adverse impact exception to cumulation does not apply

to the subject countries with the exception of Argentina; (2) there

would likely be a reasonable overlap of competition between subject

imports from each country and the domestic like product as well as

among subject imports from each country;9 and (3) based on the

     7
          “‘No statutory provision enumerates the factors to be
considered by the ITC in making the discernible adverse impact
determination. In the absence of specific statutory guidance,
the ITC “‘generally considers the likely volume of the subject
imports and the likely impact of those imports on the domestic
industry within a reasonably foreseeable time if the orders are
revoked.’” Cogne Acciai Speciali S.P.A. v. United States, 29 CIT
1168, 1173 (2005) (citation omitted).
     8
          The Commission also found that subject imports from
Argentina are ineligible for cumulation on the ground that they
were likely to have no discernible adverse impact on the domestic
industry in the event of revocation. See Views at 20 (PR 453).
     9
          The ITC considers the following four factors to assess
whether subject imports are likely to have a reasonable
                                                        (continued...)
Court No. 07-00454                                                 Page 10

existence of unique conditions of competition, subject imports from

the Mittal Countries would not be likely to compete under similar

conditions of competition with the subject imports from the Other

Cumulated Countries.      See id.

       Plaintiffs do not challenge the first two subsidiary findings,

but    dispute   the   third    subsidiary   finding    relating    to    the

Commission’s conditions of competition analysis.         Their challenges

generally fall into the following three categories.10           First, they

contend that the Commission’s conditions of competition analysis is

inconsistent with the purpose of the cumulation provision. Second,

they object to the analytical framework employed by two of the

Commissioners who declined to cumulate subject imports from the

Mittal Countries with subject imports from the Other Cumulated

Countries.       Third,   Plaintiffs    argue    that   the    Commission’s

cumulation determination is not supported by substantial evidence

on the record.     For the reasons set forth below, the Court finds

that    the   Commission’s     cumulation    decision   is    supported   by

(...continued)
competitive overlap with the domestic like product: “(1) the
degree of fungibility between products; (2) the presence of sales
or offers to sell in the same geographic markets; (3) the
existence of common or similar channels of distribution; and (4)
the simultaneous presence of imports in the market.” Wieland
Werke, AG v. United States, 13 CIT 561, 563, 718 F. Supp. 50, 52
(1989).
       10
          Where each Plaintiff makes substantially similar
arguments, the Court will not address each Plaintiff’s argument
separately.
Court No. 07-00454                                                            Page 11

substantial evidence and in accordance with law.

A.     Conditions of Competition Analysis

       1.     Plaintiffs’ arguments

       Plaintiffs challenge the Commission’s cumulation decision on

the    ground     that   the    Commission’s       determination       to   separately

cumulate subject imports from the Mittal Countries from the Other

Cumulated       Countries      is   inconsistent     with     the   purpose    of    the

cumulation statute. See AKS’s Mem. at 12-18; Nucor’s Mem. at 8-14;

USS’s Mem. at 8-11.            Specifically, Plaintiffs complain that even

though      the     Commission      found   that   the    statutory     factors      for

cumulation were met such that (1) subject imports are not likely to

have no discernible adverse impact on the domestic industry in the

event of revocation of the orders, and (2) these subject imports

are likely to compete with each other and with the domestic like

product,      the     Commission     nevertheless     determined       to   separately

cumulate subject imports from the Mittal Countries from those of

the Other Cumulated Countries.              See AKS’s Mem. at 19; Nucor’s Mem.

at 9-10; USS’s Mem. at 8.            In so doing, Plaintiffs contend that the

Commission ignored the purpose of the cumulation provision, which

is    to    prevent    the   “hammering     effect”      of   unfair    imports     from

multiple sources.         See AKS’s Mem. at 14; Nucor’s Mem. at 13; USS’s

Mem. at 10-11.

       Although       Plaintiffs     acknowledge      that    the   Commission      may

exercise discretion in its cumulation decision, they contend that
Court No. 07-00454                                                     Page 12

its decision must be informed by the statutory text and legislative

history.    See AKS’s Mem. at 13-14; Nucor’s Mem. at 13; USS’s Mem.

at 11.     Because the Commission failed to consider the “hammering

effect” of subject merchandise from the Mittal Countries on the

domestic    industry    in   its   conditions   of    competition     analysis,

Plaintiffs argue that the Commission’s cumulation decision is

contrary to law.       See AKS’s Mem. at 15-21; Nucor’ Mem. at 13-14;

USS’s Mem. at 11.

     2.     ITC’s response

     The    ITC   responds     that   the   statute    does    not   direct   the

Commission to consider any particular factors when exercising its

discretion to cumulate, and that this Court has recognized the

Commission’s wide latitude in selecting the types of factors to

consider.    See ITC’s Mem. at 11-12.        The Commission disagrees with

Plaintiffs’ argument that ITC’s cumulation analysis is contrary to

the purpose of cumulation because it fails to account for the

possible “hammering effect.”          See id. at 12.     While acknowledging

that Plaintiffs correctly state the purpose of cumulation, the

Commission argues that no statutory language or legislative history

mandates the Commission to consider “hammering effect” as an

independent factor to be considered.               See id. at 12-13.          The

Commission    states    that    its   cumulation      decision    represents    a

reasoned exercise of its statutory discretion.                See id. at 13-14.
Court No. 07-00454                                                   Page 13

B.    Chairman Pearson and Commissioner Okun’s Analytical Framework

      In the Views, Chairman Pearson and Commissioner Okun employed

a different analytical framework in their cumulation analysis than

the other Commissioners.       These Commissioners state that:

      while they consider the same issues discussed in this
      section in determining whether to exercise their
      discretion to cumulate the subject imports, their
      analytical framework begins with whether imports from the
      subject countries are likely to face similar conditions
      of competition.    For those subject imports which are
      likely   to   compete   under   similar   conditions   of
      competition, they next proceed to consider whether those
      imports are likely to compete with each other and with
      the domestic like product.     Finally, if based on the
      analysis they intend to exercise their discretion to
      cumulate one or more subject countries, they analyze
      whether they are precluded from cumulating such imports
      because the imports from one or more subject countries,
      assessed individually, are likely to have no discernible
      adverse impact on the domestic industry.

Views at 10, n. 36 (PR 453).

      1.   Plaintiffs’ argument

      Plaintiffs contend that using their analytical framework,

Chairman   Pearson     and   Commissioner   Okun   did   not   consider   the

statutory factors because they, in the first step, reached the

decision that subject imports from the Mittal Countries were not

likely to face similar conditions of competition as the subject

imports from the Other Cumulated Countries.           See AKS’s Mem. at 28-

30;   Nucor’s   Mem.    at    15-16;   USS’s   Mem.    at   11-13.     These

Commissioners’ analysis, Plaintiffs argue, contravenes the statute
Court No. 07-00454                                                   Page 14

which requires the Commission to conduct a no discernible adverse

impact analysis and to consider whether subject imports are likely

to compete with each other and with the domestic like product.           See

id.

      2.       ITC’s response

      The ITC responds that these Commissioners considered all

statutory factors, but considered them in a different order from

the other Commissioners.        See ITC’s Mem. at 14.     In support, the

ITC points to its Views, in which it states that Commissioners

Pearson and Okun both “consider[ed] the same issues discussed in

this section in determining whether to exercise their discretion to

cumulate the subject imports.”         Views at 10 n.36 (PR 453).     Noting

that the statute does not mandate a particular order for the ITC to

consider    the    statutory    factors,   the   Commission   contends   its

cumulation analysis is consistent with the statute. See ITC’s Mem.

at 14-15.

C.    Substantial Evidence

      1.       Plaintiffs’ arguments

      Plaintiffs challenge the Commission’s cumulation decision on

an alternative ground that it is unsupported by record evidence.

See AKS’s Mem. at 21-28; Nucor’s Mem. at 17-21; USS’s Mem. at 13-

19.     They note that the Commission primarily relies on one main

fact,    the     corporate   affiliation   amongst   Mittal   USA,    Mittal

Temirtau, Mittal Galati, and Mittal SA, in concluding that the
Court No. 07-00454                                         Page 15

ArcelorMittal Group companies will likely compete in the U.S. hot-

rolled steel market in a different manner than the industries in

any of the other subject countries.      See AKS’s Mem. at 21-22;

Nucor’s Mem. at 17; USS’s Mem. at 13-14.

      Specifically, Plaintiffs point to the Commission’s reliance on

the testimony of an ArcelorMittal executive who stated that the

marketing or commercial organization in the United States has to

consent to imports from foreign affiliates.    See AKS’s Mem. at 21-

22; Nucor’s Mem. at 17-18; USS’s Mem. at 16.   Plaintiffs argue that

the testimony upon which the Commission relies and the remaining

record evidence do not demonstrate that Mittal USA would have any

incentive or authority to withhold such consent in order to protect

the domestic manufacturing interests at the cost of the company as

a whole.   See AKS’s Mem. at 22; Nucor’s Mem. at 18; USS’s Mem. at

16.   Thus, USS notes that Mittal USA’s veto power, even if true,

“does not show that [imports from the Mittal Countries] will not

contribute to the combined hammering effect of subject imports.”

USS’s Mem. at 16.

      Indeed, Plaintiffs contend that the Commission ignored the

fact that ArcelorMittal’s aim is to maximize its total profits and

the rate of return of its shareholders, not necessarily those of

each individual facility or in each individual country.   See AKS’s

Mem. at 22; Nucor’s Mem. at 18-19; USS’s Mem. at 16-17.    As such,

Plaintiffs argue that if ArcelorMittal can produce and sell steel
Court No. 07-00454                                               Page 16

more profitably in Kazakhstan, Romania, or South Africa than in the

United States, it will do so.         See Nucor’s Mem. at 18-19; USS’s

Mem. at 17.   Plaintiffs also complain that the Commission ignored

the fact that subject imports from the Mittal Countries will likely

harm the U.S. industry as a whole even if ArcelorMittal may not

intend to harm its own U.S. operations.       See AKS’s Mem. at 22-23;

Nucor’s Mem. at 20.

     2.   ITC’s responses

     Defendant     contends   that   Plaintiffs’   arguments   are   flawed

because they focus on the ultimate inquiry of whether subject

imports will harm the domestic industry and not the discretionary

cumulation decision.       See ITC’s Mem. at 16.    The ITC retorts that

Plaintiffs ignore the most pertinent factual finding at issue – the

fact that Mittal USA’s relationship with affiliated producers in

the Mittal Countries did not exist for producers in any of the

other subject countries.       See id. at 16-17.

     The Commission elaborates that it relied upon the corporate

affiliation   of     the    ArcelorMittal   companies,    evidence     that

ArcelorMittal operates a unified sales network to manage sales in

territories where the Group is not a producer, and the testimony of

an ArcelorMittal executive regarding Mittal USA’s veto power over

whether imports from a sister foreign facility enter the U.S.

market.   See id. at 17-19.      In addition, the Commission cites to

several CIT cases wherein the Court affirmed the Commission’s
Court No. 07-00454                                            Page 17

determination to not cumulate based on corporate affiliation.      See

id. at 19-20.

D.   Analysis

     1.     The ITC’s conditions of competition analysis is supported
            by substantial evidence and is not contrary to law

     As previously noted, the Commission’s no discernible adverse

impact or reasonable overlap of competition findings are not

challenged     here.    At   issue   is   whether   the   Commission’s

determination to separately cumulate subject imports from the

Mittal Countries based on its “conditions of competition” analysis

is supported by substantial evidence and in accordance with law.

     The cumulation provision is unambiguous. Cumulation in sunset

reviews is discretionary.       The cumulation provision does not

require the Commission to consider any particular factors, see 19

U.S.C. 1675a(a)(7), and the Commission “has wide latitude in

selecting the types of factors it considers relevant” in its

cumulation analysis, Allegheny, 30 CIT at 2005, 475 F. Supp. 2d at

1380.     Indeed, even before the enactment of the Trade and Tariff

Act of 1984, which introduced the statutory basis for cumulation,

the Commission had substantial discretion in determining whether to

cumulate volume and effects of imports.    See Lone Star Steel Co. v.

United States, 10 CIT 731, 734, 650 F. Supp. 183, 186 (1986).      The

prior law permitted cumulation “‘where the conditions of trade so

warrant[ed].’”    Wieland-Werke AG v. United States, 31 CIT __, __,

525 F. Supp. 2d 1353, 1363-64 (2007)(quoting USX Corp. v. United
Court No. 07-00454                                                 Page 18

States, 11 CIT 82, 87, 655 F. Supp. 487, 491 (1987).

       “[D]iscretionary cumulation does not preclude the Commission

from considering any factor it considers relevant.”         Allegheny, 30

CIT at 2007, 475 F. Supp. 2d at 1378.            Based on the statutory

directive to the ITC to consider whether subject goods would

compete with each other upon revocation of the order, this “Court

has repeatedly allowed the ITC to consider many factors related to

difference    in    the   likely   post-revocation      conditions      of

competition.” U.S. Steel Corp. v. United States, Slip Op. 08-82 at

7 (Aug. 5, 2008).

       Nevertheless, the Commission’s discretion is not unfettered

and the Commission’s “exercise of discretion [must] be predicated

upon a judgment anchored in the language and spirit of the relevant

statutes and regulations.” Allegheny, 30 CIT at 1999, 475 F. Supp.

2d at 1376 (quoting Freeport Minerals Co. v. United States, 776

F.2d 1029, 1032 (Fed. Cir. 1985)).      The purpose of cumulation is to

stem   “competition   from   unfairly   traded    imports   from   several

countries simultaneously [which] often has a hammering effect on

the domestic industry . . . [that] may not be adequately addressed

if the impact of the imports are [sic] analyzed separately on the

basis of their country of origin.”       H.R. Rep. No. 100-40, part 1,

at 130 (1987).

       In its cumulation analysis, the Commission did not find that

hot-rolled steel from the subject countries, with the exception of
Court No. 07-00454                                                  Page 19

Argentina, is likely to have no discernible adverse impact on the

domestic industry. In addition, the Commission found likelihood of

a reasonable overlap of competition between imports of hot-rolled

steel from each subject country and the domestic like product, and

among subject hot-rolled steel imports from each subject country.

Nevertheless, based on its “conditions of competition” analysis,

the Commission concluded that subject imports from the Mittal

Countries “will likely result in the ArcelorMittal Group companies

competing in the U.S. hot-rolled steel market in a different manner

than the industries in any of the other subject countries.”11 Views

at 18 (PR 453).

     Plaintiffs      contend   that   the   Commission’s   conditions     of

competition analysis is contrary to law because it ignores the

purpose   of   the   cumulation   provision.     When   analyzing    a   non-

statutory factor, such as the conditions of competition, Plaintiffs

contend that the Commission must consider the “hammering effect” of

unfair imports from the subject countries.         The Court disagrees.

     11
          “Mittal USA, was created from the
acquisition/consolidation of the assets of various former steel
companies, including Acme Steel, LTV, Bethlehem Steel, Ispat
Inland, and Weirton Steel. Mittal Steel Co., NV was formed in
2005, as the result of a merger between Ispat International and
LMN Holdings. In 2006, Mittal Steel Co. NV announced its merger
with Arcelor SA, creating a new entity ArcelorMittal; the legal
completion of the merger between Mittal and Arcelor is expected
by the end of 2007.” Views at 17, n.88 (PR 453) (citation to
CR/PR omitted). The Court will refer to this newly formed entity
as Mittal Steel Co., NV, Arcelor S.A., and ArcelorMittal
interchangeably.
Court No. 07-00454                                             Page 20

Nothing in the statutory language requires the Commission to

specifically consider the “hammering effect” of unfairly-traded

imports from multiple sources on the domestic industry in its

cumulation analysis as a separate factor. If Congress had intended

the Commission to consider “hammering effect” as an independent

factor in its discretionary cumulation analysis, it would have done

so.    It did not as evidenced by the statutory language and the

legislative history.    Although there is no doubt that the purpose

of the cumulation provision is to prevent the “hammering effect,”

Congress gave the Commission wide discretion in the types of

factors to consider.    Therefore, the fact that the Commission did

not separately consider the “hammering effect” does not invalidate

its conditions of competition analysis.        In addition, Plaintiffs

have    not   demonstrated   that   the   Commission’s   conditions   of

competition analysis is contrary to the purpose of cumulation such

that it fails to account for the “hammering effect.”12

       Moreover, the Commission’s cumulation determination, including

its conditions of competition analysis, is supported by substantial

evidence.     The Commission relied on the testimony of an executive

       12
          Plaintiffs AKS and USS seem to rely on the record
evidence regarding likely volume of imports from the Mittal
Countries as conclusive evidence of the “hammering effect.” See
AKS’s Mem. at 15-18; USS’s Mem. at 16-19. However, basing the
cumulation decision solely on the likely volume of imports
without further justification may constitute an impermissible
circular analysis that relies on the same factors for refusal to
cumulate as for an ultimate negative injury determination. See
Allegheny, 30 CIT at 2002-03, 475 F. Supp. 2d at 1378-79.
Court No. 07-00454                                                  Page 21

of ArcelorMittal as to the way it operates a unified sales network

to   “manage[]   sales    in   territories   where   the   Group   is   not   a

producer” meaning that Mittal USA essentially has a “veto power”

over whether imports from a sister foreign facility enter the U.S.

market.    Views at 17-18 (PR 453); see Transcript of Commission

Hearing on Hot-Rolled Steel Products, Inv. Nos. 701-TA-404-408 and

731-TA-898-908 (review)(July 31, 2007 and August 1, 2007)(“Tr.”),

at 218-19 (PR 253) (stating that the marketing or commercial

organization in the United States has to consent to imports from

foreign    affiliates).        The   Commission   further    supported    its

cumulation decision with evidence that Mittal Temirtau, Mittal

Galati, and Mittal Steel SA, respectively, account for virtually

all production of subject merchandise in Kazakhstan, Romania, and

South Africa.      See Views at 17 (PR 453).               In addition, the

Commission considered that Mittal USA is the largest domestic

producer of hot-rolled steel with six hot-rolled steel facilities

that account for a substantial share of domestic hot-rolled steel

production in 2006.13

      13
          The Court does not address whether corporate
affiliation should not be the sole basis upon which to determine
whether to cumulatively assess subject countries because that is
not what the Commission has done here. As discussed, the
Commission adequately supported its cumulation decision and its
conditions of competition analysis with other compelling facts
that support its theory that the subject imports from the Mittal
Countries will likely compete in a different manner than the
producers from the Other Cumulated Countries. Cf. Nucor Corp. v.
United States, Slip Op. 08-74 at 15, n.5 (July 9, 2008)
                                                        (continued...)
Court No. 07-00454                                                         Page 22

      Based on the evidence, the Commission reasonably concluded

that there is no similar relationship between any combination of

U.S. producers and subject producers that control all or virtually

all production in any of the remaining subject countries, and that

subject hot-rolled steel industries in Kazakhstan, Romania, and

South   Africa     will   likely    result    in   the    ArcelorMittal       Group

companies competing in the domestic market in a different manner

than the industries in any of the other subject countries.

      Although     Plaintiffs      complain   that      the    testimony    of    the

ArcelorMittal executive upon which the Commission relied is self-

serving, it is within the purview of the Commission to determine

the weight to be assigned to the evidence it evaluates.                    See U.S.

Steel Group v. United States, 96 F.3d 1352, 1357 (Fed. Cir. 1996).

So long as the Commission’s choice of evidentiary weight has

adequate basis, the Court must defer to the Commission. See Nippon

Steel Corp. v. United States, 458 F.3d 1345, 1359 (2006).                     Here,

the   Commission    chose   to     give   weight   to    the    testimony    of    an

ArcelorMittal executive as to ArcelorMittal’s own operation of its

sales network and Mittal USA’s veto power, and reasonably concluded

that subject imports from the Mittal Countries would compete under

(...continued)
(cumulation decision based on corporate affiliation, different
trend in capacity data, and tariff barriers in third-country
markets); U.S. Steel Corp., Slip Op. 08-82 at 7, n.6 (cumulation
decision based on corporation affiliation as well as the
differences in the product mixes and the relative importance of
home market sales).
Court No. 07-00454                                                          Page 23

different conditions of competition than those from the Other

Cumulated Countries.14

       2.      Chairman Pearson and Commissioner            Okun’s       analytical
               framework is not contrary to law

       The Court finds no merit to Plaintiffs’ argument that Chairman

Pearson and Commissioner Okun’s analytical framework is contrary to

law.        Plaintiffs contend that Chairman Pearson and Commissioner

Okun did not consider the statutory factors because they, in the

first step, reached the decision that subject imports from the

Mittal Countries were not likely to face similar conditions of

competition       as   the   subject   imports    from    the    Other     Cumulated

Countries.        Plaintiffs    argue    that    “the    statute    requires       the

Commissioners to consider whether imports compete with one another

and    the    domestic   like   product,   and    further       requires    them   to

determine whether imports from individual countries are likely to

have no discernible adverse impact on the domestic industry.”

USS’s Mem. at 12.

       14
          Plaintiffs also argue that: (1) ArcelorMittal’s aim is
to maximize its total profits rather than those of each
individual facility or country and that if ArcelorMittal can
produce and sell steel more profitably in Kazakhstan, Romania, or
South Africa than in the United States, it will do so; and (2)
the Commission ignored the fact that subject imports from the
Mittal Countries will likely harm the U.S. industry as a whole
even if ArcelorMittal may not intend to harm its own U.S.
operations. The Court finds that these arguments are
substantively related to the Commission’s volume determination
rather than the cumulation decision as discussed in further
detail in section III below.
Court No. 07-00454                                                  Page 24

       At the outset, the Court notes that the identical analytical

framework has been previously met with approval by the Court of

International Trade.          See, e.g., Nucor Corp. v. United States

(“Nucor-CoRe Steel”), Slip Op. 08-141 (Dec. 23, 2008); U.S. Steel,

Slip Op. 08-82 at 5-6, n.4. Certain plaintiffs in Nucor-CoRe Steel

raised substantially similar challenges as Plaintiffs do in the

instant matter.15       The court in that case found that “[s]tripped

bare,       [plaintiffs]     argument   is   that    Chairman   Pearson   and

Commissioner Okun chose to conduct their cumulation analysis in a

different order than [the other Commissioners].” Nucor-CoRe Steel,

Slip    Op.    08-141   at   40.   Likewise,   the    Court   disagrees   with

Plaintiffs’ reading of Chairman Pearson and Commissioner Okun’s

cumulation analysis in the instant matter.           The Commission’s Views

unequivocally state that “Chairman Pearson and Commissioner Okun .

. . consider[ed] the same issues discussed in this section,” which

       15
          In support of its argument, Plaintiffs USS and Nucor
cite Angus Chemical Co. v. United States, 140 F.3d 1478, 1485
(Fed. Cir. 1998), wherein the United States Court of Appeals for
the Federal Circuit held that the Commission must consider all
the statutory factors of volume, price, and impact in its injury
test. See Nucor’s Mem. at 15-16; USS’s Mem. at 12-13. AKS cites
to Massachusetts v. EPA, 549 U.S. 497 (2007), for the proposition
that an agency must exercise its discretion in conformance with
the authorizing statute. Both cases were cited for the same
proposition in the Nucor-CoRe Steel case, and the Court rejected
plaintiffs’ arguments. The Nucor-CoRe Steel court distinguished
Angus on the ground that it involved a different statutory
provision with different statutory language. Massachusetts was
rejected on the ground that the statute at issue, the Clean Air
Act, does not accord the same wide discretion with which Congress
imbued the Commission. This Court similarly rejects both
authorities on the same grounds.
Court No. 07-00454                                            Page 25

includes the analysis of both statutory factors.    Views at 10 n.36

(PR 453).

       Individual Commissioners “are not required to apply identical

analytical methodologies.”    See Nucor-CoRe Steel, Slip Op. 08-141

at 42 (citing U.S. Steel, 96 F.3d at 1362 (stating that “[s]o long

as the Commission’s analysis does not violate any statute and is

not otherwise arbitrary and capricious, the Commission may perform

its duties in the way it believes most suitable.”)).         Moreover,

nothing in the statute requires the Commission to consider the

factors in any particular order.     See Nucor-CoRe Steel, Slip Op.

08-141 at 40.    As such, the Court rejects Plaintiffs’ challenge to

these Commissioners’ analytical framework.

     III. Likely Volume, Price Effect, And Impact On The Industry

A.     Volume

       1.   Statutory framework

       Pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1675a(a)(1), the Commission must

evaluate “the likely volume, price effect, and impact of imports of

the subject merchandise on the industry if the order is revoked.”

In addition, 19 U.S.C. § 1675a(a)(2) provides:

            In evaluating the likely volume of imports of
            the subject merchandise if the order is
            revoked . . . the Commission shall consider
            whether the likely volume of imports of the
            subject merchandise would be significant if
            the order is revoked . . . either in absolute
            terms or relative to production or consumption
Court No. 07-00454                                          Page 26

          in the United States.      In so doing, the
          Commission   shall   consider  all  relevant
          economic factors, including –

          (A)   any   likely   increase   in   production
                capacity or existing unused production
                capacity in the exporting country,
          (B)   existing inventories of the subject
                merchandise, or likely increases in
                inventories,
          (C)   the   existence   of  barriers   to   the
                importation of such merchandise into
                countries other than the United States,
                and
          (D)   the potential for product-shifting if
                production facilities in the foreign
                country, which can be used to produce the
                subject merchandise, are currently being
                used to produce other products.

     Put simply, the Commission must determine whether, considering

the four economic factors set forth in subsections (A) through (D)

of the statute, it is “likely” that the volume of imports will be

“significant” if the unfair trade orders are revoked.       See id.

“Thus, in accordance with the statute, in order to find sufficient

volume for there to be injury, the [Commission] must identify

substantial evidence from the record demonstrating that, should the

orders be revoked, it is likely that the volume of the subject

imports entering the U.S. market will be significant.”       Nippon

Steel Corp. v. United States, 29 CIT 695, 712, 391 F. Supp. 2d

1258, 1275 (2005) (citing 19 U.S.C. § 1675a(a)(2)).

     In its Views, the Commission concluded that the volume of

imports from the Mittal Countries would not likely be significant

in the event of revocation of the orders.     See Views at 46 (PR
Court No. 07-00454                                                Page 27

453).   Plaintiffs contend that the Commission’s volume analysis is

flawed because the Commission:         (1) relied on the notion that the

producers from the Mittal Countries will restrain imports based on

their corporate affiliation with Mittal USA; (2) made statements

with    regard   to   capacity   and    capacity   utilization   that   are

unsupported by record evidence; and (3) failed to adequately

address the potential for market-shifting, export orientation of

the producers from the Mittal Countries, and third-country markets.

       2.   ArcelorMittal’s strategy

       The Commission stated that:

       ArcelorMittal Group’s strategy for its subsidiaries and
       trading group is to supply home and regional markets, and
       not to serve export markets where the Group is a
       producer, and that this global marketing strategy limits
       the motivation of the subject producers in Kazakhstan,
       Romania, and South Africa to significantly increase
       shipments to the U.S. market . . . Mittal USA’s control
       over the products that enter the U.S. market makes it
       unlikely that any of the affiliated subject producers in
       Kazakhstan,   Romania,   or   South   Africa  will   move
       aggressively to capture U.S. market share or sell its
       products in a manner that would have a negative effect on
       prices that Mittal USA receives.

Views at 44-45 (PR 453).

            a) Nucor’s arguments

       Nucor objects to the Commission’s volume finding based on the

Commission’s past reviews.       See Nucor’s Mem. at 22-24.      It argues

that in past reviews that the ITC found that an ArcelorMittal

presence in subject countries would not inhibit significant volumes

of subject merchandise from re-entering the U.S. market.          See id.
Court No. 07-00454                                                     Page 28

at 23.   As such, Nucor contends the Commission made arbitrary and

inconsistent    determinations     regarding      general     market   dynamics

without an adequate explanation.          See id. at 23-24.

      Reiterating its profit maximization theory discussed in detail

with respect to cumulation, Nucor next argues that there is no

rational economic reason why the Mittal Countries’ producers will

not   ship   significant     quantities    of    subject     merchandise   upon

revocation of the orders.      See id. at 24.      Nucor contends that they

will do so to maximize total global profits.

             b) Plaintiff USS’s arguments

      USS makes five separate arguments against the Commission’s

volume determination focusing on ArcelorMittal’s business strategy.

See USS’s Mem. at 24-31.       First, USS argues that the Commission’s

Views do not address the argument that imports from the Mittal

Countries would harm other domestic producers without harming

Mittal USA.     See id. at 24-26.

      Second, USS disputes the Commission’s statement that “the

nature of the U.S. hot-rolled steel market, in which producers and

importers     compete   in   nearly   all       geographic    markets,     makes

significant imports in any region of the country likely to have a

disruptive impact on the overall U.S. market; thus, it is a course

that Mittal USA is unlikely to pursue.”           Views at 45 (PR 453).      USS

contends that the data upon which the Commission relies do not

support the Commission’s finding that significant imports in any
Court No. 07-00454                                               Page 29

region of the country are likely to have a disruptive impact on the

overall U.S. market.     See USS’s Mem. at 26-27.

     Third, USS contends that even if it is true that Mittal USA

would suffer by reason of imports from the Mittal Countries, the

Commission failed to consider whether the harm to Mittal USA would

be   outweighed     by   the   benefit    to   ArcelorMittal’s   overall

operations.16     See id. at 27-28.      In addition, USS describes two

possible scenarios under which ArcelorMittal could increase its

overall profits in the U.S. even if doing so caused the U.S. prices

to fall.17   USS argues that the Commission’s failure to address

     16
          In support, USS cites to the separate dissenting
opinion of Commissioners Lane and Pinkerton, who stated that:

     At the hearing, Mr. Schorsch, the Chief Executive Officer
     of Flat Carbon-Americas for Arcelor Mittal, testified
     that “the marketing or commercial organization” in the
     United States would have to consent to imports from
     sister companies. We note that both Mr. Schorsch and
     Mittal USA failed to identify the Arcelor Mittal entity
     or entities that exercise influence over this “marketing
     or commercial organization.” It is entirely possible –
     indeed likely given the interests of the Arcelor Mittal
     Group as a whole – that the decision to export to the
     United States would be based upon a balancing of costs to
     Mittal USA against benefits to the exporting entity.

Dissenting Views at 52.
     17
          Scenario 1: A multinational company does not engage in
unfair trade, and brings no imports into this market. It sells 3
million NT of hot-rolled steel produced at its U.S. operations
for a price of $550/NT. It makes a profit of $150/NT, or $450
million (3 million NT x $150/NT = $450 million).

          Scenario 2: The same company sells 500,000 NT of hot-
rolled steel at a dumped or subsidized price, causing the average
                                                        (continued...)
Court No. 07-00454                                          Page 30

these points constitutes an error.

     Fourth, USS points to the behavior of the Ispat organization,

the predecessor of ArcelorMittal, during the original investigation

as a basis for its position that the volume of subject imports from

the Mittal Countries is not likely to decline.     See id. at 28-30.

USS explains that although Ispat owned a U.S. producer, Ispat

Inland, Inc., and also owned the sole hot-rolled steel producer in

Kazakhstan, Ispat Karmet (which is now Mittal Temirtau), U.S.

imports from Kazakhstan increased 47.7 percent during the original

period of investigation.   See id. at 29.   As such, Plaintiffs argue

that upon revocation of the order, ArcelorMittal will similarly

increase the volume of hot-rolled steel to the United States from

its affiliates as Ispat did from Kazahkstan.

      Fifth, USS points out that the Commission’s likely volume

analysis contradicts the Staff Report stating that the Mittal

Countries would respond with “relatively large changes in the

quantity shipped to the U.S. market.”   See id. at 30; see Views at

(...continued)
U.S. price to fall from $550/NT to $520/NT. Because the
unfairly-traded goods carry a lower cost, the profit on these
imports is $220/NT, or $110 million (500,000 NT x $220/NT = $110
million). The company also sells 3 million NT of hot-rolled
steel from its domestic operations at $520/NT. On these sales,
it makes a profit of $120/NT, or $360 million (3 million x
$120/NT = $360 million). Under this scenario, therefore, the
company’s total profits in the U.S. market are $470 million ($110
million + $360 million = $470 million) – $20 million higher than
its profits under Scenario 1 – even though prices have fallen in
a manner that harms other U.S. producers.
Court No. 07-00454                                                         Page 31

II-11, 11-12 (PR 453).          USS contends the Commission impermissibly

ignored these facts even though they were raised.                 See id. at 31.

              c) Plaintiff AKS’s arguments

      AKS also challenges the Commission’s finding on the ground

that, as of 2007, Mittal USA was exporting hot-rolled steel to

Western Europe notwithstanding the fact that ArcelorMittal has many

production facilities in Western Europe.18 See AKS’s Mem. at 27-28.

AKS   notes    that     some   of   those   exports   went   to   Belgium    where

ArcelorMittal is the largest producer of flat-rolled products like

hot-rolled steel.        Based on these facts, AKS states that domestic

producers argued before the Commission that ArcelorMittal would not

hesitate to export to the United States from the Mittal Countries.

The Commission, however, did not address this issue in the Views.

              d) ITC’s responses

      The Commission maintains that its volume finding is supported

by substantial evidence.            See ITC’s Mem. at 25-36.      In addition to

considering all of the record evidence relating to production

capacity,      unused    capacity,      inventories,    domestic     and    export

      18
          AKS makes many of the same arguments that USS puts
forth against the ITC’s finding that ArcelorMittal would limit
imports to the United States. See AKS’s Mem. at 21-28. Although
AKS’s arguments are directed to the Commission’s cumulation
decision rather than its volume determination, the Court finds
they relate to likely volume of subject imports and are
appropriately discussed in this section. Since they are similar
to USS’s arguments, the Court will not recount them, but they
were thoroughly considered with respect to both the Commission’s
cumulation and volume determinations.
Court No. 07-00454                                                Page 32

shipment patterns, barriers to importation, and potential for

product shifting, see id. at 25-32, the Commission states it relied

on the testimony of a Mittal USA executive that Mittal USA has veto

power     over   imports   of   hot-rolled    steel   products   from   the

subsidiaries, see id. at 32.

     In response to Plaintiffs’ arguments, the ITC retorts that

record evidence does not support Plaintiffs’ speculative theories

that the ArcelorMittal group would maximize it profits at the

expense of its U.S. operations.       See id. at 32-34.   Based on record

evidence, the Commission states that it reasonably found that

ArcelorMittal would not likely disrupt Mittal USA and the U.S.

market.     Based on Mittal USA’s own interest in maintaining a

profitable U.S. market, the Commission states that it is unlikely

that volume of imports from the Mittal Countries would enter in

significant volumes.

     In further support, the Commission states that hot-rolled

steel is a price sensitive product that is sold nationally.             See

id. at 34.       Therefore, the Commission contends that any pricing

practices that would negatively impact Mittal USA’s competitors are

likely to also impact Mittal USA.            Moreover, the ITC dismisses

Plaintiffs’ argument that Mittal USA will cause injury to other

domestic producers while not disrupting its own business as an

unsupported speculation.        See id. at 35.

     The ITC disputes USS’s argument relating to Mittal USA’s
Court No. 07-00454                                                Page 33

predecessor, Ispat Inland, Inc., on the ground that there are

substantial differences in facts. See id. at 35-36. Specifically,

the Commission states that the current corporate relationship

involves substantially more domestic and subject production than

the single country relationships that existed in the original

investigations.    The Commission states that Ispat Inland, then

accounted for a much smaller portion of domestic production, and

was related to a hot-rolled steel producer in only one country,

Ispat Karmet, in Kazakhstan.       In contrast, Mittal USA accounts for

a much larger portion of domestic production than Ispat Inland did,

and is related to producers in Romania and South Africa.

     3.   Production capacity and capacity utilization

     With respect to production capacity and capacity utilization,

the Commission stated that:

     The production capacity for Kazakhstan, Romania, and
     South Africa on a cumulated basis is relatively modest
     and has remained relatively flat over the period of
     reviews, fluctuating slightly between 12 million and 13
     million short tons. Capacity utilization on a cumulated
     basis has remained relatively stable, ranging from about
     78 percent to 86 percent between 2001 and 2006.

Views at 43 (PR 453).

          a) Plaintiffs’ argument

     Plaintiffs   contend   that    the   Commission’s   volume   analysis

ignored the [                               ].   See Nucor’s Mem. at 25-

26; USS’s Mem. at 21-22.     USS points to [                             ]

unused capacity during 2006.       See USS’s Mem. at 21.   In comparison
Court No. 07-00454                                                  Page 34

to the total volume of subject imports from all ten countries in

2000, which was then 3,683,069 NT, USS argues that producers in the

Mittal Countries could ship a volume of imports equal to [                 ]

percent of the total imports during 2000 by merely drawing upon

their unused capacity.       See id. at 21-22; AKS’s Mem. 16-17.

            b) ITC’s response

     The Commission maintains that the production capacity for the

Mittal Countries on a cumulated basis of 12 to 13 million short

tons is relatively flat in fluctuation and that this production

capacity is relatively modest in comparison with the 2006 U.S.

production   capacity   of    over   80   million   short   tons,   and   the

production capacity of the Other Cumulated Countries of 90 to 134

million short tons (which varies depending on the source of data).

See ITC’s Mem. at 26. The Commission also notes that cumulated

production capacity for the Mittal Countries had only slightly

increased from the 11.8 million short tons reported in the original

investigations whereas production capacity of the Other Cumulated

Countries    had   almost    tripled.       With    respect   to    capacity

utilization, the ITC maintains that excess capacity remained at a

level similar to that during the original investigations and it

remained at a relatively constant level throughout the period of

review (“POR”).
Court No. 07-00454                                         Page 35

     4.   Market shifting, export orientation and third-country
          markets

     The Commission stated:

     Domestic shipments of hot-rolled steel (combined internal
     consumption and home market) on a cumulated basis
     accounted for a majority of total shipments in each of
     the subject countries, with the share remaining at a
     relatively constant level (approximately two-thirds of
     total shipments) over the period of review.         Thus,
     exports as a share of total shipments and the volume of
     total exports have remained relatively stable.        The
     volume of shipment exported has increasingly been focused
     on customers located in markets considered regional to
     each of these subject countries.

Views at 43 (PR 453).

          a) Plaintiff USS’s argument

     USS contends that in the above discussion the Commission

failed to account for the fact that the U.S. market is particularly

attractive to foreign producers despite making that finding with

respect to imports from the Other Cumulated Countries.19   See USS’s

Mem. at 22-23.   USS thus argues that the Commission’s analysis is

     19
          Specifically, Plaintiffs point to the Commission’s
statement with respect to China, India, Indonesia, Taiwan,
Thailand, and Ukraine that:

     Other considerations are the attractiveness of the
     relatively open U.S. market and its higher prices that
     will serve as an incentive for producers in these subject
     countries to direct exports currently shipped to other
     markets to the U.S. market if the orders are revoked.
     Prices for hot-rolled steel in the United States
     generally are appreciably higher than those in most other
     markets, except those in the European Union.

Views at 34 (PR 453).
Court No. 07-00454                                                     Page 36

seriously undermined, and the Commission has failed to adequately

address this issue in its market-shifting analysis.

      Moreover, USS contends that [                        ] of exports from

the Mittal Countries were shipped to [

                                                              ].   See id. at

23.

            b) Plaintiff Nucor’s arguments

      Nucor contends that the Commission failed to discuss the fact

that subject producers from the Mittal Countries exported [

                     ] of total shipments than [

                            ] and that they are and still remain net

exporters.    See Nucor’s Mem. at 26-27.

      Moreover, Nucor argues that “capacity increases in alternative

export markets will deprive subject producers of many of their

current export destinations, making it likely that they will shift

subject    exports    to   the   United   States   upon   revocation    of   the

orders.”    See id. at 28.

      In particular, Nucor contends that the Commission ignored the

shrinking third-country export markets of subject producers from

the Mittal Countries, including the potential impact of China’s

shift from a net-importer to a net-exporter of hot-rolled steel

products on subject producers from the Mittal Countries.               See id.
Court No. 07-00454                                                 Page 37

In addition, Nucor argues that the effect of China’s shift to net-

exporter status will be further exacerbated by growing capacity in

other alternative export markets, which will make it more likely

that subject producers from the Mittal Countries will shift exports

to the United States upon revocation.        See id. at 29-30.

            c) ITC’s responses

      The Commission responds that it considered the record evidence

regarding domestic and export shipment patterns and found that

domestic    shipments   of   hot-rolled    steel   on   a   cumulated   basis

accounted for a majority of total shipments in each of the subject

countries.    See ITC’s Mem. at 27.       In addition, it considered the

export markets for each of the Mittal Countries and found that

those countries increasingly focused on regional customers.              See

id.    With respect to Nucor’s argument regarding China and the

impact of increases in Chinese production, the Commission responds

that it found that there was no reason to discuss China.            See id.

at 31-32.     According to the Commission, China had not been a

principal let alone a major market for the subject industries, and

decreases in such exports had occurred by 2005 and 2006.

      5.    Analysis

      The Commission’s volume determination cannot be sustained on

the grounds upon which it relies.20         Central to the Commission’s

      20
          The Court considered Nucor’s argument that in past
reviews the ITC found that an ArcelorMittal presence in subject
                                                        (continued...)
Court No. 07-00454                                                  Page 38

volume determination is its finding that Mittal USA will exercise

its   veto    power   in    limiting   subject   imports   from   the   Mittal

Countries.      In support, the Commission relies on the corporate

affiliation     of    the    ArcelorMittal   companies,     the   investment

ArcelorMittal made in acquiring Mittal USA, and the fact that the

hot-rolled steel market is nationwide and sensitive to small price

changes.

      The evidence upon which the Commission relies may support the

theory that      ArcelorMittal will seek to protect its own U.S.

interest, but it does not logically result in the conclusion that

Mittal USA will limit subject imports from the Mittal Countries.

Indeed, evidence overwhelmingly supports the conclusion that:              (1)

ArcelorMittal affiliates will do what is good for the company as a

whole; (2) ArcelorMittal’s overall operations would benefit from

increased imports from the Mittal Countries; and, therefore; (3)

Mittal USA has no incentive to exercise its veto power over imports

from the Mittal Countries.

      First    and    foremost,   ArcelorMittal’s     affiliate    companies

(...continued)
countries would not inhibit significant volumes of subject
merchandise from re-entering the U.S. market citing Steel
Concrete Reinforcing Bar from Belarus, China, Indonesia, Korea,
Latvia, Moldova, Poland, and Ukraine, Invs. Nos. 731-TA-873-875,
877-880, and 882 (Review), USITC Pub. No. 3933 (July 2007)(“Rebar
Sunset Review”). See Nucor’s Mem. at 23. This argument does not
merit a lengthy discussion. It suffices to say, the Commission’s
evidentiary and logical bases for its volume finding in the Rebar
Sunset Review are distinguishable from those of the subject
review.
Court No. 07-00454                                                Page 39

evaluate their business decisions based on what is in the best

interest of ArcelorMittal’s overall operations, not that of each

affiliated entity.      See Views at 65-66 n.251 (CR 427)(“[

                                                           ].’” (emphasis

added)).

     Secondly,    the   two   scenarios   described   by   USS   provide   a

theoretical model by which ArcelorMittal could increase its overall

profits in the United States even if doing so caused U.S. prices to

fall.     The Commission’s own Staff Report concluded that the mills

in the Mittal Countries would respond to changes in demand in the

United States with “relatively large changes in the quantity

shipped to the U.S. market.”21      Views at II-11 to II-12 (PR 453).

ArcelorMittal would apparently benefit from maximizing production

in its low-cost facilities in Kazakhstan.       See Tr. at 222, 268-269

(PR 253).

     21
          The Commission did not address this critical
information in their Final Determination even though it was
raised by interested parties. The Commission “may not through
its silence simply ignore a Staff Report analysis that
contradicts the Commission’s own conclusions where an interested
party has specifically brought the possibly conflicting evidence
to the agency’s attention.” Altx, Inc. v. United States, 25 CIT
1100, 1103, 167 F. Supp. 2d 1353, 1359-60 (2001). If the
Commission believes the information contained in the Staff Report
is not contradictory to its volume determination as it asserts,
see ITC’s Mem. at 30, it ought to provide a cogent explanation
for its belief.
Court No. 07-00454                                          Page 40

     In addition, by drawing upon their unused capacity, producers

in the Mittal Countries are capable of shipping a volume of imports

equal to [       ] percent of the total volume of subject imports

during 2000.   Even “Mittal USA acknowledged that it may allow

imports from its sister facilities in these subject countries to

enter the U.S. market.”22   Views at 44 (PR 453).   Thus, clearly, if

harm to Mittal USA by way of subject imports from its affiliates

would be outweighed by the benefit to ArcelorMittal’s overall

operations, then Mittal USA would have no incentive to exercise its

veto power over imports from the Mittal Countries.23

     The Commission’s volume finding is also flawed with respect to

its finding that “significant imports in any region of the country

[are] likely to have a disruptive impact on the overall U.S.

market” suggesting that any pricing practice that would negatively

impact Mittal USA’s competitors is likely to also impact Mittal

     22
          The Commission responds that it considered this
argument, but relied upon the testimony that such imports from
Mittal USA’s sister facilities would be “‘managed in such a way
and controlled . . . by the domestic marketing organization,
which obviously has the interest of protecting . . . that
production base in that domestic market.’” ITC’s Mem. at 33.
This testimony merely states that Mittal USA would protect its
own domestic production base. It, however, does not provide a
reasoned basis for the Commission’s belief that Mittal USA would
not disrupt the U.S. market or harm the other domestic producers.
     23
          Indeed, in 2006, ArcelorMittal’s affiliates
collectively imported a total of [      ] of reported total U.S.
imports. See Final Staff Report at Table I-16 (CR 376). One of
those affiliates was [           ] importer of steel into the
U.S. See id.
Court No. 07-00454                                                              Page 41

USA.        Views at 45 (PR 453).               The only data upon which the

Commission       cites    to   support    its    findings    is    a    chart   listing

producers and importers by region.                See Views at Table II-1 (PR

453).       This data, however, do not provide an adequate basis for the

Commission’s finding that regional surges in subject imports are

likely to have a national effect or lead to the conclusion that any

negative price impact on Mittal USA’s competitors would also

negatively impact Mittal USA.24                 The Commission’s finding even

contradicts the admission of an executive of ArcelorMittal that its

imports “may affect competitors in this market who are in different

geographies or serve different market segments, and so on.” Tr. at

219 (PR 253).          Indeed, ArcelorMittal’s U.S. mills are located in

the East and Midwest, which would enable ArcelorMittal to steer

imports away from direct competition with Mittal USA. See Views at

Table I-14 (PR 453).           Accordingly, the Court cannot sustain the

Commission’s findings without a reasoned basis for its belief that

significant imports in any region of the country are likely to have

a disruptive impact on the overall U.S. market.

       The Commission’s volume determination also cannot be sustained

based       on   its     inadequate      explanation    of        the    behavior    of

       24
          The Court disagrees with the Commission’s contention
that “the nationwide effect on domestic prices of additional
supplies of hot-rolled steel [] was a theory proposed by Domestic
Producers.” ITC’s Mem. at 23. The testimony upon which the
Commission relies simply does not support the Commission’s
position. See Tr. at 267-268 (PR 253).
Court No. 07-00454                                                        Page 42

ArcelorMittal and its predecessor.                Evidence reflects that U.S.

imports from Kazakhstan increased from 130,329 short tons in 1998

to 192,470 short tons in 2000, an increase of 47.7 percent, while

Ispat organization, the predecessor of ArcelorMittal, owned a U.S.

producer,       Ispat   Inland,     Inc.,   and    the   sole   hot-rolled    steel

producer in Kazakhstan, Ispat Karmet.25                   See Views at I-8 (PR

453).     As Plaintiffs point out, this fact supports the theory that

upon revocation of the order, ArcelorMittal will similarly increase

the volume of hot-rolled steel to the United States from its

affiliates as Ispat did from Kazahkstan.                  Moreover, as of 2007,

Mittal    USA    was    exporting    hot-rolled      steel   to   Western    Europe

notwithstanding the fact that ArcelorMittal has many production

facilities in Western Europe.           See Post-Hearing Brief of USS at 12

(PR 328).       The record further reflects that some of those exports

went to Belgium where ArcelorMittal is the largest producer of

flat-rolled products like hot-rolled steel.

     The Commission responds that ArcelorMittal’s multinational

operations       involve    substantially         more   domestic   and     subject

production than those single country relationships that were in

place in the original investigations. This explanation is woefully

inadequate.       Views at 45 (PR 453).       The fact that ArcelorMittal is

related to steel producers in more than one country and accounts

for a larger portion of domestic production as compared to Ispat

     25
             Ispat Karmet is now Mittal Temirtau.
Court No. 07-00454                                                      Page 43

Inland does not sufficiently explain why ArcelorMittal would be

compelled    to    restrain   its   volume     of   imports   from   the   Mittal

Countries    especially       in    light      of   ArcelorMittal       and   its

predecessor’s apparent business practices.

     The Commission’s volume determination is also flawed to the

extent it failed to address certain key evidence on the record.

“‘[A] reviewing court is not barred from setting aside [an agency]

decision when it cannot conscientiously find that the evidence

supporting that decision is substantial, when viewed in the light

that the record in its entirety furnishes, including the body of

evidence opposed to the [agency’s] view.’”               Timkin Co. v. United

States, 27 CIT 605, 621, 264 F. Supp. 2d 1264, 1278 (2003) (quoting

Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 340 U.S. 474, 488 (1951)).

     Specifically,      the   Commission       failed    to   discuss   evidence

opposed to the ITC’s volume determination, including [

                  ] and export orientation of the Mittal Countries’

producers,    attractiveness        of   the    U.S.    market,   and   capacity

increases in alternative export markets.

     The Commission’s analysis of production capacity fails to

account for the fact that in 2006, the Mittal Countries, on a

cumulated basis, had [                   ] short tons of [                     ],

which accounts for nearly [                    ] the amount that sufficed for

material injury in the original investigation.                 See Final Staff

Report at Tables IV-31, IV-35, IV-40 (CR 376).                    This fact is
Court No. 07-00454                                                  Page 44

significant since it means that producers in the Mittal Countries

could, by drawing upon their unused capacity, ship a volume of

imports equal to a large portion of the total imports during 2000.

     With    respect   to   the   export   orientation   of   the   subject

producers of the Mittal Countries, the Commission did not address

the fact that: (1) from 2000 to 2006, Romanian exports [              ] from

[    ] percent to [         ] percent, see Final Staff Report at Table

IV-34 (CR 376); (2) in 2006, Romania produced [                     ] short

tons of hot-rolled steel for sale on the open market26 and exported

[           ] short tons, meaning that it exported [          ] percent of

commercial shipments, see id.       at Table IV-35; (3) during the POR,

South African exports as a share of total shipments ranged from

[                                  ], and in 2006, its volume of total

exports was [          ] short tons, see id. at Table IV-40; (4) in

2006, Kazakhstan produced [                 ] short tons of hot-rolled

steel for sale on the open market27 and exported [                  ] short

tons, meaning that it exported [               ] percent of commercial

shipments, see id. at Table IV-31; and (5) during the POR, Kazakh

exports as a share of total shipments ranged from [

            ], see id. at Table IV-31.       Thus, the record indicates

that subject producers in the Mittal Countries exported [

     26
          This figure equals the quantity of production less the
quantity of internal consumption for Romania.
     27
          This figure equals the quantity of production less the
quantity of internal consumption for Kazakhstan.
Court No. 07-00454                                                 Page 45

               ] of total shipments than [

                                  ], which suggests that significant

volumes of imports could enter the U.S. market.       See Views at 20,

n. 69 (CR 427).

     The Commission also makes no mention of the attractiveness of

the U.S. market to the industries in the Mittal Countries despite

finding it an important factor with respect to the imports from the

Other Cumulated Countries.        The fact that the U.S. market is

particularly attractive to foreign producers due to the relatively

open U.S. market and its higher prices serves as an incentive for

the producers of the Mittal Countries as well as those of the Other

Cumulated Countries to direct shipments to the U.S. market if the

orders are revoked.    See id. at 2-23.    If the Commission believes

that is not the case, it should provide an adequate basis for its

belief.

     In addition, the Commission ignores capacity increases in

alternative export markets, which will deprive subject producers of

their current export destinations making it likely that they will

shift subject exports to the United States upon revocation of the

orders. Specifically, the Commission did not address the potential

impact of China’s shift from a net-importer to a net-exporter of

hot-rolled   steel    products   on   subject   producers   from    Mittal

Countries.   The Commission’s response that there was no reason to

discuss China is a post hoc rationalization.      See ITC’s Mem. at 31.
Court No. 07-00454                                                     Page 46

The Commission relied upon the “China effect” to support its

affirmative determination for the Other Cumulated Countries.                 At

minimum, the Commission should explain why China is irrelevant with

respect to the Mittal Countries.

      The   Commission’s      volume   determination     and   its   subsidiary

findings, in view of the record as a whole, are not substantially

supported or explained, especially in light of the Commission’s

reliance of its flawed belief that Mittal USA would exercise its

veto power to limit imports from the Mittal Countries.               See Usinor

v.   United    States,   26   CIT   767,   784   (July   19,   2002)   (“‘When

considered individually, every discrepancy discussed here might not

rise to the level of requiring reconsideration of the overall

disposition, but taken as a whole, the court finds that the ITC

decision      is   not   substantially     supported     and   explained.’”).

Moreover, “[w]hile the ITC need not address every argument and

piece of evidence . . . it must address significant arguments and

evidence which seriously undermine its reasoning and conclusions.”

Altx, 25 CIT at 1117-18, 167 F. Supp. 2d at 1374.

      Accordingly, on remand, the Commission must:             (1) reevaluate

its flawed reasoning for the finding that ArcelorMittal companies

and/or Mittal USA would limit subject imports from the Mittal

Countries; (2) reassess and further explain the basis for its

findings that significant imports in any region of the country are

likely to have a disruptive impact on the overall U.S. market, and
Court No. 07-00454                                                             Page 47

that any pricing practices that would negatively impact Mittal

USA’s competitors is likely to also impact Mittal USA; (3) reassess

and   further        explain     the    behavior    of    ArcelorMittal        and   its

predecessor, the Ispat organization, with respect to their business

practices       in    exporting    to    countries       in    which    they   maintain

production      facilities;       and    (4)   reassess        and   further    explain

evidence opposed to the ITC’s volume determination, including

[                      ], export orientation of the Mittal Countries’

producers,       attractiveness         of   the   U.S.       market,   and    capacity

increases in alternative export markets.

B.    Price Effects

      The Commission found that revocation of the orders would not

be likely to lead to significant underselling or significant price

depression or suppression within a reasonably foreseeable time.

See Views at 46 (PR 453). In so doing, the Commission relied on

its volume determination.

      1.    Plaintiff USS’s argument

      USS argues that subject producers from the Mittal Countries

will engage in significant underselling.                  See USS’s Mem. at 31-33.

Relying on the record from the original investigations, USS states

that Kazakh imports undersold the domestic like product in 6 of 6

pricing comparisons, Romanian imports undersold the domestic like

product    in    37    of   43    comparisons,     and    South      African   imports
Court No. 07-00454                                                           Page 48

undersold the domestic like product in 10 of 19 instances.28                        In

addition, USS points to the Commission’s finding with respect to

subject imports from the Other Cumulated Countries that low-priced

imports will generally force domestic hot-rolled steel producers to

either lower prices or lose sale, and argues that low-priced

imports from the Mittal Countries would have the same effect.

     2.      Plaintiff Nucor’s arguments

     Nucor argues that the Commission’s price effects finding is

unsupported by substantial evidence because it relies on faulty

volume and conditions of competition analysis. See Nucor’s Mem. at

30-32.     Nucor’s other arguments are substantially similar to USS’s

arguments, and the Court will not recount them in detail.

     3.      ITC’s responses

     The ITC responds that the Commission considered the fact that

in the original investigations imports from the Mittal Countries

undersold     the   domestic      like   product   in    a    majority   of    price

comparisons and considered the limited pricing data in these

reviews.     See ITC’s Mem. at 36-38.           The Commission states it did

not rely on the data from the original investigation due to the

substantial changes in conditions of competition including Mittal

USA’s     increased   role   in    the   U.S.   market       as   compared    to   its

     28
          In these reviews, the pricing data were limited. The
most recent price comparison available were for 2003, which
included no price comparisons for Kazakhstan, 13 comparisons for
Romania and 8 comparisons for South Africa. See Views at 46, n.
269 (PR 453).
Court No. 07-00454                                                           Page 49

predecessor and its affiliation with producers in the Mittal

Countries.         With respect to the pricing comparison data from these

reviews, the Commission states that it was reasonable not to rely

on such limited data.           In sum, the ITC responds that it rejected

domestic producers’ theories and reasonably found from the record

evidence that Mittal USA has no incentive to allow subject imports

from the Mittal Countries to be priced aggressively so as to move

large volumes of hot-rolled steel at low prices into the U.S.

market.

       4.     Analysis

       Having found that the Commission’s volume determination is

unsupported by substantial evidence, the Court finds that the

Commission’s conclusion that revocation of the orders would not

lead    to    adverse       price   effects    is    similarly     unsupported    by

substantial evidence.          On remand, the Commission must reassess the

potential price effects in accordance with its revised volume

determination.

C.     Likely Impact

       In    its    Views,   the    Commission      did   not   find   the   domestic

industry vulnerable. Considering its volume finding, price effects

and    conditions      of    competition,     the    Commission    concluded     that

revocation of the orders on imports from the Mittal Countries is

not likely to lead to a significant adverse impact on the domestic
Court No. 07-00454                                                    Page 50

industry within a reasonably foreseeable time. See Views at 47 (PR

453).

     1.     Plaintiff USS’s argument

     USS    argues   that   the   Commission’s    impact    finding      is   not

supported by substantial evidence to the extent it rests on the

Commission’s volume and price effects findings.            See USS’s Mem. at

33-34.     Moreover, it contends that the Commission’s likely impact

finding cannot rely solely on its finding that domestic industry is

not vulnerable to material injury.

     2.     Plaintiff Nucor’s argument

     Similarly, Nucor argues that the Commission’s impact finding

cannot be sustained because it is premised on faulty volume, price

effects and conditions of competition analysis.            See Nucor’s Mem.

at 32-35.    Specifically, Nucor states that the Commission, in its

affirmative    impact   determination    for     imports    from   the    Other

Cumulated Countries, also found that the domestic industry is not

vulnerable to material injury.       See id. at 33.        Nevertheless, the

Commission, taking note that the domestic industry performed poorly

in the latter portion of the POR, stated that this performance

would further deteriorate if subject imports re-entered the U.S.

market exacerbating the declines in production, shipments, market

share, and financial performance.       See id. at 34.

     Nucor argues that the likely volume and price effects of

imports from the Mittal Countries will also exacerbate declines in
Court No. 07-00454                                              Page 51

the   domestic   industry’s   production   and   financial   performance

because imports from the Mittal Countries will likely be diverted

to the United States upon revocation of the orders.      See id. at 34-

35.   Thus, according to Nucor, the poor financial performance of

the domestic industry in the latter portion of the POR applies

equally to an analysis of subject imports from the Mittal Countries

as it does to imports from the Other Cumulated Countries.

      3.    ITC’s response

      The Commission states that Plaintiffs primarily rely on the

Commission’s volume and price effects findings in their attacks on

the Commission’s impact finding.     See ITC’s Mem. at 38.       Because

the Commission’s volume and price effects findings are supported by

substantial evidence, it contends that the impact finding should be

affirmed.

      4.    Analysis

      Having found that the Commission’s volume and price effects

determinations are unsupported by substantial evidence, the Court

finds that the Commission’s likely impact analysis is similarly

unsupported by substantial evidence to the extent it relies on the

faulty volume finding. On remand, the Commission must reassess its

likely impact analysis in accordance with its revised volume and

price effects determinations.      In addition, the Commission must

account for and explain the poor performance of the domestic

industry in the latter portion of the POR.
Court No. 07-00454                                       Page 52

                           CONCLUSION

     In accordance with the foregoing, the Court remands the ITC’s

final determination.   Plaintiffs’ motion for judgment upon the

agency record is granted in part and denied in part.

                                    /s/ Nicholas Tsoucalas
                                      NICHOLAS TSOUCALAS
                                         SENIOR JUDGE

Dated:    March 9, 2009
          New York, New York
                                ERRATUM

Nucor Corp. v. United States, Consol. Court No. 07-00454, Slip
Op. 09-16, dated March 9, 2009.

Page 29, footnote 16, Line 2:    “Pinkerton” should read “Pinkert”

                                          March 24, 2009