China
– Measures Imposing Anti-Dumping Duties on High‑Performance Stainless Steel
Seamless Tubes ("HP-SSST")
from
Japan
AB-2015-4
China
– Measures Imposing Anti-Dumping Duties on High‑Performance Stainless Steel
Seamless Tubes ("HP-SSST")
from
the European Union
AB-2015-5
Reports
of the Appellate Body
The Appellate Body
is issuing these Reports in the form of a single document constituting two
separate Appellate Body Reports: WT/DS454/AB/R; and WT/DS460/AB/R. The
cover page, preliminary pages, sections 1‑4, 5.3, the subsections of section
5.5 that are not attributed below to only DS454 or DS460, and the annexes
contained in the Addendum (document WT/DS454/AB/R/Add.1, WT/DS460/AB/R/Add.1)
are common to both Reports. The page header throughout the document bears the
two document symbols WT/DS454/AB/R and WT/DS460/AB/R, with the following
exceptions: sections 5.5.2.1 and 5.5.3.1.2, which bear the document symbol
for the Appellate Body Report WT/DS454/AB/R; and sections 5.1, 5.2, 5.4, 5.5.1.2,
and 5.6, which bear the document symbol for the Appellate Body Report
WT/DS460/AB/R. Finally, Section 6, on pages JPN-103 and JPN-104, bears the
document symbol for and contains the Appellate Body's conclusions and
recommendation in the Appellate Body Report WT/DS454/AB/R; and Section 6,
on pages EU-105 to EU-107, bears the document symbol for and contains the Appellate Body's
conclusions and recommendation in the Appellate Body Report WT/DS460/AB/R.
Table of Contents
1 introduction.. 11
2 Arguments
of the Participants. 17
3 Arguments
of the Third Participants. 18
4 issues
raised in these appeals. 18
5 analysis
of the Appellate Body. 21
5.1 .. Data
for SG&A amounts – Articles 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement. 21
5.1.1 The
Panel's terms of reference. 21
5.1.1.1 The
Panel's findings. 21
5.1.1.2 The
relevant legal standard under Article 6.2 of the DSU. 23
5.1.1.3 Whether the
European Union's claims under Articles 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement were within the scope of the Panel's terms of reference. 25
5.1.1.3.1 Article 2.2.1
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement 25
5.1.1.3.2 Article 2.2.2
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement 26
5.1.2 The
Panel's interpretation and application of Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement 29
5.1.2.1 The
Panel's findings. 29
5.1.2.2 Analysis
of the Panel's findings regarding MOFCOM's determination of an SG&A amount
for SMST 30
5.1.2.3 Conclusion. 35
5.1.3 The
European Union's conditional appeal under Articles 2.2 and 2.2.1.1 of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement 35
5.2 .. MOFCOM's
alleged failure to take into account certain information provided during the
verification visit. 35
5.2.1 The
Panel's findings. 35
5.2.2 Whether
the Panel erred in finding that China acted inconsistently with
Article 6.7 and paragraph 7 of Annex I to the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by
rejecting SMST's rectification request 37
5.2.3 The
European Union's conditional appeal under Article 6.8 and
paragraphs 3 and 6 of Annex II to the Anti-Dumping Agreement 39
5.3 .. Showing
of "good cause" under Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement. 41
5.3.1 The
Panel's findings. 41
5.3.2 Assessment
of the Panel's analysis. 43
5.3.3 Whether
the Panel applied internally inconsistent reasoning in violation of Article 11
of the DSU 46
5.3.4 Whether
the Panel made a case for the complainants. 48
5.3.5 Conclusion. 49
5.4 .. Disclosure
of the essential facts concerning MOFCOM's dumping determination. 50
5.4.1 The
Panel's findings. 50
5.4.2 Whether
the Panel erred in rejecting the European Union's claim under
Article 6.9 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement 51
5.5 .. MOFCOM's
injury determination. 56
5.5.1 Price
effects – Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement 57
5.5.1.1 The
Panel's interpretation of "price undercutting" in its review of
MOFCOM's assessment of price effects for Grade C imports. 58
5.5.1.1.1 The
Panel's findings. 58
5.5.1.1.2 Arguments
on appeal 59
5.5.1.1.3 Analysis. 60
5.5.1.2 Whether
MOFCOM was required to make a finding of price undercutting for the product as
a whole 65
5.5.1.2.1 The
Panel's findings. 65
5.5.1.2.2 Arguments
on appeal 66
5.5.1.2.3 Analysis. 66
5.5.2 MOFCOM's
impact analysis – Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement 68
5.5.2.1 Japan's
claim under Article 6.2 of the DSU. 69
5.5.2.2 The
Panel's assessment of MOFCOM's impact analysis. 71
5.5.2.2.1 The
Panel's findings. 71
5.5.2.2.2 Arguments
on appeal 72
5.5.2.2.3 Analysis. 72
5.5.3 MOFCOM's
causation analysis – Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement 75
5.5.3.1 The
Panel's assessment of MOFCOM's causation analysis. 76
5.5.3.1.1 The
Panel's findings. 76
5.5.3.1.2 Japan's
panel request and Article 6.2 of the DSU. 78
5.5.3.1.3 Whether
the Panel made the case for the complainants. 81
5.5.3.1.4 Whether
the Panel erred in finding that MOFCOM's causation analysis is inconsistent
with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement 82
5.5.3.1.4.1 Article 11 of the DSU. 83
5.5.3.1.4.2 The Panel's assessment regarding MOFCOM's
findings concerning the market share of imports 83
5.5.3.1.4.3 MOFCOM's finding of price correlation . 84
5.5.3.1.4.4 Conclusion. 91
5.5.3.1.5 MOFCOM's
non-attribution analysis. 91
5.5.3.1.5.1 The Panel's findings. 91
5.5.3.1.5.2 Arguments on appeal 91
5.5.3.1.5.3 Analysis. 92
5.5.3.1.6 Additional
"independent" claims under Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement 93
5.5.3.1.6.1 The Panel's findings. 93
5.5.3.1.6.2 Arguments on appeal 94
5.5.3.1.6.3 Analysis. 94
5.5.3.2 Conclusions. 95
5.6 .. Additional
working procedures concerning BCI. 97
5.6.1 The
Panel's findings. 97
5.6.2 Arguments. 99
5.6.3 Analysis. 100
6 FINDINGS
AND Conclusions in the APPELLATE BODY REPORT WT/DS454/AB/R. JPN-103
6 FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS IN THE APPELLATE BODY
REPORT wt/ds460/ab/r EU-105
ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THESE REPORTS
Abbreviation
|
Description
|
Anti‑Dumping
Agreement
|
Agreement on Implementation
of Article VI of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994
|
BCI
|
business confidential
information
|
BCI
Procedures
|
Additional Working
Procedures of the Panels Concerning Business Confidential Information
(contained in Annex A-2 to the Panel Reports)
|
complainants
|
Japan and the European Union
|
COP
|
cost of production
|
DSB
|
Dispute Settlement Body
|
DSU
|
Understanding on Rules and
Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes
|
EU
Panel Report
|
Panel Report, China – Measures Imposing Anti-Dumping Duties on High-Performance
Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes ("HP-SSST") from the European Union,
WT/DS460/R, Add.1 and Corr.1
|
European Union's panel request
|
Request for
the Establishment of a Panel by the European Union, WT/DS460/4,
16 August 2013
|
GAAP
|
generally accepted
accounting principles
|
GATT 1994
|
General Agreement on Tariffs
and Trade 1994
|
HP‑SSST
|
high‑performance stainless
steel seamless tubes
|
Japan
Panel Report
|
Panel Report, China – Measures Imposing Anti‑Dumping Duties on High‑Performance
Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes ("HP‑SSST") from Japan,
WT/DS454/R and Add.1
|
Japan's panel request
|
Request for
the Establishment of a Panel by Japan, WT/DS454/4, 11 April 2013
|
Kobe
|
Kobe Special Tube Co., Ltd.
|
MOFCOM
|
Ministry of Commerce of the
People's Republic of China
|
Panel
Reports
|
Japan Panel Report and
EU Panel Report
|
petitioners
|
jointly, Jiangsu Wujin
Stainless Steel Pipe Group Co., Ltd. and Changshu Walsin Specialty Steel Co.,
Ltd.
|
POI
|
period of investigation
|
SCM
Agreement
|
Agreement on Subsidies and
Countervailing Measures
|
SG&A
|
administrative, selling and
general
|
SMI
|
Sumitomo Metal Industries,
Ltd.
|
SMST
|
Salzgitter Mannesmann
Stainless Tubes
|
Tubacex
|
Tubacex
Tubos Inoxidables, S.A.
|
Working
Procedures
|
Working Procedures for
Appellate Review, WT/AB/WP/6, 16 August
2010
|
WTO
|
World Trade Organization
|
PANEL
EXHIBITS CITED IN THESE REPORTS
Exhibit
|
Abbreviation
(if any)
|
Description
|
CHN-5-EN
(BCI)
EU-10 (BCI)
|
SMST's Dumping
Questionnaire Response
|
Excerpts of the narrative of SMST's response to
MOFCOM's dumping questionnaire of 21 November 2011
|
CHN-10-CH
(BCI)
CHN-10-EN (BCI)
EU-14 (BCI)
|
SMST's
Supplemental Dumping Questionnaire Response
|
Excerpts of the narrative of SMST's response to
MOFCOM's supplemental dumping questionnaire of 20 February 2012
|
CHN-11-EN
|
MOFCOM's Verification
Notification to SMST
|
Notification from MOFCOM to SMST concerning relevant
issues for the on-site verification of 3 May 2012
|
CHN-12-EN (BCI)
|
MOFCOM's Preliminary
Dumping Disclosure to SMST
|
Letter dated 9 May 2012 from MOFCOM to SMST
concerning Disclosure of Basic Facts relied upon in the Dumping Part of the
Preliminary Determination concerning Certain High-performance Stainless Steel
Seamless Tubes
|
CHN-16-EN (BCI)
|
|
Objections as to the accuracy of English translations
of exhibits attached to the first written submissions of Japan and/or the European Union
to the Panel
|
CHN-19-EN (BCI)
|
|
Updated English version of Table 6 annexed to SMST's
Dumping Questionnaire Response
|
CHN-20-CH
(BCI)
CHN-20-EN (BCI)
|
SMI's Injury
Questionnaire Response
|
Extract (question 8) of the narrative of SMI's
response to MOFCOM's injury questionnaire
|
EU-23-EN
|
MOFCOM's Verification
Disclosure to SMST
|
MOFCOM, High-performance Stainless Steel Seamless
Tubes Antidumping Investigation – Disclosure of Basic Verification Facts, 25
June 2012
|
EU-25-CH
EU-25-EN
|
MOFCOM's Final Dumping
Disclosure to SMST
|
MOFCOM, High-performance Stainless Steel Seamless
Tubes Antidumping Investigation – Dumping Margin Calculation Disclosure
before Final Determination, 26 September 2012
|
EU-27-CH
EU-27-EN
|
MOFCOM's Final Dumping Disclosure
to the EU
|
Annex, Government Disclosure prior to the
Anti-Dumping Final Determination on Certain High-performance Stainless Steel
Seamless Tubes, 26 September 2012
|
EU-28-CH
(BCI)
EU-28-EN (BCI)
|
SMST's Comments on
Final Dumping Disclosure
|
Comments of the SMST on SMST Final Dumping Disclosure
of 8 October 2012
|
JPN-1-CH
JPN-1-EN
EU-29
|
MOFCOM's Final
Determination Notice
|
MOFCOM, Announcement No. 72 of 2012 on the Final
Ruling of the Anti‑dumping Case against Imports of Certain High-performance
Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes Originated in the EU and Japan,
8 November 2012
|
JPN-2-CH
JPN-2-EN
EU-30
|
MOFCOM's Final
Determination
|
Final Determination Notice, Appendix: Final
Determination in the Anti-dumping Investigation on Imports of Certain
High-performance Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes from the EU and Japan
|
JPN-3-CH
JPN-3-EN
EU-1
|
Petition by the PRC Industry
|
Petition by the PRC Industry of Certain
High-performance Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes for Anti-dumping
Investigation on Imports of Certain High‑performance Stainless Steel Seamless
Tubes Originating in Japan and the EU, 15 July 2011
|
JPN-6-CH
JPN-6-EN
EU-17
|
MOFCOM's Preliminary Determination Notice
|
MOFCOM, Announcement No. 21 of 2012 on Releasing the
Preliminary Ruling on Anti-dumping Investigation on Imports of Certain
High-performance Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes from the EU and Japan,
8 May 2012
|
JPN-7-CH
JPN-7-EN
EU-18
|
MOFCOM's Preliminary Determination
|
Preliminary Determination Notice, Appendix:
Preliminary Determination in the Anti-dumping Investigation on Imports of
Certain High‑performance Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes from the EU and Japan
|
JPN-18 (BCI)
|
|
Letter dated 9 May 2012 from MOFCOM to SMI on the
Disclosure of Basic Facts upon Which the Preliminary Dumping Determination in
the Anti-dumping Investigation on Imports of Certain High-performance
Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes is Based
|
JPN-20 (BCI)
|
|
Letter 26 September 2012 from MOFCOM to SMI on
the Disclosure of Basic Facts upon Which the Final Dumping Determination in
the Anti-dumping Investigation on Imports of Certain High-performance
Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes is Based
|
JPN-23-EN
EU-24
|
MOFCOM's Injury
Disclosure
|
MOFCOM, Notice on
Information Disclosure Concerning Industry Injury Investigation in the
Anti-dumping Investigation on Imports of Certain High-performance Stainless
Steel Seamless Tubes from the EU and Japan, 7 August 2012
|
JPN-25-EN
|
|
Request for Considering Public Interest in the Anti‑Dumping
Investigation on Certain High‑Performance Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes by
Sumitomo Metal Industries, Ltd. and Kobe Special Tube Co., Ltd.,
February 2012
|
JPN-29
EU-32
|
|
Translation exhibit – Comments on Panel Exhibit
CHN-16-EN (BCI)
|
CASES CITED IN THESE REPORTS
Short Title
|
Full Case Title and Citation
|
Australia – Apples
|
Appellate Body Report, Australia
– Measures Affecting the Importation of Apples from New Zealand,
WT/DS367/AB/R, adopted 17 December 2010, DSR 2010:V, p. 2175
|
Australia – Salmon
|
Appellate Body Report, Australia
– Measures Affecting Importation of Salmon, WT/DS18/AB/R, adopted
6 November 1998, DSR 1998:VIII, p. 3327
|
Brazil – Desiccated Coconut
|
Appellate Body Report, Brazil –
Measures Affecting Desiccated Coconut, WT/DS22/AB/R, adopted
20 March 1997, DSR 1997:I, p. 167
|
Brazil – Retreaded Tyres
|
Appellate Body Report, Brazil –
Measures Affecting Imports of Retreaded Tyres, WT/DS332/AB/R,
adopted 17 December 2007, DSR 2007:IV, p. 1527
|
Canada – Aircraft
|
Appellate Body Report, Canada –
Measures Affecting the Export of Civilian Aircraft, WT/DS70/AB/R,
adopted 20 August 1999, DSR 1999:III, p. 1377
|
Canada – Aircraft
(Article 21.5 – Brazil)
|
Appellate Body Report, Canada –
Measures Affecting the Export of Civilian Aircraft – Recourse by Brazil to Article 21.5
of the DSU, WT/DS70/AB/RW, adopted 4 August 2000,
DSR 2000:IX, p. 4299
|
Canada – Periodicals
|
Appellate Body Report, Canada –
Certain Measures Concerning Periodicals, WT/DS31/AB/R, adopted
30 July 1997, DSR 1997:I, p. 449
|
Canada – Renewable Energy /
Canada – Feed-in Tariff Program
|
Appellate Body Reports, Canada – Certain Measures Affecting the Renewable Energy Generation
Sector / Canada – Measures Relating to the Feed-in Tariff Program,
WT/DS412/AB/R / WT/DS426/AB/R, adopted 24 May 2013, DSR 2013:I, p. 7
|
China – Broiler Products
|
Panel Report, China -
Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duty Measures on Broiler Products from the
United States, WT/DS427/R and Add.1, adopted 25 September
2013, DSR 2013:IV, p. 1041
|
China – GOES
|
Appellate Body Report, China –
Countervailing and Anti-Dumping Duties on Grain Oriented Flat-Rolled
Electrical Steel from the United States, WT/DS414/AB/R, adopted 16 November
2012, DSR 2012:XII, p. 6251
|
China –
HP-SSST (Japan) /
China – HP‑SSST (EU)
|
Panel Reports, China – Measures
Imposing Anti-Dumping Duties on High-Performance Stainless Steel Seamless
Tubes ("HP-SSST") from Japan / China – Measures Imposing
Anti-Dumping Duties on High-Performance Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes
("HP-SSST") from the European Union, WT/DS454/R and
Add.1 / WT/DS460/R, Add.1 and Corr.1, circulated to WTO Members 13 February
2015 [appeal in progress]
|
China – Rare Earths
|
Appellate Body Reports, China – Measures Related to the Exportation of Rare Earths, Tungsten,
and Molybdenum, WT/DS431/AB/R / WT/DS432/AB/R / WT/DS433/AB/R,
adopted 29 August 2014
|
China – Raw Materials
|
Appellate Body Reports, China –
Measures Related to the Exportation of Various Raw Materials, WT/DS394/AB/R /
WT/DS395/AB/R / WT/DS398/AB/R, adopted 22 February 2012, DSR 2012:VII,
p. 3295
|
China – X-Ray Equipment
|
Panel Report, China – Definitive
Anti-Dumping Duties on X-Ray Security Inspection Equipment from the European Union,
WT/DS425/R and Add.1, adopted 24 April 2013, DSR 2013:III, p. 659
|
EC – Bananas III
|
Appellate Body Report, European
Communities – Regime for the Importation, Sale and Distribution of Bananas,
WT/DS27/AB/R, adopted 25 September 1997, DSR 1997:II, p. 591
|
EC – Bed Linen
|
Appellate Body Report, European
Communities – Anti‑Dumping Duties on Imports of Cotton‑Type Bed Linen from
India, WT/DS141/AB/R, adopted 12 March 2001, DSR 2001:V,
p. 2049
|
EC – Bed Linen
(Article 21.5 – India)
|
Appellate Body Report, European
Communities – Anti‑Dumping Duties on Imports of Cotton‑Type Bed Linen from
India – Recourse to Article 21.5 of the DSU by India, WT/DS141/AB/RW, adopted 24 April 2003,
DSR 2003:III, p. 965
|
EC – Chicken Cuts
|
Appellate Body Report, European
Communities – Customs Classification of Frozen
Boneless Chicken Cuts, WT/DS269/AB/R, WT/DS286/AB/R, adopted
27 September 2005, and Corr.1, DSR 2005:XIX, p. 9157
|
EC –
Fasteners (China)
|
Appellate Body Report, European
Communities – Definitive Anti-Dumping Measures on Certain Iron or Steel
Fasteners from China, WT/DS397/AB/R, adopted 28 July 2011, DSR 2011:VII, p. 3995
|
EC – Hormones
|
Appellate Body Report, EC
Measures Concerning Meat and Meat Products (Hormones),
WT/DS26/AB/R, WT/DS48/AB/R, adopted 13 February 1998, DSR 1998:I,
p. 135
|
EC – Poultry
|
Appellate Body Report, European
Communities – Measures Affecting the Importation of Certain Poultry Products,
WT/DS69/AB/R, adopted 23 July 1998, DSR 1998:V, p. 2031
|
EC – Salmon (Norway)
|
Panel Report, European Communities –
Anti‑Dumping Measure on Farmed Salmon from Norway, WT/DS337/R,
adopted 15 January 2008, and Corr.1, DSR 2008:I, p. 3
|
EC – Selected Customs Matters
|
Appellate Body Report, European
Communities – Selected Customs Matters, WT/DS315/AB/R, adopted
11 December 2006, DSR 2006:IX, p. 3791
|
EC – Tube or Pipe Fittings
|
Appellate Body Report, European
Communities – Anti‑Dumping Duties on Malleable Cast Iron Tube or Pipe
Fittings from Brazil, WT/DS219/AB/R, adopted 18 August 2003,
DSR 2003:VI, p. 2613
|
EC and certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft
|
Appellate Body Report, European Communities and Certain Member States
– Measures Affecting Trade in Large Civil Aircraft,
WT/DS316/AB/R, adopted 1 June 2011, DSR 2011:I,
p. 7
|
Guatemala – Cement I
|
Appellate Body Report, Guatemala
– Anti‑Dumping Investigation Regarding Portland Cement from Mexico,
WT/DS60/AB/R, adopted 25 November 1998, DSR 1998:IX, p. 3767
|
India – Patents (US)
|
Appellate Body Report, India –
Patent Protection for Pharmaceutical and Agricultural Chemical Products,
WT/DS50/AB/R, adopted 16 January 1998, DSR 1998:I, p. 9
|
Japan – Agricultural
Products II
|
Appellate Body Report, Japan –
Measures Affecting Agricultural Products, WT/DS76/AB/R, adopted
19 March 1999, DSR 1999:I, p. 277
|
Korea – Dairy
|
Appellate Body Report, Korea –
Definitive Safeguard Measure on Imports of Certain Dairy Products,
WT/DS98/AB/R, adopted 12 January 2000, DSR 2000:I, p. 3
|
Mexico – Corn Syrup
|
Panel Report, Mexico – Anti‑Dumping
Investigation of High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) from the United States,
WT/DS132/R, adopted 24 February 2000, and Corr.1, DSR 2000:III,
p. 1345
|
Mexico – Steel Pipes and Tubes
|
Panel Report, Mexico – Anti‑Dumping
Duties on Steel Pipes and Tubes from Guatemala, WT/DS331/R,
adopted 24 July 2007, DSR 2007:IV, p. 1207
|
Peru – Agricultural Products
|
Appellate Body Report, Peru –
Additional Duty on Imports of Certain Agricultural Products, WT/DS457/AB/R and Add.1,
adopted 31 July 2015
|
Thailand – H‑Beams
|
Appellate Body Report, Thailand –
Anti‑Dumping Duties on Angles, Shapes and Sections of Iron or Non‑Alloy Steel
and H‑Beams from Poland, WT/DS122/AB/R, adopted 5 April 2001,
DSR 2001:VII, p. 2701
|
Thailand – H‑Beams
|
Panel Report, Thailand – Anti‑Dumping
Duties on Angles, Shapes and Sections of Iron or Non‑Alloy Steel and H‑Beams
from Poland, WT/DS122/R, adopted 5 April 2001, as modified by
Appellate Body Report WT/DS122/AB/R, DSR 2001:VII, p. 2741
|
US – Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duties (China)
|
Appellate Body Report, United States – Definitive Anti-Dumping and
Countervailing Duties on Certain Products from China,
WT/DS379/AB/R, adopted 25 March 2011, DSR
2011:V, p. 2869
|
US – Carbon Steel
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Countervailing Duties on Certain Corrosion‑Resistant Carbon Steel
Flat Products from Germany, WT/DS213/AB/R and Corr.1, adopted
19 December 2002, DSR 2002:IX, p. 3779
|
US – Carbon Steel (India)
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Countervailing Measures on Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon Steel Flat
Products from India, WT/DS436/AB/R, adopted 19 December 2014
|
US – Certain EC Products
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Import Measures on Certain Products from the European Communities,
WT/DS165/AB/R, adopted 10 January 2001, DSR 2001:I, p. 373
|
US – COOL
|
Appellate Body
Reports, United States – Certain Country of Origin
Labelling (COOL) Requirements, WT/DS384/AB/R / WT/DS386/AB/R, adopted
23 July 2012, DSR 2012:V, p. 2449
|
US – Corrosion‑Resistant Steel
Sunset Review
|
Panel Report, United States – Sunset
Review of Anti‑Dumping Duties on Corrosion‑Resistant Carbon Steel Flat
Products from Japan, WT/DS244/R, adopted 9 January 2004, as
modified by Appellate Body Report WT/DS244/AB/R, DSR 2004:I,
p. 85
|
US – Countervailing and Anti‑Dumping
Measures (China)
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Countervailing and Anti-Dumping Measures on Certain Products from
China, WT/DS449/AB/R and Corr.1, adopted
22 July 2014
|
US – Countervailing and Anti‑Dumping
Measures (China)
|
Panel Report, United States –
Countervailing and Anti-Dumping Measures on Certain Products from China,
WT/DS449/R and Add.1, adopted 22
July 2014, as modified by Appellate Body Report WT/DS449/AB/R
|
US – Countervailing Duty
Investigation on DRAMS
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Countervailing Duty Investigation on Dynamic Random Access Memory
Semiconductors (DRAMS) from Korea, WT/DS296/AB/R, adopted
20 July 2005, DSR 2005:XVI, p. 8131
|
US –
Countervailing Measures (China)
|
Appellate Body Report, United States – Countervailing Duty Measures on Certain Products from
China, WT/DS437/AB/R, adopted 16 January 2015
|
US – FSC
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Tax Treatment for "Foreign Sales Corporations",
WT/DS108/AB/R, adopted 20 March 2000, DSR 2000:III, p. 1619
|
US – Gambling
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Measures Affecting the Cross‑Border Supply of Gambling and Betting
Services, WT/DS285/AB/R, adopted 20 April 2005,
DSR 2005:XII, p. 5663 (Corr.1, DSR 2006:XII, p. 5475)
|
US – Gasoline
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Standards for Reformulated and Conventional Gasoline,
WT/DS2/AB/R, adopted 20 May 1996, DSR 1996:I, p. 3
|
US – Hot‑Rolled Steel
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Anti‑Dumping Measures on Certain Hot‑Rolled Steel Products from
Japan, WT/DS184/AB/R, adopted 23 August 2001,
DSR 2001:X, p. 4697
|
US – Lamb
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Safeguard Measures on Imports of Fresh, Chilled or Frozen Lamb Meat
from New Zealand and Australia, WT/DS177/AB/R, WT/DS178/AB/R,
adopted 16 May 2001, DSR 2001:IX, p. 4051
|
US – Large Civil Aircraft (2nd complaint)
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Measures Affecting Trade in Large Civil Aircraft (Second Complaint), WT/DS353/AB/R, adopted
23 March 2012, DSR 2012:I, p. 7
|
US – Oil Country Tubular Goods
Sunset Reviews
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Sunset Reviews of Anti‑Dumping Measures on Oil Country Tubular Goods
from Argentina, WT/DS268/AB/R, adopted 17 December 2004,
DSR 2004:VII, p. 3257
|
US – Section 211 Appropriations
Act
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Section 211 Omnibus Appropriations Act of 1998,
WT/DS176/AB/R, adopted 1 February 2002, DSR 2002:II, p. 589
|
US – Shrimp
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Import Prohibition of Certain Shrimp and Shrimp Products,
WT/DS58/AB/R, adopted 6 November 1998, DSR 1998:VII, p. 2755
|
US – Steel Safeguards
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Definitive Safeguard Measures on Imports of Certain Steel Products,
WT/DS248/AB/R, WT/DS249/AB/R, WT/DS251/AB/R, WT/DS252/AB/R, WT/DS253/AB/R,
WT/DS254/AB/R, WT/DS258/AB/R, WT/DS259/AB/R, adopted 10 December 2003,
DSR 2003:VII, p. 3117
|
US – Tyres (China)
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Measures Affecting Imports of Certain Passenger Vehicle and Light
Truck Tyres from China,
WT/DS399/AB/R, adopted 5 October 2011, DSR 2011:IX, p. 4811
|
US – Upland Cotton
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Subsidies on Upland Cotton, WT/DS267/AB/R, adopted
21 March 2005, DSR 2005:I, p. 3
|
US – Upland Cotton
|
Panel Report, United States –
Subsidies on Upland Cotton, WT/DS267/R, Add.1 to Add.3 and Corr.1,
adopted 21 March 2005, as modified by Appellate Body Report
WT/DS267/AB/R, DSR 2005:II, p. 299
|
US – Wheat Gluten
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Definitive Safeguard Measures on Imports of Wheat Gluten from the
European Communities, WT/DS166/AB/R, adopted 19 January 2001,
DSR 2001:II, p. 717
|
US – Wool Shirts and Blouses
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Measure Affecting Imports of Woven Wool Shirts and Blouses from
India, WT/DS33/AB/R, adopted 23 May 1997, and Corr.1,
DSR 1997:I, p. 323
|
US – Zeroing (Japan) (Article 21.5
– Japan)
|
Appellate Body Report, United
States – Measures Relating to Zeroing and Sunset Reviews – Recourse to Article 21.5
of the DSU by Japan, WT/DS322/AB/RW, adopted 31 August 2009,
DSR 2009:VIII, p. 3441
|
World Trade Organization
Appellate Body
China
– Measures Imposing Anti‑Dumping Duties on High‑Performance Stainless Steel
Seamless Tubes ("HP‑SSST") from Japan (DS454)
China
– Measures Imposing Anti‑Dumping Duties on High‑Performance Stainless Steel
Seamless Tubes ("HP‑SSST") from the European Union (DS460)
Japan,
Appellant[1]/Appellee[2]/Third Participant[3]
China,
Appellant[4]/Other Appellant[5]/Appellee[6]
European Union,
Other Appellant[7]/Appellee[8]/Third Participant[9]
India, Third Participant
Korea, Third Participant
Russia, Third Participant
Saudi Arabia,
Third Participant
Turkey,
Third Participant
United States,
Third Participant
|
AB-2015-4
AB-2015-5
Appellate Body Division:
Van den Bossche, Presiding Member
Graham, Member
Ramírez-Hernández, Member
|
1.1. Japan and China each appeals
certain issues of law and legal interpretations developed in the
Panel Report, China – Measures Imposing
Anti‑Dumping Duties on High‑Performance Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes ("HP‑SSST")
from Japan, WT/DS454/R[10]
(Japan Panel Report); and China and the European Union each appeals
certain issues of law and legal interpretations developed in the
Panel Report, China – Measures Imposing
Anti‑Dumping Duties on High-Performance Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes
("HP-SSST") from the European Union, WT/DS460/R[11]
(EU Panel Report).[12]
1.2. On 24 May 2013 and 30 August 2013,
respectively, two panels were established to consider complaints by Japan[13]
and the European Union[14]
(the complainants) with respect to China's measures imposing anti‑dumping
duties on imports of certain high‑performance stainless steel seamless tubes
(HP‑SSST) from Japan and the European Union.[15]
1.3. On 27 September 2013,
after consultation with the parties, the Panel[16]
adopted additional working procedures concerning business confidential
information (BCI Procedures). Following a request for a preliminary ruling
by the European Union, the Panel introduced modifications to the BCI
Procedures on 22 May 2014.[17]
1.4. China's measures at issue in these
disputes are set forth in the Preliminary Determination[18] and the Final Determination[19] of the Ministry of Commerce of the People's Republic of China (MOFCOM),
including any annexes and amendments thereto.[20] MOFCOM identified the scope of the products under investigation as
imports of certain HP-SSST from the European Union and Japan.[21]
HP-SSST is mainly used in the manufacture of pressurized components such as
superheaters and reheaters of supercritical and ultra-supercritical boilers.[22]
MOFCOM found that there are three main types or grades of HP-SSST, which the
Panel referred to as Grade A, Grade B, and Grade C,
respectively.[23]
1.5. Both complainants requested the
Panel to find that China, in the conduct of the anti‑dumping investigation at
issue, acted inconsistently with several provisions of the Agreement on
Implementation of Article VI of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
1994 (Anti‑Dumping Agreement), as well as Article VI of the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 (GATT 1994). In particular, they
requested the Panel to find that China acted contrary to the provisions of the
Anti‑Dumping Agreement in its: (i) determination of injury;
(ii) treatment of certain confidential information provided by the
applicants; (iii) alleged failure to disclose certain essential facts;
(iv) application of provisional measures; and (v) alleged provision
of inadequate information in its Final Determination Notice. In addition, the European Union
requested the Panel to find that China acted inconsistently with the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement in arriving at its determination of dumping.[24]
1.6. The Panel Reports were circulated
to Members of the World Trade Organization (WTO) on 13 February 2015.[25]
In the Japan Panel Report, the Panel concluded that MOFCOM's determination of injury
is inconsistent with Articles 3.1, 3.2, 3.4, and 3.5 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement, for the following reasons:
a.
MOFCOM failed to account properly for differences in quantities when
comparing the price of Grade C subject imports with the domestic Grade C
price in its price effects analysis, contrary to Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement;
b.
MOFCOM failed to evaluate properly the magnitude of the margin of
dumping in considering the impact of subject imports on the domestic industry,
contrary to Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement;
c.
MOFCOM improperly relied on the market share of subject imports, and on
its flawed price effects and impact analyses, in determining a causal link
between subject imports and material injury to the domestic industry, contrary
to Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement; and
d.
MOFCOM failed to ensure that injury caused by the decrease in apparent
consumption and the increase in production capacity was not attributed to
subject imports, contrary to Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement.[26]
1.7. The Panel, however, rejected
Japan's claims under Articles 3.1, 3.2, 3.4, and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
that:
a.
MOFCOM failed to consider whether Grade C subject imports had any
price undercutting effect on domestic Grade C products and improperly
extended its findings of price undercutting in respect of Grades B and C
to the domestic like product as a whole, contrary to Articles 3.1 and 3.2
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement; and
b.
MOFCOM failed to undertake a segmented analysis and to weigh properly
the positive and negative injury factors when assessing the impact of subject
imports on the domestic industry, contrary to Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[27]
1.8. The Panel concluded that MOFCOM
allowed certain information supplied by the petitioners[28]
to remain confidential without objectively assessing the "good cause"
alleged or scrutinizing the petitioners' showing of "good cause",
contrary to Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[29]
1.9. The Panel also concluded that China
acted inconsistently with Article 6.5.1 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
by failing to require the petitioners to provide sufficiently detailed non‑confidential
summaries of information treated as confidential, or explanations as to why
summarization of this information was not possible.[30]
1.10. The Panel found that China acted
inconsistently with Article 6.9 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by
failing to disclose adequately essential facts in connection with:
a.
the methodology used to calculate the margins of dumping for Sumitomo
Metal Industries, Ltd. (SMI) and Kobe Special Tube Co., Ltd. (Kobe); and
b.
import prices, domestic prices, and price comparisons considered by
MOFCOM in its determination of injury.[31]
1.11. The Panel, however, rejected Japan's
claim that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.9 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement by failing to disclose adequately essential facts
in connection with:
a.
the data underlying MOFCOM's determination of dumping in respect of SMI
and Kobe; and
b.
the determination and the calculation of the dumping margins for all
Japanese companies other than SMI and Kobe.[32]
1.12. The Panel also rejected Japan's
claim that MOFCOM's reliance on facts available to calculate the dumping margin
for all Japanese companies other than SMI and Kobe is inconsistent with Article 6.8
and paragraph 1 of Annex II to the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[33]
1.13. In the EU Panel Report, the Panel
found that the European Union's claim under Article 2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
fell outside the Panel's terms of reference.[34]
The Panel also found that the European Union's claims under Article 2.2.1.1
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
– pertaining to MOFCOM's use of data that: (i) allegedly were not in accordance
with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP); (ii) did not reasonably
reflect the costs associated with the product under consideration; and
(iii) were not historically utilized by Salzgitter Mannesmann Stainless
Tubes (SMST) – fell outside the Panel's terms of reference.[35]
1.14. Turning to
the European Union's claims that were within the Panel's terms of
reference, the Panel concluded that:
a.
China acted inconsistently with Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
by failing to determine an amount for administrative, selling and general
(SG&A) costs for SMST on the basis of actual data pertaining to production
and sales in the ordinary course of trade of the like product[36];
consequently, the Panel did not consider it necessary to rule on the European Union's
claims that China acted inconsistently with Articles 2.2.1 and 2.2.1.1 of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement[37];
b.
China acted inconsistently with Article 2.4 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
because MOFCOM failed to address SMST's request for an adjustment to ensure a
fair comparison between the export price and the normal value for Grade C HP‑SSST[38];
c.
China acted inconsistently with Article 6.7 and paragraph 7 of
Annex I to the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM rejected SMST's
request for rectification only on the basis that it was not provided prior to the
verification visit[39];
and
d.
MOFCOM's determination of injury is inconsistent with Articles 3.1,
3.2, 3.4, and 3.5 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement because:
i.
MOFCOM failed to account properly for differences in quantities when
comparing the price of Grade C subject imports with the domestic Grade C
price in its price effects analysis, contrary to Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement;
ii.
MOFCOM failed to evaluate properly the magnitude of the margin of
dumping in considering the impact of subject imports on the domestic industry,
contrary to Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement;
iii.
MOFCOM improperly relied on the market share of subject imports, and on
its flawed price effects and impact analyses, in determining a causal link
between subject imports and material injury to the domestic industry, contrary
to Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement; and
iv.
MOFCOM failed to ensure that injury caused by the decrease in apparent
consumption and the increase in production capacity was not attributed to subject
imports, contrary to Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement.[40]
1.15. The Panel, however, rejected the European Union's
claims under Articles 3.1, 3.2, 3.4, and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
that:
a.
MOFCOM failed to consider whether Grade C subject imports had any
price undercutting effect on domestic Grade C products and improperly
extended its findings of price undercutting in respect of Grades B and C
to the domestic like product as a whole, contrary to Articles 3.1 and 3.2
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement; and
b.
MOFCOM failed to undertake a segmented analysis and to weigh properly
the positive and negative injury factors when assessing the impact of subject
imports on the domestic industry, contrary to Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[41]
1.16. The Panel also rejected the European Union's
claims that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.8 and
paragraphs 3 and 6 of Annex II to the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by
applying facts available in respect of certain information that SMST sought to
rectify at the verification.[42]
Likewise, the Panel rejected the European Union's claims that China's
reliance on facts available to calculate the dumping margin for all EU
companies other than SMST and Tubacex Tubos Inoxidables, S.A. (Tubacex) is
inconsistent with Article 6.8 and paragraph 1 of Annex II to the
Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[43]
1.17. The Panel concluded that MOFCOM
allowed certain information supplied by the petitioners to remain confidential
without objectively assessing the "good cause" alleged or scrutinizing
the petitioners' showing of "good cause", contrary to Article 6.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[44]
1.18. Similarly, the Panel found that
China acted inconsistently with Article 6.5.1 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
by failing to require the petitioners to provide sufficiently detailed non‑confidential
summaries of information treated as confidential, or explanations as to why
summarization of that information was not possible.[45]
1.19. The Panel also concluded that China
acted inconsistently with Article 6.9 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
by failing to disclose adequately essential facts in connection with:
a.
the methodology used to calculate the margins of dumping for SMST and
Tubacex; and
b.
import prices, domestic prices, and price comparisons considered by
MOFCOM in its determination of injury.[46]
1.20. The Panel rejected the European Union's
claims that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.9 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
by failing to disclose adequately essential facts in connection with:
a.
the data underlying MOFCOM's determination of dumping in respect of SMST
and Tubacex; and
b.
the determination and the calculation of the dumping margins for all
EU companies other than SMST and Tubacex.[47]
1.21. In both the Japan and EU Panel
Reports, the Panel concluded that, pursuant to Article 3.8 of the Understanding
on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (DSU), to the
extent that China acted inconsistently with certain provisions of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement,
China nullified or impaired benefits accruing to Japan and the European Union
under that Agreement.[48]
Accordingly, pursuant to Article 19.1 of the DSU, the Panel recommended
that China bring its measures into conformity with its obligations under the
Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[49]
1.22. On 20 May 2015, Japan notified the Dispute Settlement
Body (DSB) of its intention to appeal[50]
certain issues of law covered in the Japan Panel Report and certain legal
interpretations developed by the Panel, and filed a Notice of Appeal and an
appellant's submission.[51]
On 26 May 2015, China notified the DSB of its intention to appeal[52]
certain issues of law covered in the Japan Panel Report and certain legal
interpretations developed by the Panel, and filed a Notice of Other Appeal and
an other appellant's submission.[53]
1.23. On 20 May 2015, China notified the DSB of its
intention to appeal[54]
certain issues of law covered in the EU Panel Report and certain legal
interpretations developed by the Panel, and filed a Notice of Appeal and an
appellant's submission.[55]
On 26 May 2015, the European Union notified the DSB of its intention
to appeal[56]
certain issues of law covered in the EU Panel Report and certain legal
interpretations developed by the Panel, and filed a Notice of Other Appeal and
an other appellant's submission.[57]
1.24. By letter dated
28 May 2015, the Appellate Body informed the participants and
third parties that it intended to consolidate the appellate proceedings in
these disputes, and gave them an opportunity to comment. No objections were
received. By letter dated 1 June 2015, the Appellate Body
informed the participants and third parties that, in the interests of
"fairness and orderly procedure", as referred to in Rule 16(1)
of the Working Procedures for Appellate Review[58]
(Working Procedures), the appellate proceedings in respect of the
aforementioned appeals would be consolidated due to the significant overlap in
the content of these disputes for which the appeals were filed on the same
date. A single Appellate Body Division was selected to hear both appeals,
and a single oral hearing was held by the Division.
1.25. On 8 June 2015, Japan,
the European Union[59],
and China each filed an appellee's submission.[60]
1.26. On 10 June 2015, the
United States filed a third participant's submission.[61]
On the same day, India, Korea, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey each notified its intention to appear at
the oral hearing as a third participant.[62]
1.27. On 15 June 2015, in response to a
letter from the Division specifying the dates of the oral hearing in these
proceedings, Japan sent a letter to the Division indicating that it had
concerns regarding the decision to hold the oral hearing on days 71‑72 of these
proceedings.[63]
On 16 June 2015, the Division received a letter from the European Union,
in response to Japan's letter, stating that the European Union assumed
that, pursuant to Article 17.5 of the DSU, the Appellate Body would
inform the DSB, in due course, of the reasons for the delay.[64]
On 17 June 2015, the Appellate Body received a communication from China
indicating that it did not have any substantive comments on the procedures
adopted by the Division in these appeals. On the same date, the Appellate Body
received a letter from India indicating that it did not consider that more
specific explanations regarding the Appellate Body's timetable were
necessary.
1.28. By letter dated
18 June 2015, the Division hearing these appeals indicated that it
would inform the DSB of the reasons for the delay by letter within two months of
the date of the filing of these appeals. The Division added that, in that
letter, or as soon as possible thereafter, it would provide an estimated date
of circulation of the Appellate Body Reports in these disputes.
1.29. By
letter dated 19 July 2015, the Chair of the Appellate Body
notified the Chair of the DSB that the Appellate Body would not be able to
circulate its Reports by the end of the 60‑day period, or within the 90‑day
timeframe provided for in Article 17.5 of the DSU, due to the
number and complexity of the issues raised in these appeals and parallel
proceedings, scheduling issues arising from the overlap in the composition
of the Divisions hearing the different appeals, and shortage of staff in the Appellate Body Secretariat. He
further indicated that, due to a pending request for a change in the working
schedule in the parallel appellate proceedings in DS381, the Appellate Body
was not, at that time, in a position to inform the DSB of the estimated date of
circulation of the Appellate Body Reports in DS454 and DS460. The Chair
indicated, however, that the Appellate Body expected that matter to be
resolved soon and that the Appellate Body would then inform the DSB of the
estimated date of circulation.
1.30. Subsequently,
after the working schedule in DS381 was decided, the Chair of the Appellate Body
informed the Chair of the DSB, by letter dated 28 July 2015, that the Appellate Body
Reports in these appeals would be circulated no later than 14 October 2015.
1.31. The oral
hearing in these appeals was held on 30-31 July 2015. The
participants and two third participants (Turkey and the United States)
made oral statements. The participants and third participants responded to
questions posed by the Members of the Appellate Body Division hearing
these appeals.
2.1. The claims and arguments of the
participants are reflected in the executive summaries of their written
submissions provided to the Appellate Body.[65] The Notices of Appeal and Other Appeal, and the executive
summaries of the participants' claims and arguments, are contained in Annexes A
and B of the Addendum to these Reports, WT/DS454/AB/R/Add.1, WT/DS460/AB/R/Add.1.
3.1. The arguments of the
United States, as third participant, are reflected in the executive
summary of its written submission provided to the Appellate Body[66], contained in Annex C of the
Addendum to these Reports, WT/DS454/AB/R/Add.1, WT/DS460/AB/R/Add.1.
4.1. The following issues are raised in
these appeals:
a. with respect to the Panel's
findings regarding Articles 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement:
i.
whether the Panel erred in finding that the European Union's panel
request, as it relates to Articles 2.2.1 and 2.2.2, complies with the
requirement of Article 6.2 of the DSU to provide a brief summary of the
legal basis of the complaint sufficient to present the problem clearly and, consequently,
in finding that the European Union's claims under these provisions were
within the Panel's terms of reference (raised in DS460 by China);
ii. whether the Panel erred in its
interpretation and application of Article 2.2.2 in finding that China failed
to determine an SG&A amount for SMST on the basis of actual data pertaining
to production and sales in the ordinary course of trade of the like product
(raised in DS460 by China); and
iii. whether, in reaching its finding
under Article 2.2.2, the Panel acted inconsistently with its obligations
under Articles 11 and 12.7 of the DSU and Article 17.6(i) of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
(raised in DS460 by China);
b. whether the Panel erred in finding
that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.7 and paragraph 7 of
Annex I to the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by rejecting SMST's request for
rectification of certain information only on the basis that it was not provided
prior to verification (raised in DS460 by the European Union);
c. with respect to the Panel's finding
that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement:
i.
whether the Panel erred in its interpretation and application of Article 6.5
in finding that China acted inconsistently with that provision because MOFCOM
permitted the full text of the reports in appendix V and appendix VIII to
the petition, appendix 59 to the petitioners' supplemental evidence of
1 March 2012, and the appendix to the petitioners' supplemental
evidence of 29 March 2012, to remain confidential without objectively
assessing the petitioners' showing of "good cause" (raised in DS454
and DS460 by China); and
ii. whether the Panel applied an
erroneous standard of review and failed to make an objective assessment of the
facts contrary to the requirements of Article 11 of the DSU and Article 17.6(i)
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement (raised in DS454 and DS460 by China);
d. with respect to the Panel's
findings under Article 6.9 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement:
i.
whether the Panel erred in its interpretation and application of Article 6.9
in rejecting the European Union's claim that China acted inconsistently
with that provision because MOFCOM failed to disclose adequately the essential
facts in connection with the data underlying MOFCOM's determination of dumping
concerning SMST and Tubacex (raised in DS460 by the European Union); and
ii. whether the Appellate Body can
complete the legal analysis and find that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.9
because MOFCOM failed to disclose adequately the essential facts in connection
with the data underlying MOFCOM's determination of dumping concerning SMST and
Tubacex (raised in DS460 by the European Union);
e. with respect to the Panel's
findings under Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement:
i.
whether the Panel erred in its interpretation of Article 3.2 in
finding that, in its consideration of whether there has been a significant
price undercutting, an investigating authority may consider simply whether
dumped imports sell at lower prices than comparable domestic products (raised
in DS454 by Japan and in DS460 by the European Union);
ii. whether the Panel erred by
rejecting Japan's and the European Union's claims that MOFCOM acted
inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.2 by failing to consider whether Grade C
subject imports had any price undercutting effect on domestic Grade C
products, in the sense of placing downward pressure on those domestic prices by
being sold at lower prices (raised in DS454 by Japan and in DS460 by the European Union);
iii. whether the Appellate Body can
complete the legal analysis and find that MOFCOM's assessment of whether there
had been a significant price undercutting by Grade C imports from Japan,
as compared with the price of domestic Grade C, is inconsistent with Articles 3.1
and 3.2 (raised in DS454 by Japan and in DS460 by the European Union); and
iv. whether the Panel erred by
rejecting the European Union's claim that MOFCOM acted inconsistently with
Articles 3.1 and 3.2 by improperly extending its finding of price
undercutting in respect of Grades B and C to the domestic like product as
a whole, including domestic Grade A (raised in DS460 by the European Union);
f. with respect to the Panel's
findings under Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement:
i.
whether the Panel erred in finding that Japan's claim, that MOFCOM failed
to examine whether dumped imports provided explanatory force for the state of
the domestic industry, fell outside the Panel's terms of reference (raised in
DS454 by Japan); and
ii. whether the Panel erred in
rejecting Japan's and the European Union's claims that MOFCOM acted
inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.4 because MOFCOM was required to,
but did not, undertake a segmented impact analysis (raised in DS454 by Japan
and in DS460 by the European Union);
g. with respect to the Panel's finding
that China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement:
i.
whether, in reaching its finding that MOFCOM improperly relied on the
market share of dumped imports in determining a causal link between dumped
imports and injury to the domestic industry, the Panel acted inconsistently
with Article 6.2 of the DSU by addressing a claim by Japan that was
outside the Panel's terms of reference (raised in DS454 by China);
ii. whether, in reaching its finding
that MOFCOM improperly relied on the market share of dumped imports in
determining a causal link between dumped imports and injury to the domestic
industry, the Panel acted inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU
because it ruled on a matter that was not before it, or, in the alternative,
made the case for the complainant (raised in DS454 and DS460 by China);
iii. whether the Panel erred in finding
that MOFCOM improperly relied on the market share of dumped imports in
determining a causal link between dumped imports and injury to the domestic
industry, and made no finding of cross-grade price effects whereby price
undercutting by Grade B and C imports might be shown to affect the price
of domestic Grade A HP-SSST (raised in DS454 and DS460 by China);
iv. whether the Panel erred in finding
that China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
because MOFCOM failed to ensure that the injury caused by the decrease in
apparent consumption and the increase in domestic production capacity was not
attributed to the dumped imports (raised in DS454 and DS460 by China); and
v. whether the Panel acted
inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU in finding that the complainants
had not advanced independent claims concerning MOFCOM's price effects and
impact analyses, under Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement, other than those concerning MOFCOM's reliance on market shares and
MOFCOM's non-attribution analysis (raised in DS454 by Japan and in DS460 by the
European Union); and
h. with respect to the Panel's
designation of business confidential information (BCI) and its adoption of BCI
Procedures, whether the Panel erred in its interpretation and application of Articles 18.2
and 13.1 of the DSU and Articles 17.7 and 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement, and, in particular, in finding that, in the context of a dispute
brought under the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, the phrase "confidential
information" in Article 17.7 refers to the confidential information
previously examined by the investigating authority and treated as confidential
pursuant to Article 6.5, and which is then provided to a dispute
settlement panel pursuant to Article 17.7 (raised in DS460 by the European Union).
5.1. We begin with China's claims as
they relate to the Panel's assessment of MOFCOM's determination of dumping for
SMST, one of the EU companies that were investigated. We recall, in this
regard, that MOFCOM calculated the margin of dumping for a particular type of
HP-SSST, referred to in the Panel Reports as Grade B, on the basis of a
comparison between SMST's export prices to China and a constructed "normal
value"[67],
that is, the sum of: (i) the cost of production (COP) in the country of
origin; and (ii) amounts for SG&A costs and profits. With respect to
the amounts for SG&A costs and profits, the chapeau of Article 2.2.2
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement states that these "shall be based on actual
data pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary course of trade of the
like product by the exporter or producer under investigation."[68]
5.2. We examine, first, China's claims
that the Panel erred in concluding that the European Union's panel
request, as it relates to Articles 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement, provides a "brief summary of the legal basis of the complaint
sufficient to present the problem clearly", as required by Article 6.2
of the DSU. Thereafter, we examine China's claim that the Panel erred in
its interpretation and application of Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement, and acted inconsistently with its duties under Articles 11
and 12.7 of the DSU and Article 17.6(i) of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
when it found that MOFCOM had failed to determine an amount for SG&A costs
for SMST on the basis of actual data pertaining to production and sales in the
ordinary course of trade of the like product.
5.3. The European Union alleged in
its panel request that China acted inconsistently with:
Articles 2.2, 2.2.1, 2.2.1.1, and 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement because China did not determine the amounts for [SG&A] costs and
for profits on the basis of records and actual data by the exporters or
producers under investigation. In particular, the amounts for [SG&A] costs
and for profits as constructed by China do not reflect the records and the
actual data of the exporters or producers under investigation.[69]
5.4. In its first written submission to
the Panel, the European Union relied on this language in its panel request
as the basis for its claims that China acted inconsistently with:
·
Article 2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because the
unrepresentative and rejected data used by MOFCOM did not permit a proper
comparison, and the amount for SG&A was not reasonable;
·
Article 2.2.1 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM used
free samples, which by definition are not sales in the ordinary course of
trade;
·
Article 2.2.1.1 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM used
unrepresentative and rejected data that: (i) did not correspond to the
records kept by SMST; (ii) were not in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles (GAAP); (iii) did not reasonably reflect the costs
associated with the product under consideration; and (iv) had not been
historically utilized by SMST; and
·
Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM failed
to determine an SG&A amount for SMST on the basis of actual data pertaining
to production and sales in the ordinary course of trade of the like product.[70]
5.5. China argued that several of these
claims were outside the Panel's terms of reference because the European Union
had not complied with the requirements under Article 6.2 of the DSU with
respect to those claims. In making this argument, China submitted that the European Union
had presented two sets of claims in its first written submission: (i) main
claims under Article 2.2.2; and (ii) "additional/support
claims" under Articles 2.2, 2.2.1, and 2.2.1.1 in support of its main
claims.
5.6. With regard to the European Union's
"main claims", China accepted that "the European Union's
claim under Article 2.2.2 that the SG&A amount was not based on actual
data falls within the Panel's terms of reference."[71]
However, China contended that "the European Union's panel request does
not include a claim under Article 2.2.2 that the SG&A amount did not
pertain to production and sales in the ordinary course of trade."[72]
With regard to what it described as the European Union's "additional
claims", China accepted that "the European Union's claim under
Article 2.2.1.1 that data used did not correspond to the records kept by
SMST falls within the Panel's terms of reference."[73]
However, China maintained that all remaining "additional claims"
under Articles 2.2, 2.2.1, and 2.2.1.1 were outside the scope of the European Union's
panel request.[74]
According to China, "such non‑inclusion" was "not a matter of a
lack of any clarity or precision in the European Union's request for
establishment of a panel".[75]
Rather, China asserted that the European Union "clearly specified the
claims included in its request for establishment", and "expressly
limited" its claims under Articles 2.2, 2.2.1, 2.2.1.1,
and 2.2.2 to the claims that the SG&A amounts used by MOFCOM to
construct normal value did not reflect the records kept by SMST, and were not
based on "actual data".[76]
China contended that the use of the term "in particular" in the European Union's
panel request clearly defined the claims raised by the European Union.[77]
5.7. Citing Appellate Body
jurisprudence, the Panel recalled that, "when 'a provision contains not
one single, distinct obligation, but rather multiple obligations, a panel
request might need to specify which of the obligations contained in the
provision is being challenged'"[78],
and that "compliance with the requirements of Article 6.2 [of the
DSU] must be determined on the merits of each case, having considered the panel
request as a whole, and in the light of attendant circumstances."[79]
The Panel observed that the mere fact that the European Union referred to
a particular provision in its panel request, allegedly without specifying the
particular obligation being challenged, did not necessarily mean that the European Union's
panel request fails to meet the requirements of Article 6.2 of the DSU.
The Panel noted that this was "because the relevant WTO obligations
may nevertheless be identifiable from a careful reading of the panel request as
a whole."[80]
The Panel proceeded, therefore, to "examine whether a careful reading of
the European Union's panel request, including any narrative explanation
contained therein, permits a sufficiently clear identification of the legal
basis regarding each of the Article 2 claims pursued in the European Union's
first written submission."[81]
5.8. Regarding the European Union's
claim under Article 2.2.1, the Panel described Article 2.2.1 as
containing "one single obligation relating to when sales of the like
product may be treated as not being in the ordinary course of trade"[82],
and considered that a "reference" to Article 2.2.1 was,
therefore, "sufficient to clearly present a problem pertaining to the
treatment of below‑cost sales".[83]
The Panel concluded that the European Union's panel request, with respect
to the claim under Article 2.2.1 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement, complies
with Article 6.2 of the DSU.
5.9. With respect to the European Union's
claim under Article 2.2.2, the Panel observed that the European Union's
panel request alleges that "China did not determine the [SG&A amounts]
on the basis of … actual data by the exporters or producers under
investigation", and recalled that China had accepted that the European Union's
claim under Article 2.2.2 relating to "actual data" was properly
before the Panel.[84]
Further, the Panel pointed out that the panel request includes a reference to Article 2.2.1
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement. Relying on the text of that provision, which
stipulates the conditions under which "sales … at prices below per unit …
costs of production plus [SG&A costs] may be treated as not being in the
ordinary course of trade … and may be disregarded in determining normal
value", the Panel considered that "a reasonably informed reader would
understand from the reference to Article 2.2.1 that the European Union
also takes issue … with whether or not SG&A amounts are based on data
pertaining to the production and sales in the ordinary course of trade."[85]
Thus, the Panel concluded that the European Union's claim under Article 2.2.2
relating to "actual data pertaining to production and sales in the
ordinary course of trade" was within the scope of its terms of reference.[86]
5.10. We begin our analysis by reviewing
WTO jurisprudence regarding the requirements of Article 6.2 of the DSU. We
then address the specific issues raised by China on appeal.
5.11. Article 6.2 of the DSU reads,
in relevant part:
The request for the establishment of a panel shall be
made in writing. It shall indicate whether consultations were held, identify
the specific measures at issue and provide a brief summary of the legal basis
of the complaint sufficient to present the problem clearly.
5.12. Article 6.2 of the DSU sets
out two principal requirements: (i) the identification of the specific measures
at issue; and (ii) the provision of a brief summary of the legal basis of the
complaint sufficient to present the problem clearly.[87] The requirements specified in Article 6.2 are significant because,
"pursuant to Article 7 of the DSU, a panel's terms of reference
are governed by the request for establishment of a panel."[88] In other words, a panel request delimits the scope of a panel's
jurisdiction.
5.13. In assessing whether a panel
request is "sufficiently precise" to comply with Article 6.2,
panels must "scrutinize carefully the panel request, read as a whole, and
on the basis of the language used".[89]
While submissions and statements made during the course of the panel
proceedings may be consulted in order to confirm the meaning of the words used
in the panel request[90],
they cannot "cure" defects in the request.[91]
Rather, a panel request must be examined on its face as it existed at the time
of filing.[92]
The need to examine the panel request "on its face" and "on the
basis of the language used" makes the narrative in the panel request a
significant part of the assessment of whether the request provides "a
brief summary of the legal basis of the complaint sufficient to present the
problem clearly".[93]
5.14. With respect to this requirement,
the Appellate Body has explained that the reference in Article 6.2 of
the DSU to the "legal basis of the complaint" refers to the claims
pertaining to a specific provision of a covered agreement containing the
obligation alleged to be violated[94];
and that it is the claims, and not
the arguments, that are to be set out in a
panel request in a way that is sufficient to present the problem clearly.[95]
For the purposes of Article 6.2, a "claim" refers to an
allegation that "the respondent party has violated, or nullified or
impaired the benefits arising from, an identified provision of a particular
agreement."[96]
"Arguments", by contrast, are statements put forth by a complaining
party "to demonstrate that the responding party's measure does indeed
infringe upon the identified treaty provision".[97]
The Appellate Body has stated that the "[i]dentification of the
treaty provisions claimed to have been violated by the respondent is always
necessary" and is a "minimum prerequisite if the legal basis of the
complaint is to be presented at all".[98]
5.15. Regarding the requirement that a
complainant provide a "brief summary" that is sufficient to "present
the problem clearly", the Appellate Body has explained that a panel
request must "plainly connect the challenged measure(s) with the
provision(s) of the covered agreements claimed to have been infringed".[99]
Thus, "to the extent that a provision contains not one single, distinct
obligation, but rather multiple obligations, a panel request might need to
specify which of the obligations contained in the provision is being
challenged."[100]
5.16. A further element relevant to
assessing the consistency of a panel request with Article 6.2 of the DSU
is whether it complies with the due process objective in that provision of
notifying the respondent and third parties of the nature of the complainant's
case.[101]
5.17. China contends, as it did before
the Panel, that the European Union's panel request was expressly limited
to two claims: (i) that MOFCOM did not determine SG&A amounts and
profits on the basis of the records of the
exporters or producers; and (ii) that MOFCOM did not determine SG&A
amounts and profits on the basis of the actual data of
the exporters or producers.[102]
For China, this was clear, given that the European Union alleged in its
panel request that China acted inconsistently with the identified provisions of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement "because" China did not determine SG&A
amounts "on the basis of records and actual data by the exporters or
producers under investigation".[103]
China adds that the use of the term "in particular", in the second
sentence of paragraph 1 of the European Union's panel request,
further defines the claims raised by the European Union.[104]
5.18. The European Union counters
that it did not expressly limit its panel request through the use of the term
"because", but that this term was simply used to introduce a brief
summary of the legal basis of the complaint.[105]
With respect to the expression "in particular", the European Union
argues that the Panel correctly found that this language served to highlight that the European Union's
claims under the provisions at issue would focus on the manner in which China
determined the amount for SG&A costs for SMST
"as constructed" by MOFCOM.[106]
5.19. We recall that the European Union's
panel request includes specific references to Articles 2.2, 2.2.1,
2.2.1.1, and 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, and a specific listing of the
grounds for the European Union's claims. The European Union alleged,
in order, that: (i) China had violated Articles 2.2, 2.2.1, 2.2.1.1, and
2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement; (ii) this was so "because China did
not determine the amounts for [SG&A] costs and for profits on the basis of
records and actual data by the exporters or producers under investigation";
and (iii) "[i]n particular, the amounts for [SG&A]
costs and for profits as constructed by China do not reflect the records and
the actual data of the exporters or producers under investigation".[107]
5.20. We disagree with China to the
extent it argues that it is not relevant to assess the nature of the
provisions cited by the European Union in its panel request, including
whether they contain a single
obligation, or multiple, distinct obligations.[108]
Contrary to what China suggests, "[w]hether or not a general reference to a
treaty provision will be adequate to meet the requirement of sufficiency under Article 6.2
is to be examined on a case-by-case basis, taking into account the extent to
which such reference sheds light on the nature of the obligation at issue."[109]
Moreover, Article 6.2 of the
DSU does not prohibit a party from including in the panel request statements
"that foreshadow its arguments in substantiating the claim"[110],
and that the presence of such statements "should not be interpreted to
narrow the scope of the measures or the claims".[111]
5.21. With
these considerations in mind, we turn to examine the nature and scope of Articles 2.2.1
and 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement. We start with Article 2.2.1,
which reads, in relevant part:
Sales of the like product in the domestic market of the
exporting country or sales to a third country at prices below per unit (fixed
and variable) costs of production plus [SG&A] costs may be treated as not
being in the ordinary course of trade by reason of price and may be disregarded
in determining normal value only if the
authorities determine that such sales are made within an extended period of time in substantial quantities
and are at prices which do not provide for the recovery of all costs within a
reasonable period of time.[112]
5.22. Under Article 2.2.1,
investigating authorities may treat below-cost sales of the like product as not
being "in the ordinary course of trade" by reason of price, and may
disregard such sales in determining normal value "only if" the
authorities determine that such sales were: (i) made within an extended period
of time; (ii) in substantial quantities; and (iii) at prices which do not
provide for the recovery of all costs within a reasonable period of time. While
an investigating authority can act inconsistently with Article 2.2.1 in
different ways – e.g. by disregarding below-cost sales without determining
whether they were "made within an extended period of time" or
"in substantial quantities" – this does not mean, however, that Article 2.2.1
contains multiple, distinct obligations. Rather, as we see it, Article 2.2.1
sets out a single obligation whereby an
investigating authority may disregard below-cost sales of the like product only if it determines that "such" below-cost sales
display the three specific characteristics mentioned above. The
fact that the European Union did not include statements in its panel
request foreshadowing the arguments it would make in order to substantiate its
claim under Article 2.2.1 does not mean that the European Union's
panel request does not comply with the standard set out in Article 6.2 of
the DSU.[113]
5.23. In the
light of the above, we uphold the
Panel's finding, in paragraph 7.49 of the EU Panel Report, that the European Union's
panel request complies with the requirement in Article 6.2 of the DSU to
"provide a brief summary of the legal basis of the complaint sufficient to
present the problem clearly" in respect of the European Union's claim
under Article 2.2.1 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.
5.24. Turning to China's claim under Article 2.2.2
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, we note that this provision sets forth how the
amounts for SG&A costs and profits are to be calculated for purposes of constructing
normal value. The chapeau of Article 2.2.2 provides, in relevant part,
that "the amounts for [SG&A] costs and for profits shall be based on
actual data pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary course of trade
of the like product by the exporter or producer under investigation." Article 2.2.2
further clarifies that, "[w]hen such amounts cannot be determined on this
basis" – i.e. "based on actual data pertaining to production and
sales in the ordinary course of trade of the like product by the exporter or
producer under investigation" – an investigating authority may
proceed to employ one of the other three methods provided in
subparagraphs (i)‑(iii) of Article 2.2.2.
5.25. By its express terms, Article 2.2.2
requires that an investigating authority, when calculating constructed normal
value under Article 2.2, first attempt to make such a calculation using
the "actual data pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary course
of trade". Therefore, if actual data for
SG&A costs and profits in the ordinary course of trade exists for the
exporter under investigation, an investigating authority may not calculate
constructed value using data from other sources.[114]
5.26. China reads the reference in the
chapeau of Article 2.2.2 to "actual data pertaining to production and
sales in the ordinary course" as setting out multiple, distinct
obligations, including an obligation to determine an amount for SG&A costs
on the basis of "actual data" that is "independent" and
"distinct" from the obligation to determine such costs on the basis
of data "pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary course of
trade".[115]
Thus, while China accepts, based on the narrative explanation contained in the European Union's
panel request, that the European Union's claim under Article 2.2.2
relating to "actual data" was within the Panel's terms of reference,
China contends that this is not the case for the European Union's claim
relating to the determination of an SG&A amount on the basis of actual data
pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary
course of trade.[116]
For its part, the European Union submits that the relevant terms in Article 2.2.2
are interlinked.[117]
Specifically, the European Union argues that the term "pertaining
to" is a modifier that links the term "actual data" to what
follows, so that "it is only the phrase as a whole that makes sense."[118]
5.27. Looking at the structure of Article 2.2.2,
we note that the noun "data" is immediately preceded by the adjective
"actual" and followed by the phrase "pertaining to production
and sales in the ordinary course of trade". As we see it, the term
"actual data" is clearly linked to the language that follows. The
phrase "pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary course of
trade" serves, in particular, to specify the actual data that is to be
used in order to calculate an amount for SG&A costs for purposes of
constructing normal value under Article 2.2.2. Thus, read as a whole, the
relevant phrase imposes a single obligation, set out in the chapeau of Article 2.2.2,
for investigating authorities to determine amounts for SG&A costs and
profits on the basis of actual data that relates to, or concerns, production
and sales in the ordinary course of trade. This reading of Article 2.2.2
would appear to be confirmed by the second sentence of that provision, which
refers back to the first sentence, and provides that, when SG&A amounts
"cannot be determined on this basis", thus referring in the singular
to the preferred method to be used to calculate such SG&A amounts. This is
consistent with the Appellate Body having referred to the chapeau of Article 2.2.2
as setting out "a general obligation ('shall') on an investigating
authority to use 'actual data pertaining to production and sales in the
ordinary course of trade' when determining amounts for SG&A and
profits."[119]
5.28. China seeks to overcome the plain
language in Article 2.2.2 by referring to the Appellate Body report
in EC – Bed Linen.[120]
In that dispute, the Appellate Body explained, in the context of examining
a substantive claim under Article 2.2.2(ii), that "all of 'the actual amounts incurred and realized' by other
exporters or producers must be included [when constructing normal value], regardless of whether those amounts are incurred and
realized on production and sales made in the ordinary course of trade or
not."[121]
In making this statement, the Appellate Body did not
address the question of whether Article 2.2.2 sets out distinct
requirements concerning the determination of constructed normal value that
would have to be spelt out explicitly in a panel request pursuant to Article 6.2
of the DSU in order to fall within a panel's terms of reference. The Appellate Body
report in EC – Bed Linen, therefore, does not
support China's position that Article 2.2.2 sets out distinct requirements
with respect to "actual data", on the one hand, and "data
pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary course of trade", on
the other hand.
5.29. China also takes issue with the
Panel's reliance on the reference to Article 2.2.1 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement in the European Union's panel request in concluding that the European Union's
claim under Article 2.2.2 was within the Panel's terms of reference. This
reference, as China contends, cannot be read to include a claim under Article 2.2.2
being within the Panel's terms of reference given that this claim "was not
among the two claims to which the [European Union's] panel request was
expressly limited".[122]
China adds that Article 2.2.1 and Article 2.2.2 were listed
separately in the European Union's panel request, together with a number
of other provisions.
5.30. In response, the European Union
argues that the reference to Article 2.2.1, with its single obligation
regarding the ordinary course of trade, confirms or provides relevant context
for understanding the reference to Article 2.2.2 in the panel request,
since each of these provisions is a development of Article 2.2 "with
respect to if and how
normal value may be constructed".[123]
5.31. We
agree with China that the reference to Article 2.2.1 in the European Union's
panel request could be read to suggest that the
European Union considered that MOFCOM erred by excluding
sales that should have been considered as being in the ordinary course of trade
from its determination of an SG&A amount for SMST, rather than by including sales that should have been excluded. This does
not mean, however, that the Panel would have been precluded from taking into account the
reference to Article 2.2.1 in the panel request as relevant context in
determining whether the European Union's claim under Article 2.2.2
was properly within the Panel's terms of reference. Although claims under Article 2.2.1
and Article 2.2.2 require distinct identification, the obligations
contained in these provisions are related insofar as they pertain to the
calculation of constructed normal value. Thus, a reference to Article 2.2.1
may be useful to understand the scope of the claim raised under Article 2.2.2.
We agree, therefore, with the Panel that the reference to Article 2.2.1
can relevantly inform the question of whether the European Union had
sufficiently articulated a claim under Article 2.2.2. We do not consider
that the Panel erred by looking at the language contained in the European Union's
panel request as a whole, including the reference to Article 2.2.1 of the
Anti‑Dumping Agreement.
5.32. China contends that the Appellate Body's
reasoning in EC – Fasteners (China) lends
support to its position in this case, referring to a "similarly structured
sentence" found in China's panel request in that case.[124]
We find China's arguments in this regard to be unavailing. Regardless of
whether China's panel request in EC – Fasteners (China) may
have contained a "similarly structured sentence"[125],
as China argues, the sufficiency of a panel request for the purposes of Article 6.2
of the DSU is to be determined on the basis of the language contained in the
panel request and the nature of the obligations contained in the provisions at
issue. Here, for the reasons described above, we consider the narrative
provided by the European Union to be sufficient to identify a claim under Article 2.2.2
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement regarding "actual data pertaining to
production and sales in the ordinary course of trade", considering the
nature of the single obligation contained in that provision. This was not the
basis for the Appellate Body's finding in EC –
Fasteners (China), where a claim "regarding the disclosure of
the identity of the complainants and supporters" was not mentioned
explicitly, and not covered by other language contained in China's panel
request, or captured through a reference to any one of the identified treaty
provisions by itself.
5.33. China asserts that the Panel
"distorted" the meaning of the relevant part of the European Union's
panel request, and failed to make an objective assessment of the term
"in particular" contained in the European Union's panel
request, when it found that the European Union had raised more than two
claims under Article 2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement regarding MOFCOM's
calculation of a constructed normal value for SMST.[126]
China also submits that, in finding that the "mere mention" of Article 2.2.1
provides "a brief summary of the legal basis of the complaint" in
relation to Article 2.2.2, and considering that "a reasonably
informed reader" would understand from this reference to Article 2.2.1
that the European Union also takes issue "with whether or not
SG&A amounts are based on data pertaining to the production and sales in
the ordinary course of trade", the Panel failed to make an objective
assessment of the matter before it, as required under Article 11 of the
DSU.[127]
Having disagreed with China that the European Union's panel request was
"expressly limited" to two claims under Article 2 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement, and having agreed with the Panel that the reference in the European Union's
panel request to Article 2.2.1 can relevantly inform the question of
whether the European Union had sufficiently articulated a claim under Article 2.2.2,
we do not consider it necessary to make additional findings regarding China's
claims under Article 11 of the DSU.
5.34. In sum, having reviewed the
language in Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, we do not agree
with China that Article 2.2.2 sets out separate obligations regarding
"actual data" and "data pertaining to production and sales in
the ordinary course of trade". Instead, we consider the narrative in the European Union's
panel request – "China did not determine the amounts for [SG&A] costs
and for profits on the basis of records and actual data by the exporters
or producers under investigation"[128]
– to be broad enough to encompass the European Union's claim regarding
"actual data pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary course of
trade". That the European Union did not include further language from
the text of Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement does not, in our
view, limit or reduce the scope of the European Union's claim to
"actual data".
5.35. For all these reasons, we uphold
the Panel's finding, in paragraph 7.51 of the EU Panel Report, that the European Union's
panel request complies with the requirement in Article 6.2 of the DSU to
"provide a brief summary of the legal basis of the complaint sufficient to
present the problem clearly" in respect of the European Union's claim
under Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.
5.36. We now turn to address whether, as
China claims, the Panel erred in its interpretation and application of Article 2.2.2
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement and acted inconsistently with Articles 11
and 12.7 of the DSU and Article 17.6(i) of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement in
concluding that China acted inconsistently with Article 2.2.2 because
MOFCOM did not determine an SG&A amount for SMST on the basis of
"actual data pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary course of
trade of the like product".
5.37. Before the Panel, the European Union
claimed that China acted inconsistently with Articles 2.2, 2.2.1, 2.2.1.1,
and 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because "China did not determine
the amount for [SG&A] on the basis of records and actual data kept by the
exporter or producer under investigation (SMST) or in a manner that reasonably
reflects the costs associated with the production and sale of [Grade B]."[129]
The European Union argued that "the data from table 6-3 of SMST's
questionnaire response, which was used by China to construct normal value, was
not 'actual data pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary course of
trade'."[130]
According to the European Union, this was because: (i) Table 6-3
included SG&A amounts derived from planned rates
and not the actual expense; and (ii) the SG&A
amounts in Table 6-3 were based on "abnormally high" COP, as it
included two unrepresentative free sample production transactions.[131]
China, for its part, submitted that MOFCOM determined the SG&A amount on
the basis of actual data reported by SMST for Grade B HP-SSST sold in the European Union
included in Table 6‑3. Moreover, China argued that "it is irrelevant
whether or not the coefficients used to determine the SG&A amounts are also
actual data, because the SG&A amounts at issue were 'based on' actual data,
i.e. actual [COP], and Article 2.2.2 does not require the SG&A amount
to be actual data in itself."[132]
5.38. The Panel began its assessment with
the text of Article 2.2.2, which sets forth how the amounts for SG&A
are to be calculated for purposes of a constructed normal value. The Panel
understood the issue to be whether Table 6-3, which China submitted was the
basis for the SG&A amounts used in MOFCOM's calculation of normal value,
was "based on 'actual data pertaining to production and sales in the
ordinary course of trade of the like product'".[133]
The Panel explained, in this regard, that "[i]t is undisputed that the
SG&A amounts in table 6-3 consist of the [COP] multiplied by certain
coefficients" and that these coefficients reflect "the planned
internal rates used by SMST in preparing price/cost allocations for
orders".[134]
5.39. Next, the Panel noted the apparent
disagreement between MOFCOM and SMST with respect to the source of the data to
be used to determine the SG&A amount. While the European Union
asserted that SMST understood that MOFCOM should have been using the SG&A
amount based on actual data from Table 6-5, China submitted that MOFCOM made it
clear in its disclosures that it was using the data in Table 6-3.[135]
Regardless of the parties' differing understandings, the Panel found that it
was undisputed that SMST requested MOFCOM, and MOFCOM accepted, "not to
use in the constructed normal value calculations the [COP] in table 6-3 for Grade B
sales in the European Union, because such [COP] was distorted due to the
inclusion of the two free sample transactions."[136]
However, MOFCOM used the SG&A amounts in Table 6-3, even though these had
been derived by applying certain coefficients to the disregarded COP data.
5.40. While noting China's argument that
the affected SG&A data could have been corrected by the relevant
coefficients, the Panel did not consider that "an unbiased and objective
investigating authority could have assumed the corrective potential of the
relevant coefficients without any supporting analysis or evidence."[137]
Instead, the Panel agreed with the European Union that "any such
assumption would have been 'speculative'."[138]
Thus, the Panel opined that, "by using SG&A data based on the
application of coefficients to data that had already been excluded for the
purpose of constructing normal value, MOFCOM failed to fulfil the requirements
of Article 2.2.2."[139]
Put differently, the Panel concluded that MOFCOM improperly utilized data
relating to two free samples, which MOFCOM had excluded for the purpose of
determining the COP, to establish the SG&A amounts. On this basis, the Panel concluded that "China acted inconsistently
with Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by failing to determine
an SG&A amount for SMST on the basis of actual data pertaining to
production and sales in the ordinary course of trade of the like product."[140]
5.41. China begins by raising a claim
under Article 12.7 of the DSU, arguing that the Panel did not set out the
findings of fact, the applicability of the relevant provisions, and the basic
rationale behind its findings. According to China, it is not clear whether the
Panel considered the measure at issue to be inconsistent with Article 2.2.2
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because it is not based "on actual data or
on data pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary course of trade, or
both".[141]
In addition, China argues that the Panel: (i) failed to set out how and
why China allegedly violated these requirements; (ii) failed to address
the interpretation of these requirements and the relevant facts that would lead
to a conclusion of violation of these requirements; and (iii) precluded
China from making an informed decision about whether and what to appeal.[142]
Moreover, China contends that the Panel acted inconsistently with its obligations
under Article 11 of the DSU by failing to provide an adequate explanation
for its findings.[143]
5.42. In response, the European Union
argues that "the way forward for China is clear", and that
"China can ensure that the measure taken to comply complies with Article 2.2.2,
by ensuring that the amounts for [SG&A]
are based on actual data pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary
course of trade by SMST"[144]
contained in Table 6-5 (Profitability), Table 6-6 (Detailed Chart of
Allocation of Administrative Expenses), Table 6-7 (Detailed Chart of
Allocation of Sales Expenses), and Table 6-8 (Detailed Chart of Allocation of
Financial Expenses) annexed to SMST's Dumping Questionnaire Response of 21
November 2011.[145]
The European Union submits that China's arguments are "largely a
re-iteration of its arguments concerning the scope of the [European Union's]
Panel Request, insofar as they attempt to de-link the relevant interlinked
terms of Article 2.2.2".[146]
The European Union further argues that MOFCOM disregarded SMST's repeated
statements directing MOFCOM to the actual data pertaining to production and
sales in the ordinary course of trade by SMST contained in Tables 6-5 through
6-8, and that China had ample opportunity to defend itself during the Panel
proceedings.[147]
5.43. We consider that China's arguments,
although raised in the context of Articles 11 and 12.7 of the DSU, in fact
concern the proper construction and application of the requirement in Article 2.2.2
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement to determine constructed normal value on the
basis of "actual data pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary
course of trade". We have already addressed China's arguments pertaining
to the interpretation of Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement and
disagreed with China's assertion that Article 2.2.2 sets out
"independent" and "distinct" obligations in relation to
"actual data" and "data pertaining to production and sales in
the ordinary course of trade". We, therefore, do not consider there to be
any basis for us to find that the Panel failed to make an objective assessment
of the matter before it, as required under Article 11 of the DSU, or that
the Panel failed to provide, in its Reports, the basic rationale for its
findings as required under Article 12.7 of the DSU.
5.44. As a second ground of appeal, China
asserts that "[t]he Panel misinterpreted Article 2.2.2 as requiring
an investigating authority not to base the SG&A amount on data that were
not used for the determination of the [COP] amount."[148]
China submits that the Panel "seems to have erroneously considered"
that it follows from "the fact that SG&A data are derived from [COP]
that had not been taken into account by MOFCOM for the [COP] calculation in the
normal value determination" that such data are, therefore, "not based
on actual data and/or that these are not based on data pertaining to production
and sales in the ordinary course of trade of the like product".[149]
5.45. Contrary to what China seems to
suggest, the Panel did not make a
finding as to whether or not the SG&A amount had to be determined on the
basis of data that were used for the determination of COP amounts. Nor did the
Panel address the issue of whether or not the coefficients reported by SMST,
that is, "the planned internal rates used by SMST in preparing price/cost
allocations for orders, are 'actual data' for purposes of Article 2.2.2."[150]
5.46. As a third ground of appeal, China
submits that the Panel "should have assessed how, in fact, the SG&A
amount was determined and how the data underlying this determination were
obtained", and whether the SG&A amount used by MOFCOM in its
calculation of normal value "was 'based on' data that: (i) is actual; and
(ii) pertains to production and sales in the ordinary course of trade".[151]
In China's view, there was no reason for the Panel "to assume that MOFCOM
disregarded the [COP] of Grade B sold domestically because it was not
actual or did not pertain to production or sales in the ordinary course of
trade".[152]
According to China, instead, the Panel should have analysed this question, and
should also have looked into precisely which factual circumstances constituted
the "certain particularity" referred to by MOFCOM when MOFCOM
explained in its Preliminary Dumping Disclosure that it had "used the
[COP] of Grade B sold in the Chinese market 'due to [a] certain
particularity of the transactions of this model in the EU'".[153]
5.47. The European Union responds
that the facts on the Panel record demonstrate that MOFCOM accepted SMST's
request "not to use in the constructed normal value calculations the COP
in table 6-3 for Grade B sales in the European Union, because
such COP was abnormally high due to the inclusion of the two free samples."[154]
The European Union maintains that "the only pertinent particularity
of the transactions" is that "the COP was abnormally high due to the
two free samples."[155] The European Union
argues that the Panel
was, therefore, "correct to state that it was undisputed that SMST
requested MOFCOM, and MOFCOM accepted, not to use in the constructed normal
value calculations the COP in Table 6-3 for Grade B sales in the European Union,
because such COP was distorted due to the two free samples."[156]
The European Union adds that China had many opportunities during the Panel
proceedings to step forward and assert that the phrase "certain
particularity" means something other than the fact that the COP was
abnormally high due to the two free samples, yet it failed to do so.[157]
The European Union submits that "China is precluded at this stage
from making any new factual assertions in this respect", and cannot
"reasonably fault the Panel" for concluding as it did based on the
facts and evidence that were before it.[158]
5.48. China appears to conflate the
obligations that apply to investigating authorities with those that apply to
WTO panels. It was not for the Panel in the present case to determine what
MOFCOM meant when it referred to a "certain particularity"; rather,
this was an issue for MOFCOM to explain in its
written determination. We also do not agree with China that the Panel
"assumed" that MOFCOM disregarded the COP of Grade B sold
domestically for the reason that "it was not actual or did not pertain to
production or sales in the ordinary course of trade."[159]
Rather, as we understand it, the basis for the Panel's finding under Article 2.2.2
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement was, instead, that MOFCOM "assumed the
corrective potential of the relevant coefficients" used to calculate an
SG&A amount for SMST "without supporting analysis or evidence".[160]
The Panel saw error, in particular, in MOFCOM's decision, without explanation
or analysis, "to disregard the [COP] data in table 6-3 for Grade B
sales in the European Union", while at the same time using "the
SGA amounts in table 6-3, even though [those amounts] had been derived by
applying certain coefficients to that disregarded [COP] data."[161]
5.49. As a fourth ground of appeal, China
takes issue with the Panel's finding that "it is undisputed that … MOFCOM
accepted not to use in the constructed normal value calculations the [COP] in
table 6-3 for Grade B sales in the European Union, because such [COP]
was distorted due to the inclusion of the two free sample transactions."[162]
China states that "it is undisputed that MOFCOM accepted not to use the [COP]
in table 6-3 for Grade B sales in the European Union to determine the
COP in the normal value determination."[163]
However, China considers that the Panel acted inconsistently with Article 11
of the DSU to the extent that it found that "MOFCOM decided not to use the
[COP] of domestic sales because these
costs were 'distorted due to the inclusion of the two free sample transactions'
in the sense that they were not 'actual' and/or did not pertain to production
and sales 'in the ordinary course of trade'."[164]
5.50. As noted above, SMST stated in its
response to MOFCOM's initial dumping questionnaire that:
[t]he December 2010 production costs for [Grade B
was] abnormally high and should not be used in BOFT's cost or constructed value
calculations. This production relates to the zero price samples discussed above
with respect to question 9, Item 6 of Section 4. These were test
orders in very small quantities. This led to abnormally high per-unit raw
material costs because, despite the small production quantity, an entire hollow
had to be used for each order.[165]
5.51. MOFCOM responded that:
… due to [a] certain particularity of the transactions of [Grade B]
in the EU, according to Article 4 of the Anti-Dumping Regulation of the People's
Republic of China ("AD Regulation"), the Investigating Authority
decides to provisionally use the production costs of [Grade B] exported to
China, SG&A of sales in the EU and reasonable profitability as the basis to
determine the constructed value.[166]
5.52. Regardless of what MOFCOM meant
when it referred to a "certain particularity of the transactions of [Grade B]
in the EU", and whether MOFCOM considered that the COP was distorted or
not due to the inclusion of the two free samples, MOFCOM was required, in its determination, to explain why it determined an amount for SG&A costs "based
on the application of coefficients to data that had already been
excluded for the purpose of constructing normal value".[167] In the absence of such an explanation provided by MOFCOM in its written
report, we fail to see how the Panel could have found China to have acted
consistently with its obligations under Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement. We do not consider that the Panel erred in finding that "an
unbiased and objective investigating authority could [not] have assumed the corrective potential of the relevant
coefficients without any supporting analysis or evidence."[168] Contrary to what China appears to argue, this does not constitute a
finding, by the Panel, that MOFCOM could not rely
on these (rejected) "transactions for the purposes of determining SG&A
amounts"; rather, we understand the Panel simply to have found that MOFCOM
was required to explain why
it chose to do so, and failed to give such explanation.
5.53. China argues that the Panel acted
contrary to Article 11 of the DSU and Article 17.6(i) of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement by failing to take into account that "MOFCOM requested SMST to
clarify the nature of the coefficients, but did not obtain the requested
clarification."[169] China contends that an objective assessment of the methodology used by
MOFCOM to obtain the SG&A amount "would have led the Panel to conclude
that China complied with its obligations to ensure that the SG&A amount is
'based on' data that is 'actual' and pertains to 'production and sales in the
ordinary course of trade'."[170]
5.54. The European Union responds
that "[t]here are no facts or evidence on the record that would explain
how the use of the planned coefficients might have cancelled out the use of the
COP of the samples and China has never offered any explanation in this respect."[171] The European Union further submits that SMST did respond to
MOFCOM's request for clarification, and directed MOFCOM to the actual data
pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary course of trade by SMST,
contained in Tables 6-5 through 6-8.[172]
5.55. It is well established that a panel
must neither conduct a de novo review
nor simply defer to the conclusions of the investigating authority. Instead,
panels should test whether the conclusions reached by the investigating
authority are reasoned and adequate in the light of the explanations provided
by the investigating authority in its written determination.[173] Contrary to what China suggests, it was for MOFCOM to explain why it
considered that the relevant coefficients had corrective potential, and why it
used SG&A data based on the application of coefficients to data that had
already been excluded for the purpose of constructing normal value. Even
accepting, as China argues, that MOFCOM had "requested SMST to clarify the
nature of the coefficients, but did not obtain the requested
clarification"[174], this does not mean that the Panel erred in finding that "an
unbiased and objective investigating authority could [not] have assumed the
corrective potential of the relevant coefficients without any supporting
analysis or evidence."[175]
5.56. Finally, with regard to the translation of SMST's request to MOFCOM to exclude the COP
in Table 6-3 for Grade B sales in the European Union, China
argues that the European Union "distorts SMST's response" by
claiming that "SMST requested that MOFCOM not use the December production
costs in constructed value
calculations", whereas "the correct translation of SMST's request
refers to 'constructed cost
calculation' rather than 'constructed value
calculation'."[176]
5.57. The European Union responds
that, although China originally submitted its own translation of the relevant
phrase in SMST's request as "cost or constructed value
calculations"[177], China subsequently changed its position and argued that the correct
translation of this phrase was "cost or constructed cost
calculations".[178] For the European Union, these submissions are "manifestly
unreasonable and untenable", since, "[i]f the COP of the free samples
was unfit for the purposes of determining COP, it was equally unfit for the
purposes of determining an amount for SG&A [costs]."[179] The European Union contends that, when the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
uses the term "constructed", it clearly refers to the entire
calculation, and not merely to part of it, such as the COP.[180] Furthermore, the European Union submits that the term
"costs" on its own is not limited to the COP, to the exclusion of
SG&A costs.[181]
5.58. The Panel found, in the light of
its finding under Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, that it did
not need to address the disagreement between the European Union and China
concerning the correct translation into English of SMST's request to exclude
the COP in Table 6‑3.[182]
We see no error in the approach taken by the Panel in this regard, and
certainly no error arising to a violation of Article 11 of the DSU or Article 12.7
of the DSU.[183]
5.59. In the light of the above, we uphold
the Panel's finding, in paragraphs 7.66 and 8.6.a of the EU Panel
Report, that China acted inconsistently with Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement by failing to determine an SG&A amount for SMST on the basis of
actual data pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary course of trade
of the like product.
5.60. The European Union
conditionally appeals the Panel's findings that both the European Union's
claim under Article 2.2.1.1 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, as it relates
to the obligation to "reasonably reflect the costs associated with the
production and sale of the product under consideration", and its claim under
Article 2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, do not comply with the
requirements of Article 6.2 of the DSU and that these claims were,
therefore, outside the scope of the Panel's terms of reference.[184] The European Union
submits, however, that we need not consider these aspects of its appeal in the
event that we uphold the Panel's findings concerning the European Union's
claim under Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, or complete the legal
analysis and confirm its claim under Article 2.2.2.[185]
5.61. Having upheld the Panel's finding
that China acted inconsistently with Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement by failing to determine an SG&A amount for SMST on the basis of
actual data pertaining to production and sales in the ordinary course of trade
of the like product, we need not address this aspect of the European Union's
appeal.
5.62. We now turn to address China's
appeal of the Panel's findings that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.7
and paragraph 7 of Annex I to the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by rejecting SMST's
request for rectification of information on the sole basis that this request was
not made before the verification started.
5.63. We begin by summarizing the
relevant findings of the Panel before addressing specific arguments raised by
China on appeal.
5.64. Before the Panel, the European Union
contended that: (i) SMST submitted to MOFCOM that certain financial expenses
had been inadvertently double-counted in SMST's Dumping Questionnaire Response;
and (ii) SMST "adduced corrected information that was duly
verified".[186] The European Union claimed that
China acted inconsistently with Article 6.7 and paragraph 7
of Annex I to the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by refusing to take into
account the corrected information provided during the on-the-spot
investigation.[187] Pointing to language in MOFCOM's Final Determination and Final Dumping
Disclosure to SMST, the European Union argued that the only reason
provided by MOFCOM "for refusing to take the corrected information into
account was that SMST did not raise this point before the verification
started".[188]
5.65. In response, China argued that
investigating authorities are not required, under Article 6.7 and
paragraph 7 of Annex I, to accept all information presented during a
verification visit. Moreover, while accepting that the purpose
of a verification visit is to verify information provided or to obtain further
details, China asserted that this "does not imply that an
investigating authority is compelled to verify information provided or to
obtain further details".[189]
5.66. The Panel began its analysis by
observing that the European Union's claim was of a procedural nature and
concerned the question of whether China acted inconsistently with Article 6.7
and paragraph 7 of Annex I to the Anti-Dumping Agreement because
MOFCOM refused to take into account the information provided by SMST on the
sole basis that SMST did not raise this matter before the on-the-spot investigation
started.[190]
5.67. The Panel noted that, in a
communication sent to SMST prior to the on-the-spot investigation, MOFCOM had
requested SMST to prepare certain documents relating to, inter alia,
Table 6-5 ("Profitability"),
which summarized the information concerning SG&A costs contained in
Tables 6-6 ("Detailed
Chart of Allocation of Administrative Expenses")
and 6-8 ("Detailed Chart
of Allocation of Financial Expenses") supplied by SMST as annexes to its
initial dumping questionnaire response.[191] The Panel considered, therefore, that there was "a clear and
direct connection" between the information that SMST sought to correct in
Tables 6-6 and 6-8 and the information expressly requested by MOFCOM
relating to Table 6-5.[192] Recalling that, under paragraph 7 of Annex I, "the main purpose of
the on‑the‑spot investigation is to verify information", the Panel
considered "that an investigating authority would normally welcome the
rectification of information in these circumstances".[193] The Panel found that, by first requesting SMST to prepare documents
relating to Table 6-5, but then rejecting potentially relevant information
"on the sole ground that SMST did not
raise this matter before the verification started", MOFCOM acted contrary
to the main purpose of the on‑the‑spot investigation.[194] Having said this, the Panel agreed with China that Article 6.7 and
paragraph 7 of Annex I to the Anti‑Dumping Agreement do not contain
an obligation for an investigating
authority "to accept all information
presented to it during the verification visit".[195] The Panel also agreed that an investigating authority "does not
necessarily have to accept new information during verification"[196], and that an investigating authority does not "have to accept
voluminous amounts of corrected information".[197] Turning to the specific facts before it, the Panel highlighted,
however, that the European Union's claim concerned the rectification of
"one piece of information", namely, the financial expenses of SMST's
headquarters.[198] The Panel therefore saw "no valid reason why MOFCOM did not accept
the rectified information from SMST, particularly since MOFCOM appear[ed] to
have understood the matter explained by SMST concerning the financial expenses
at issue".[199] In these circumstances, the Panel agreed with the European Union
that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.7 and paragraph 7 of Annex
I to the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM rejected this information
submitted by SMST on the sole basis that it was not provided prior to the
on-the-spot investigation.[200]
5.68. On appeal, China contends that the
Panel erred in finding that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.7
and paragraph 7 of Annex I to the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by rejecting
SMST's request for rectification of information relating to SMST's financial
expenses on the sole basis that this request was not made before the verification
visit started. China maintains that, by creating the obligation to act in line
with the main purpose of the verification visit, the Panel read into Article 6.7
and paragraph 7 of Annex I words that are not there. For China, Article 6.7
and paragraph 7 of Annex I do not contain an obligation for an
investigating authority to act in line with the main purpose of the
verification visit. China also maintains that Article 6.7 does not impose
on an investigating authority an obligation to conduct on-the-spot verification
in the territory of an exporting Member. Rather, for China, Article 6.7
grants an investigating authority the right to carry out a verification visit
subject to a number of limitations, "provided they obtain the agreement of
the firms concerned and notify the representatives of the government of the
Member in question, and unless that Member objects to the investigation".[201]
5.69. The European Union counters
that the Panel correctly found that "th[e] specific fact
pattern [of the present case] demonstrates an inconsistency with Article 6.7
and paragraph 7".[202]
Referring to the language in paragraph 7 of Annex I concerning the
main purpose of the on‑the‑spot investigation, the European Union argues
that "it is inherently contradictory and internally inconsistent to ask
for something, receive it, and then later reject it."[203]
According to the European Union, while an investigating authority enjoys a
certain margin of appreciation under Article 6.7 and paragraph 7 to
Annex I, it should decide whether to accept or reject information
submitted to it "on the basis of objective criteria, such as the risk of
undue delay in the conduct of the proceedings".[204]
5.70. The first sentence of Article 6.7[205]
stipulates that, "[i]n order to verify information provided or to obtain
further details, the authorities may carry out investigations in the territory
of other Members as required". This right to carry out on‑the‑spot investigations
in the territory of another Member is limited, however, to instances
where: (i) the investigating authority has obtained the agreement of the
firm(s) concerned; (ii) the investigating authority has notified the
representatives of the government of the Member in question; and (iii) that
Member has not objected to the investigation.[206] The second sentence of Article 6.7
prescribes that the procedures described in Annex I "shall apply to
investigations carried out in the territory of other Members". While Article 6.7
lays out the basic framework for verifications in the territory of another
Member, Annex I, entitled "Procedures for on-the-spot investigations
pursuant to Paragraph 7 of Article 6", sets out further parameters
for the conduct of such investigations.
5.71. Paragraph 7 of Annex I states
that, "[a]s the main purpose of the on‑the‑spot investigation is to verify
information provided or to obtain further details",
such investigation should generally "be carried out" after the
investigating authority has received the response to the questionnaire that was
used in the anti‑dumping investigation. Paragraph 7 further provides that
"it should be standard practice" to advise firms in advance about the
"general nature of the information to be verified and of any further
information which needs to be provided", but that "this should not
preclude requests to be made on the spot for further details to be provided in
the light of information obtained."
5.72. Moving to the immediate context for
Article 6.7 and paragraph 7 of Annex I, we note that Article 6.6
of the Anti-Dumping Agreement stipulates that investigating "authorities
shall during the course of an investigation satisfy themselves as to the
accuracy of the information supplied by interested parties upon which their
findings are based."[207]
The investigating authority can do so in several ways, including by conducting
on-the-spot investigations, as contemplated under Article 6.7, "[i]n
order to verify information provided or to obtain further details".[208]
5.73. We further note that Article 6
of the Anti-Dumping Agreement situates the conduct of on-the-spot
investigations within a broader set of provisions regulating the process of
identifying and gathering evidence for anti-dumping duty investigations.[209]
In addition to laying down evidentiary rules that apply throughout the course of an anti‑dumping
investigation, Article 6 speaks to the due process rights that are enjoyed
by interested parties during the investigation. This further reinforces the
textual directive under Article 6.6 for investigating authorities to
satisfy themselves as to the accuracy of the information supplied by interested
parties, including in the context of carrying out on-the-spot investigations
under Article 6.7.
5.74. The requirement that investigating
authorities "satisfy themselves as to the accuracy of the information
supplied by interested parties" does not mean that they are under an
obligation to accept and use all information that is submitted to them.
Circumstances will vary, and investigating authorities have some degree of
latitude in deciding whether to accept and use information submitted by interested
parties during on-the-spot investigations or thereafter. That latitude is
limited, however, by the investigating authority's obligation under Article 6.6
to ensure that the information on which its findings are based is accurate, and
by the legitimate due process interests of the parties to an investigation.[210]
An investigating authority must balance these due process interests with the
need to control and expedite the investigating process.[211]
This balance between the due process interests of the parties and controlling
and expediting the investigating process applies throughout the investigation,
including during on-the-spot investigations.
5.75. Depending on the particularities of
each case, factors bearing upon the latitude of an investigating authority to
accept or reject information submitted during an on‑the‑spot investigation may
include, for example, the timing of the presentation of new information;
whether the acceptance of new information would cause undue difficulties in the
conduct of the investigation[212];
whether the interested party has submitted voluminous amounts of information or
merely seeks to have an arithmetical or clerical error corrected; whether the
information at issue relates to facts that are "essential" within the
meaning of Article 6.9 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement; or whether the
information supplied by an interested party relates to the information
specifically requested by the investigating authority. We agree with the Panel
that Article 6.7 and paragraph 7 of Annex I to the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement do not contain an obligation for an investigating authority "to
accept all information presented to it during a
verification visit".[213]
We also agree with the Panel that an investigating authority does not
necessarily "have to accept voluminous amounts of corrected
information".[214]
At the same time, an investigating authority may accept information provided during
the on-the-spot investigation or, in appropriate circumstances, even at a later
stage.[215]
5.76. With these considerations in mind,
we recall that MOFCOM requested SMST to prepare documents relating to Table
6-5, and that SMST sought to correct information contained in Tables 6-6
and 6-8, which, in turn, were summarized in Table 6-5.[216]
The Panel found, therefore, that there was a "clear and direct
connection" between the information that SMST sought to correct and the
information expressly requested by MOFCOM.[217]
China does not contest this finding.[218]
It is also uncontested that SMST's request for rectification concerned one
specific piece of information, that is, the financial expenses of SMST's
headquarters.[219]
In refusing to take that information into account, MOFCOM did not reason that
the acceptance of that information would have caused undue difficulties in the
conduct of the investigation; that SMST would have submitted voluminous amounts
of additional information to the investigating authority late in the
proceedings; or impeded or delayed the conduct of the anti-dumping proceedings
in some way. Instead, as the Panel found, MOFCOM rejected SMST's rectification
request "on the sole ground
that SMST did not raise this matter before the verification started".[220]
China does not contest that this was the only reason for the rejection given by
MOFCOM in the Final Determination.[221]
5.77. In these circumstances, and in the
absence of any further explanation by MOFCOM, we see no error in the Panel's
finding that there seems to have been no valid reason why MOFCOM did not accept
the corrected information provided by SMST. Moreover, contrary to what China
suggests, the Panel did not find that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.7
and paragraph 7 of Annex I because MOFCOM acted contrary to the main purpose of
the verification visit. Instead, as we understand it, the Panel based its
findings on the fact that, while MOFCOM expressly requested SMST to prepare
certain information for the on-the-spot investigation, it then refused to take
into account corrected information even though it had a "clear and direct
connection" to the information that had been requested. MOFCOM rejected
the corrected information although it consisted of only "one piece of
information" regarding the financial expenses of SMST's headquarters, and
did so solely on the basis that it was not provided prior to the verification
visit, and without providing other reasons.
5.78. In the light of the foregoing, we uphold
the Panel's finding, in paragraphs 7.101 and 8.6.c. of the EU Panel
Report, that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.7 and paragraph 7
of Annex I to the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by rejecting SMST's request for
rectification only on the basis that it was not provided prior to verification.
5.79. In the event that we reverse the
Panel's findings under Article 6.7 and paragraph 7 of Annex I to
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, the European Union appeals the Panel's
rejection of the European Union's claim under Article 6.8 and
paragraphs 3 and 6 of Annex II to the Anti-Dumping Agreement.[222]
5.80. We recall that the Panel rejected
the European Union's claims under Article 6.8 and paragraphs 3 and 6
of Annex II that MOFCOM had applied "facts available", and found,
instead, that "MOFCOM based its determination on evidence contained in the
records, which at that time MOFCOM considered were the correct facts submitted
by SMST."[223]
5.81. Having upheld the Panel's finding
that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.7 and paragraph 7 of Annex
I to the Anti-Dumping Agreement by rejecting SMST's rectification request on
the sole basis that it was not provided prior to the verification visit, we need
not further address this aspect of the European Union's appeal.
5.82. China claims that the Panel erred
in its interpretation and application of Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement in finding that China acted inconsistently with its obligations under
that provision by permitting the full text of certain reports submitted by the
petitioners in the underlying investigation "to remain confidential
without objectively assessing 'good cause' and scrutinizing the petitioners'
showing".[224]
China further claims, on three grounds, that the Panel applied an erroneous
standard of review and failed to make an objective assessment of the facts
before it, contrary to the requirements of Article 11 of the DSU and Article 17.6(i)
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement. First, China alleges that the Panel erroneously
limited its review to assessing whether MOFCOM had explained why it considered
that the full text of the reports at issue warranted confidential treatment.
Second, China contends that the Panel applied internally inconsistent reasoning
in its analysis of the claims under Articles 6.5 and 6.5.1 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement. Third, China asserts that the Panel improperly made the case for the
complainants with regard to their claims under Article 6.5 of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.
5.83. Before addressing the specific
claims raised by China, we first summarize the relevant findings of the Panel,
and the context in which the Panel made those findings. We then examine Article 6.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, and the disciplines that apply thereunder.
5.84. Before the Panel, Japan and the European Union
argued that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement because MOFCOM permitted the full text of four reports to remain
confidential without objectively assessing the "good cause" alleged
for confidential treatment and scrutinizing the petitioners' showing.[225]
These reports are contained in: (i) appendix V to the petition;
(ii) appendix VIII to the petition; (iii) appendix 59 to
the petitioners' supplemental evidence of 1 March 2012; and
(iv) the appendix to the petitioners' supplemental evidence of
29 March 2012.
5.85. China responded that "good
cause" had been adequately shown by the petitioners because they had
provided several substantiated reasons as to why confidential treatment was
warranted both for the names of the relevant third party institutes and the
full text of the four reports at issue.[226]
In addition, China argued that the Anti‑Dumping Agreement does not impose an
obligation on an investigating authority "to explain why it considers that
confidential treatment [of information] is warranted".[227]
5.86. The Panel identified the issue
before it as involving an examination of whether MOFCOM permitted the full text of the four reports to remain confidential without
objectively assessing the "good cause" alleged for confidential
treatment and scrutinizing the petitioners' showing to determine whether the
requests were sufficiently substantiated.[228]
With regard to China's allegation that the European Union had failed to
establish a prima facie case of violation, the Panel
found that, although the European Union "could have been more
specific in setting out its [] claim" under Article 6.5 in its first
written submission, overall, it considered that the European Union had
"sufficiently connected its Article 6.5 claim to the relevant
appendices".[229]
5.87. The Panel noted that, in evaluating
the complainants' claims under Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement,
it would be guided by the Appellate Body's pronouncements on "good
cause" in EC – Fasteners (China).[230]
Turning to the specific facts before it, the Panel examined the petitioners'
requests for confidential treatment of information contained in the four
appendices at issue, and MOFCOM's statement granting confidential
treatment.[231]
5.88. Regarding the scope of MOFCOM's
statement, the Panel found that, although it was directed at the requests for
confidential treatment of appendix V, it could "also be reasonably
understood" to apply to the appendix to the petitioners' supplemental
evidence of 29 March 2012, as the latter "builds on" the
former.[232]
5.89. The Panel next turned to examine
whether MOFCOM's statement was sufficient to demonstrate that MOFCOM
objectively assessed the petitioners' showing of "good cause" with
regard to both the names of the third party institutes and the full text of
appendix V and the appendix to the petitioners' supplemental evidence of
29 March 2012. The Panel found that, while the petitioners' requests
referred to both the names of the institutes and the full text of the reports,
when accepting the petitioners' requests for confidential treatment, "MOFCOM
limited its statement to address only 'the legitimacy of the petitioners'
application to treat the name of the
"authoritative third party institute" as confidential'."[233]
With respect to the confidential treatment of the full text of the two reports
at issue, the Panel noted that MOFCOM's statement only "summariz[ed] the
petitioners' arguments for confidential treatment and requests; rather than [having]
reflect[ed] MOFCOM's explanation or reasoning".[234]
The Panel concluded that there was thus "no evidence" that
"MOFCOM objectively assessed the 'good cause' alleged for confidential
treatment, and scrutinized the petitioners' requests relating to the full text of appendix V, and appendix to the
petitioners' supplemental evidence of 29 March 2012."[235]
With regard to appendix VIII to the petition and appendix 59 to the
petitioners' supplemental evidence of 1 March 2012, the Panel found
that, in the absence of any evidence that MOFCOM objectively assessed the
"good cause" alleged and scrutinized the petitioners' requests, it
had no basis to conclude that MOFCOM had done so.[236]
5.90. Having upheld the European Union's
claim that MOFCOM did not objectively assess the "good cause" alleged
by the petitioners for confidential treatment of the full text of the four
appendices at issue, the Panel noted China's argument that "the 'Anti‑Dumping
Agreement does not require an investigating authority which found that
confidential treatment is warranted to do or specify anything, beyond the
obligation to treat such information as confidential'."[237]
The Panel found that, "[i]n the absence of any explanation by
MOFCOM", there was "no basis to conclude that MOFCOM properly
determined that the petitioners had shown 'good cause' for their requests for
confidential treatment".[238]
The Panel also considered that it had "no basis … to imply that MOFCOM
properly determined that the petitioners had shown 'good cause' for their
requests for confidential treatment from the fact that MOFCOM ultimately
granted their request".[239]
5.91. The Panel concluded that China
acted inconsistently with Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
by permitting the full text of the reports in appendix V and
appendix VIII to the petition, appendix 59 to the petitioners'
supplemental evidence of 1 March 2012, and the appendix to the
petitioners' supplemental evidence of 29 March 2012 "to remain
confidential without objectively assessing 'good cause' and scrutinizing the
petitioners' showing".[240]
5.92. On appeal, China argues that the
Panel erred in construing Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement as
imposing an obligation on an investigating authority to explain why it
considers that confidential treatment is warranted.[241]
China refers to the panel report in Mexico – Steel Pipes and
Tubes and the Appellate Body report in EC - Fasteners (China) to argue that, while an investigating
authority must review and decide whether "good cause" was shown,
there is no obligation for an investigating authority to provide any
explanation regarding its assessment and scrutiny of the alleged showing of
"good cause".[242]
5.93. Japan and the European Union
observe that, contrary to what China suggests, the Panel did not find that Article 6.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement contains an obligation for the investigating authority
to "provide an explanation" for its reasons for granting
confidentiality. Rather, the Panel's finding was that, in the absence of any explanation by
MOFCOM, the Panel had no basis to conclude that MOFCOM undertook an objective
assessment and properly determined that the petitioners had shown "good
cause" for their requests for confidential treatment with respect to the
full text of the four reports at issue. [243]
At the oral hearing, Japan and the European Union agreed that the degree
of substantiation required from an investigating authority depends on the
nature of the information for which confidential treatment is sought, noting
however that, in the absence of any evidence that MOFCOM had objectively
assessed the "good cause" alleged for confidential treatment, the
Panel correctly concluded that China had acted inconsistently with Article 6.5.[244]
5.94. We begin our analysis by examining
the text of Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, which provides:
Any information which is by nature
confidential (for example, because its disclosure would be of significant
competitive advantage to a competitor or because its disclosure would have a
significantly adverse effect upon a person supplying the information or upon a
person from whom that person acquired the information), or which is provided on
a confidential basis by parties to an investigation shall, upon good cause
shown, be treated as such by the authorities. Such information shall not be
disclosed without specific permission of the party submitting it.[*]
[*original fn]17
Members are aware that in the territory of certain Members disclosure pursuant
to a narrowly‑drawn protective order may be required.
5.95. In EC –
Fasteners (China), the Appellate Body explained that Article 6.5
covers information that is "by nature confidential", as well as
information that is "provided on a confidential basis", and that a
"good cause" showing by the party seeking confidential treatment is
required for both of these categories of information.[245]
The Appellate Body added that "[t]he 'good cause' alleged must
constitute a reason sufficient to justify the withholding of information from
both the public and from the other parties interested in the
investigation."[246]
According to the Appellate Body, "'[g]ood cause' must be assessed and
determined objectively by the investigating authority, and cannot be determined
merely based on the subjective concerns of the submitting party."[247]
The Appellate Body further stated:
In practice, a
party seeking confidential treatment for information must make its "good
cause" showing to the investigating authority upon submission of the
information. The authority must objectively assess the "good cause"
alleged for confidential treatment, and scrutinize the party's showing in order
to determine whether the submitting party has sufficiently substantiated its
request. In making its assessment, the investigating authority must seek to
balance the submitting party's interest in protecting its confidential
information with the prejudicial effect that the non-disclosure of the
information may have on the transparency and due process interests of other
parties involved in the investigation to present their cases and defend their
interests. The type of evidence and the extent of substantiation an authority
must require will depend on the nature of the information at issue and the
particular "good cause" alleged. The obligation remains with the
investigating authority to examine objectively the justification given for the
need for confidential treatment. If information is treated as confidential by
an authority without such a "good cause" showing having been made,
the authority would be acting inconsistently with its obligations under Article 6.5
to grant such treatment only "upon good cause shown".[248]
5.96. The Appellate Body further
noted that, "[w]henever information is treated as confidential,
transparency and due process concerns will necessarily arise because such
treatment entails the withholding of information from other parties to an
investigation."[249]
The Appellate Body stated that "Articles 6.5 and 6.5.1
accommodate the concerns of confidentiality, transparency, and due process by
protecting information that is by nature confidential or is submitted on a
confidential basis and upon 'good cause' shown, but establishing an alternative
method for communicating its content so as to satisfy the right of other
parties to the investigation to obtain a reasonable understanding of the
substance of the confidential information, and to defend their interests."[250]
5.97. The Appellate Body added that
an investigating authority "must objectively assess the 'good cause'
alleged for confidential treatment, and scrutinize the party's showing in order
to determine whether the submitting party has sufficiently substantiated its
request".[251]
However, the Appellate Body did not further say how
the sufficiency of a showing of "good cause" is to be assessed by an
investigating authority, or how it is to be assessed by a reviewing panel. As
we see it, a panel tasked with reviewing whether an investigating authority has
objectively assessed the "good cause" alleged by a party must examine
this issue on the basis of the investigating authority's published report and
its related supporting documents, and in the light of the nature of the
information at issue[252]
and the reasons given by the submitting party for its request for confidential
treatment.[253]
The type of evidence and the extent of substantiation the investigating
authority must require will depend on the nature of the information at issue
and the particular "good cause" alleged.[254]
In reviewing whether an investigating authority has assessed and determined
objectively that "good cause" for confidential treatment has been
shown to exist, it is not for a panel to engage in a de novo
review of the record of the investigation and determine for itself whether the
existence of "good cause" has been sufficiently substantiated by the
submitting party.
5.98. Turning to the present case, we
note that, in finding that there was no evidence that MOFCOM objectively
assessed the "good cause" alleged for confidential treatment, the
Panel stressed that it was not concluding that MOFCOM could not have treated the full text of the reports contained in
appendix V and the appendix to the petitioners' supplemental evidence of 29
March 2012 as confidential.[255]
Rather, the Panel found that there was "no evidence that MOFCOM ever
considered whether good cause had been shown for such treatment"[256],
and thus no evidence of an objective assessment.
5.99. Pursuant to Article 6.5 of the
Anti‑Dumping Agreement, it is for the investigating authority to require a
party that seeks confidential treatment of information to explain and provide
reasons as to why the information at issue should be treated as confidential.
The investigating authority, in turn, is under an obligation to assess
objectively the "good cause" alleged by the submitting party for
confidential treatment, and to "scrutinize the party's showing in order to
determine whether the submitting party has sufficiently substantiated its
request".[257]
As the Appellate Body has explained, "'[g]ood cause' must be assessed
and determined objectively by the investigating authority, and cannot be
determined merely based on the subjective concerns of the submitting
party."[258]
In the present case, however, MOFCOM merely summarized the reasons provided by
the petitioners for confidential treatment of the full text of two of the four
reports at issue.[259]
5.100. Therefore, we see no error in the
Panel's finding that, in the absence of any evidence
that MOFCOM objectively assessed the "good cause" alleged, it had no
basis to conclude that MOFCOM undertook an objective assessment and properly
determined that the petitioners had shown "good cause" for their
requests for confidential treatment.[260]
In these circumstances, we also see no error in the Panel's conclusion
that there was no basis for it to find that "MOFCOM properly determined
that the petitioners had shown 'good cause' for their requests for confidential
treatment from the fact that MOFCOM ultimately granted their request for
confidential treatment."[261]
5.101. China also submits that, in
reaching its findings under Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, the
Panel applied an erroneous standard of review and failed to make an objective
assessment of the facts before it, contrary to the requirements of Article 11
of the DSU and Article 17.6(i) of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[262]
According to China, the Panel applied an incorrect standard of review
because it failed to take into account the information on the record that was
before MOFCOM.[263]
Although China brings this claim as a separate one, it appears to be premised
on the same contention as its claim that the Panel erred in the interpretation
and application of Article 6.5, namely, that the Panel should have looked
into the facts that were before MOFCOM in order to determine whether MOFCOM
objectively assessed the "good cause" alleged.
5.102. We do not consider that the Panel
would have complied with the applicable standard of review if, in the absence
of any evidence of an objective assessment by MOFCOM of the "good
cause" alleged, it had engaged in a de novo review
of evidence on the record of the investigation and determined for itself, or on
the basis of subjective concerns of the petitioners, whether the request for
confidential treatment was sufficiently substantiated and that "good
cause" for such treatment objectively existed. Having rejected China's
claim of error under Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, we also do
not agree with China that the Panel acted inconsistently with Article 11
of the DSU and Article 17.6(i) of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by failing to
take into account the information on the record, including the requests for
confidential treatment by the petitioners.[264]
We fail to see how the Panel, having found that there was no evidence that MOFCOM objectively assessed the "good
cause" alleged, and that MOFCOM had instead only summarized the
petitioners' requests and arguments for confidential treatment[265],
could have concluded that MOFCOM undertook an objective assessment and properly
determined that the petitioners had shown "good cause" for their
requests for confidential treatment.
5.103. We next turn to China's claim that
the Panel applied internally inconsistent reasoning in its analysis of Japan's
and the European Union's claims under Articles 6.5 and 6.5.1 of the
Anti‑Dumping Agreement, contrary to the requirements of Article 11
of the DSU. China contends that, unlike under Article 6.5, in its
analysis under Article 6.5.1 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, the Panel did
not take issue with the absence of explanations by MOFCOM, and focused its
examination, instead, on the non‑confidential summaries provided by the
petitioners, as well as the statements provided by the petitioners as to why
summarization was not possible.[266]
In support of its position, China argues that, in EC –
Fasteners (China), in the context of its assessment under Article 6.5.1,
"the Appellate Body examined the statements provided by certain parties who claimed that they could not provide a
non‑confidential summary of information submitted in confidence, and did not
require an analysis of statements by the investigating authority."[267]
In China's view, such internally inconsistent reasoning of the Panel in its
analyses under Article 6.5 and Article 6.5.1 cannot be reconciled
with the Panel's duty to make an objective assessment of the facts under Article 11
of the DSU.
5.104. Japan and the European Union
respond that, while there may be similarities between the obligations of an
investigating authority under Article 6.5 and Article 6.5.1 of the
Anti‑Dumping Agreement, a precondition for triggering the obligation under Article 6.5.1
for the investigating authority "to scrutinize the reasons advanced for
not supplying non‑confidential summaries" is "the existence of a
statement by the party pertaining to such reasons".[268]
According to the complainants, the Panel's finding that the record did not
contain any reasons advanced by the petitioners for not supplying non‑confidential
summaries was not a finding on the adequacy of the reasons.[269]
5.105. Article 6.5 and Article 6.5.1
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement each imposes distinct obligations on an
investigating authority. Under Article 6.5, the investigating authority is
required objectively to assess the "good cause" alleged by the party requesting
confidential treatment. By contrast, under Article 6.5.1, the
investigating authority is obliged, in respect of information that an
investigating authority has decided to treat as confidential under Article 6.5, "to
require that a non‑confidential summary of the information be furnished, and to
ensure that the summary contains 'sufficient detail to permit a reasonable
understanding of the substance of the information submitted in
confidence'."[270]
When it is not possible to supply a non‑confidential summary, Article 6.5.1
requires a party "to identify the exceptional circumstances and provide a
statement explaining the reasons why summarization is not possible".[271]
For its part, the investigating authority must scrutinize such statements to
determine whether they establish exceptional circumstances, and whether the
reasons given explain why summarization is not possible.[272]
Thus, although the subject matter of Article 6.5 and Article 6.5.1 is
similar, the nature of the obligations that apply under the two provisions is
different.
5.106. In the present disputes, the issue
before the Panel under Article 6.5 was whether MOFCOM permitted the full
text of the four appendices to remain confidential without objectively
assessing and scrutinizing the petitioners' showing of "good cause".
By contrast, under Article 6.5.1, the issue before the Panel was:
(i) whether MOFCOM required the petitioners to provide sufficient non‑confidential
summaries of the confidential information contained in reports found in the
four appendices at issue; and (ii) whether MOFCOM required the petitioners
to provide adequate statements as to why summarization was not possible with
respect to the remaining 32 appendices.[273]
5.107. As we have noted above, whether an
investigating authority has objectively assessed the "good cause" alleged
by a party under Article 6.5 is to be examined on the basis of the
investigating authority's published report and its related supporting
documents, and in the light of the nature of the information at issue and the
reasons given by the interested party for its request for confidential
treatment. We have also found that the Panel did not err in stating that, in
the absence of any evidence that MOFCOM had objectively assessed whether the
petitioners had made a showing of "good cause" in the present case,
it could not find that MOFCOM had complied with its obligation under Article 6.5.[274]
5.108. In addressing the complainants'
claim under Article 6.5.1 that MOFCOM failed to require the petitioners to
provide sufficient non‑confidential summaries of the confidential information,
the Panel compared confidential versions and the non‑confidential summaries of
the four appendices at issue. We recall that, in EC - Fasteners (China), the Appellate Body held that the
sufficiency of the summary provided depends on the confidential information at
issue, and that it must permit "a reasonable understanding of the
substance of the information withheld".[275]
Thus, in order to determine whether MOFCOM ensured that the
non-confidential summaries of the four reports at issue were sufficiently
detailed, the Panel compared those summaries with the confidential versions of the
underlying reports. Further, in assessing whether MOFCOM required the
petitioners to provide adequate statements as to why summarization was not
possible with regard to the remaining 32 appendices, the Panel examined the
statements by the petitioners.[276]
5.109. We do not consider that the Panel's
approach to addressing the complainants' claims under Articles 6.5 and
6.5.1 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement was "internally inconsistent".
Rather, as we see it, the Panel properly reflected the distinct nature of the
substantive legal obligation at issue in each case.
5.110. China also argues that the Panel's
approach under Article 6.5 in the present disputes contradicts the
approach adopted by the Appellate Body in EC –
Fasteners (China) in its analysis of the claims under Article 6.5.1
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement. In EC - Fasteners (China), the Appellate Body considered whether
the investigating authority had ensured that two domestic producers – Agrati
and Fontana Luigi – had provided adequate statements as to why summarization of
confidential information was not possible. Having examined the Panel's
assessment of the statements by Agrati and Fontana Luigi, the Appellate Body
concluded that those statements did not contain sufficient explanations as to
why summarization of certain information was not possible, and, accordingly,
that the European Union had failed to comply with its obligations under Article 6.5.1.[277]
Moreover, the Appellate Body found that the investigating authority had
failed to scrutinize the reasons provided in the statements of Agrati and
Fontana Luigi, in violation of Article 6.5.1. We do not view the
approach taken by the Appellate Body in EC –
Fasteners (China) to support China's position regarding the alleged
application of inconsistent reasoning by the Panel in the present disputes.
Similarly to what we have noted above, we consider that the difference in the
approaches taken by the Panel in its analysis under Article 6.5 and by the
Appellate Body in EC – Fasteners (China)
in its analysis under Article 6.5.1 reflects the distinct nature of the
substantive legal obligations at issue. For all these reasons, we do not agree
with China that the Panel failed to make an objective assessment of the matter
before it by applying an "internally inconsistent" reasoning in its
examination of the claims under Articles 6.5 and 6.5.1 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement.
5.111. China argues that the Panel acted
inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU by finding that China acted
inconsistently with Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement on grounds
not alleged by the complainants in their first written submissions, contrary to
paragraph 7 of the Joint Working Procedures of the Panels.[278]
More specifically, China explains that it had understood, on the basis of the
complainants' panel requests, as well as the complainants' first written
submissions, that they were claiming that China had violated Article 6.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM granted confidential treatment to
the four appendices at issue "without 'good cause' being shown by the
petitioners".[279]
According to China, it was not until after the parties had received
question No. 67 from the Panel that the issue arose as to whether or
not MOFCOM had objectively assessed and determined the showing of "good
cause" by the petitioners.[280]
5.112. In response, Japan and the European Union
submit that China's arguments are based on its erroneous understanding of the
nature of the analysis under Article 6.5.[281]
According to the complainants, an allegation that confidential treatment was
extended without "good cause" being shown is merely another way of
expressing that the investigating authority failed to undertake an objective
assessment as to whether "good cause" had been shown by the
applicant.[282]
5.113. We understand China to distinguish
between what it sees as two distinct issues: (i) whether MOFCOM
"objectively assessed" and scrutinized the "good cause"
alleged for confidential treatment in order to determine whether the
petitioners' requests were sufficiently substantiated; and (ii) whether
MOFCOM granted confidential treatment without a showing of "good
cause" by the petitioners. China considers that the complainants did not
argue – at any stage during the Panel proceedings, and, in any event, not in
their first written submissions – the issue of whether MOFCOM objectively
assessed the reasons given by the petitioners for their requests for
confidential treatment.[283]
5.114. We note that, in their panel
requests, the complainants alleged that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.5
because MOFCOM treated information supplied by the petitioners as confidential
"without good cause shown".[284]
We consider this language to have been sufficient to put China on notice that
the question of whether MOFCOM objectively assessed the "good cause"
alleged by the petitioners would be an issue in these disputes.
5.115. In their first written submissions,
the complainants further argued that the petitioners did not show "good
cause" for treating the full text of the relevant appendices as
confidential, and therefore China acted inconsistently with Article 6.5 "in
permitting the full texts of these Appendices to remain confidential".[285]
The complainants also contended that, by granting the confidential treatment to
the full texts of the four aforementioned reports "without a showing of
good cause", China violated Article 6.5.[286]
Moreover, in response to question No. 67 from the Panel, the complainants
argued that "the authority must objectively assess the 'good cause'
alleged for confidential treatment, and scrutinize the party's showing in order
to determine whether the submitting party has sufficiently substantiated its
request".[287]
5.116. China takes issue with the fact
that the complainants referred expressly to the obligation of the investigating
authority to assess objectively the "good cause" only after having
received the Panel's question.[288]
We recall that paragraph 7 of the Joint Working Procedures of the Panels
provided that, "[b]efore the first substantive meeting of the Panels with
the parties, each party shall submit a written submission in which it presents
the facts of its case and its arguments, in accordance with the timetable
adopted by the Panels."[289]
However, we see no reason why this language should be construed to have
precluded the complainants from further elaborating on the claims identified in
their panel requests in response to the Panel's questioning. We also note that
the Appellate Body has previously found that "panels are entitled to
ask questions of the parties that they deem relevant to the consideration of the
issues before them."[290]
Moreover, it is within the competence of a panel "freely to use arguments
submitted by any of the parties – or to develop its own legal reasoning – to
support its own findings and conclusions on the matter under its
consideration".[291]
5.117. Accordingly, we disagree with
China's argument that the Panel made the case for the complainants and thereby
acted inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU.
5.118. In the light of the above, we uphold
the Panel's findings, in paragraphs 7.290 and 7.297‑7.303 of the Panel
Reports, paragraph 8.1.b. of the Japan Panel Report, and paragraph 8.6.e
of the EU Panel Report, that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM permitted the full text of the
reports contained in appendix V and appendix VIII to the petition,
appendix 59 to the petitioners' supplemental evidence of
1 March 2012, and the appendix to the petitioners' supplemental
evidence of 29 March 2012 to remain confidential without objectively
assessing the petitioners' showing of "good cause".
5.119. The European Union appeals the
Panel's rejection of the European Union's claim that China acted
inconsistently with Article 6.9 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because
MOFCOM failed to adequately disclose the essential facts in connection with the
data underlying MOFCOM's determination of dumping concerning SMST and Tubacex.[292]
In its appeal, the European Union asserts that the Panel erred both in its
interpretation and application of Article 6.9.
5.120. We begin by recalling the relevant
findings by the Panel before addressing the specific issues raised by the European Union
on appeal, as well as China's contention that the European Union's
challenge goes to the objectivity of the Panel's assessment of the facts and
should therefore have been brought under Article 11 of the DSU.
5.121. Before the Panel, Japan and the European Union
contended that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.9 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement because MOFCOM had not disclosed the essential facts that formed the
basis for its dumping determinations.[293]
In particular, the complainants argued that, in its dumping determinations,
MOFCOM failed to disclose any information relating to: (i) the specific
cost and sales data used to calculate normal value and export prices underlying
the margin calculations; (ii) adjustments to this data, for instance, to
take account of taxes and freight; and (iii) information on the calculation
methodology, namely, the formulae used in calculations, the data applied in
these formulae, and how MOFCOM applied these data in constructing normal value,
export price, and production costs.[294]
5.122. In response, China argued that the
complainants failed to make a prima facie
case and, instead, relied on general, unsubstantiated allegations without any
specific reference to the disclosure documents. China further contended that,
contrary to the European Union's allegations, MOFCOM had disclosed all
essential facts pertaining to its dumping determinations in its preliminary and
final dumping disclosures. In particular, with regard to production costs,
SG&A, and profits, China submitted that MOFCOM had "explained when it
accepted the data submitted by the exporters, and when it resorted to
constructed normal values or export prices".[295]
According to China, MOFCOM also indicated when it used the adjustments
requested by the exporters, and the amount of the adjustments made in other
instances. In addition, China argued that MOFCOM provided the necessary
information for the respondents to understand the methodology used to calculate
the margins of dumping.[296]
5.123. The Panel started its analysis of
the complainants' claims by referring to WTO jurisprudence establishing that
"the basic data underlying an investigating authority's dumping
determination constitute 'essential facts' within the meaning of Article 6.9."[297]
Moreover, the Panel noted that, in China – Broiler Products,
the panel found that "a narrative description of the data used cannot ipso facto be considered insufficient disclosure, provided
the essential facts the authority is referring to are in the possession of the
respondent."[298]
On this basis, the Panel found that Article 6.9 does not require
investigating authorities to "prepare disclosures containing the entirety
of the essential facts under consideration" in cases where the relevant
essential facts are in the possession of the respondent.[299]
The Panel therefore did not consider that an investigating authority would
necessarily need to disclose "a spread sheet 'duly completed with the data
actually relied on by the investigating authority'", as the European Union
suggested.[300]
The Panel noted that, "[w]hile this would be one way of complying with Article 6.9,
a narrative description would also suffice in the appropriate circumstances,
provided that such description does not leave uncertainty as to the essential
facts under consideration."[301]
5.124. The Panel further observed that
MOFCOM had made both preliminary and final dumping disclosures to the exporters
at issue, the narrative of which "described the sales data under
consideration, the basis for determining normal value and export price, and the
adjustments made thereto".[302]
Moreover, "MOFCOM specified when it used data or made adjustments
requested by the exporters" and "disclosed actual data when it
departed from the data submitted by the exporters".[303]
The Panel expressed the view that, "[o]ther than observing that MOFCOM
failed to provide actual data that was already in the respondents' possession,
the complainants ha[d] not identified any flaws in MOFCOM's narrative
description, or otherwise explained how such description would not have been
sufficient for the relevant exporters to defend" their interests.[304]
Therefore, the Panel saw "no basis … to find that the narrative
descriptions provided by MOFCOM do not satisfy the requirements of Article 6.9
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement".[305]
5.125. As noted, the European Union
takes issue with the Panel's interpretation and application of Article 6.9
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement with respect to the data underlying MOFCOM's
determination of dumping concerning SMST and Tubacex.[306]
The European Union submits, as it did before the Panel, that the
"essential facts supporting an anti‑dumping margin determination include
the data underlying the margin calculations and adjustments to the data"[307],
as well as information on the calculation methodology, such as the formulae
used in calculations and the data applied in the formulae. According to the European Union,
the lack of disclosure of such facts in the underlying investigation impaired
the interested parties' ability to defend their interests, because the
interested parties did not have "an opportunity to 'provide additional
information or correct perceived errors, and comment on or make arguments as to
the proper interpretation of those facts'".[308]
The European Union argues, in particular, that Article 6.9
"requires disclosure of all the essential facts under consideration which
form the basis for the decision whether to apply definitive measures"[309],
and submits, contrary to what the Panel's analysis suggests, that the
"[m]ere possession of the data set from which the facts have been selected
is clearly insufficient for the interested party to defend its interests."[310]
5.126. In response, China argues that the European Union
appears to challenge the Panel's examination and weighing of the evidence,
rather than the Panel's interpretation and application of Article 6.9.[311]
China notes that the European Union has not raised a claim under Article 11
of the DSU concerning this aspect of the Panel's findings, and argues, on this
basis, that the European Union's appeal concerning the Panel's findings
under Article 6.9 should be rejected. In the alternative, China submits
that the Panel correctly found that "there are several ways in
which an investigating authority can satisfy" its obligations under Article 6.9.[312]
China adds that the Panel did not find that an investigating authority "is
excused from
disclosing the essential facts if they are already in the possession
of the interested party".[313]
For China, the Panel simply distinguished between two possible manners of complying
with Article 6.9: (i) the actual provision
of specific data; and (ii) the inclusion of a narrative description of the
data used that is in the possession of the respondents.
5.127. Before
embarking on
our analysis, we note that, in addition to claiming that China acted
inconsistently with Article 6.9 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement because
MOFCOM failed to disclose the
essential facts underlying MOFCOM's determination of dumping for SMST and Tubacex,
the European Union also claimed before the Panel that MOFCOM acted
inconsistently with that provision because it did not disclose information on the calculation
methodology applied by MOFCOM to determine the margins of dumping for the
investigated companies. The Panel reasoned that an interested party would not
be able properly to defend its interests if it were not informed of the
methodology applied by the investigating authority to determine the margin of
dumping. The Panel
added that "merely disclosing the underlying data
under consideration, without also disclosing the methodology under
consideration, would be of little use in clarifying the factual basis of the
investigating authority's determinations."[314]
The Panel concluded that, by failing to disclose the methodology used to
calculate the margin of dumping, MOFCOM acted inconsistently with Article 6.9
of the Anti-Dumping Agreement. These findings have not been appealed. Instead,
the European Union's appeal concerns MOFCOM's alleged failure to disclose
the specific cost and
sales data used to calculate the normal value and export prices underlying the
margin calculations, and the adjustments to this data, for instance, to take
account of taxes and freight.
5.128. Turning to China's
contention that the European Union ought to have brought this claim under Article 11 of
the DSU, we recall the Appellate Body's finding that allegations
implicating a panel's appreciation of facts and evidence fall under Article 11
of the DSU, whereas "[t]he consistency or inconsistency of a given fact or
set of facts with the requirements of a given treaty provision is … a legal
characterization issue" and is, therefore, a legal question.[315]
As we understand it, the European Union's key contention is that the Panel
erred in determining that MOFCOM adequately disclosed the
"essential facts" underlying its dumping determinations as
required under Article 6.9. Although there are aspects of the Panel's
analysis that concern the facts that were before MOFCOM, we understand the European Union's
appeal to focus on the manner in which the Panel interpreted and applied Article 6.9
in its assessment of whether MOFCOM's dumping disclosures complied with the
legal standard under that provision. In particular, we consider that the European Union's
appeal raises issues as to the meaning and scope of the investigating
authority's duty under Article 6.9 to disclose the "essential
facts" under
consideration. Hence, we do not agree with China that the European Union's
appeal merely challenges the Panel's examination and weighing of the evidence, and
should therefore have been brought under Article 11 of the DSU. We turn,
therefore, to examine the issues raised by the European Union on appeal
concerning the Panel's interpretation and application of the legal standard
under Article 6.9 to MOFCOM's dumping disclosures.
5.129. The first sentence of Article 6.9
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement stipulates that "[t]he authorities shall,
before a final determination is made, inform all interested parties of the
essential facts under consideration which form the basis for the decision
whether to apply definitive measures." The second sentence of Article 6.9
provides that "[s]uch
disclosure should take place in sufficient time for the parties to defend their
interests."[316]
As to the scope of information that must be disclosed, the Appellate Body
has explained that Article 6.9 "cover[s] 'facts under consideration',
that is, those facts on the record that may be taken into account by an
authority in reaching a decision as to whether or not to apply definitive anti‑dumping
… duties".[317]
As to what kinds of facts are "essential" under Article 6.9, the
Appellate Body, in China – GOES,
explained that:
Article[] 6.9 …
do[es] not require the disclosure of all the facts
that are before an authority but, instead, those that are
"essential"; a word that carries a connotation of significant,
important, or salient. In considering which facts are "essential",
the following question arises: essential for what purpose? The context provided
by the latter part of Article[] 6.9 … clarifies that such facts are, first,
those that "form the basis for the decision whether to apply definitive
measures" and, second, those that ensure the ability of interested parties
to defend their interests. Thus, we understand the "essential facts"
to refer to those facts that are significant in the process of reaching a
decision as to whether or not to apply definitive measures. Such facts are
those that are salient for a decision to apply definitive measures, as well as
those that are salient for a contrary outcome. An authority must disclose such
facts, in a coherent way, so as to permit an interested party to understand the
basis for the decision whether or not to apply definitive measures. In our
view, disclosing the essential facts under consideration pursuant to Article[] 6.9
… is paramount for ensuring the ability of the parties concerned to defend
their interests.[318]
5.130. Essential facts are, therefore,
"those that are salient for a decision to apply definitive measures, as
well as those that are salient for a contrary outcome."[319]
In order to apply a definitive measure, an investigating authority must find
dumping, injury to the domestic industry, and a causal link between the dumping
and the injury. These findings, in turn, are based on various intermediate
findings and conclusions reached by the investigating authority. Whether a
particular fact is essential or "significant in the process of reaching a
decision"[320]
depends on the nature and scope of the particular substantive obligations, the
content of the particular findings needed to satisfy the substantive
obligations at issue, and the factual circumstances of each case, including the
arguments and evidence submitted by the interested parties.[321]
An investigating authority must disclose such facts "in a coherent
way" that permits an interested party to understand the factual basis for
each of the intermediate findings and conclusions reached by the authority,
such that it is able properly to defend its interests.
5.131. Thus, an investigating authority is expected, with
respect to the determination of dumping, to disclose, inter alia,
the home market and export sales being used, the adjustments made thereto, and
the calculation methodology applied by the investigating authority to determine
the margin of dumping. The mere fact that the investigating authority refers in
its disclosure to data that are in the possession of an interested party does
not mean that the investigating authority has disclosed the factual basis for
its determination in a manner that enables interested parties to comment on the
completeness and correctness of the conclusions the investigating authority
reached from the facts being considered, and to comment on or make arguments as
to the proper interpretation of those facts.[322]
Thus, while Article 6.9 does not prescribe a particular form for the
disclosure of the essential facts, it does require in all cases that the
investigating authority disclose those facts in such a manner that an
interested party can understand clearly what data the investigating authority
has used, and how those data were used to determine the margin of dumping.[323]
5.132. On appeal, the European Union's
challenge focuses on paragraphs 7.235 and 7.236 of the EU Panel Report, where the Panel set out
its understanding of the interpretation and application of Article 6.9 of
the Anti-Dumping Agreement. The Panel stated:
Previous WTO
dispute settlement panels have established that the basic data underlying an
investigating authority dumping determination constitute "essential
facts" within the meaning of Article 6.9. We agree. In addition, the
panel in China – Broiler Products found that a
narrative description of the data used cannot ipso facto
be considered insufficient disclosure, provided the essential facts the
authority is referring to are in the possession of the respondent.[*] We agree.
In cases where the relevant essential facts are already in the possession of
the respondents, we do not consider that Article 6.9 requires
investigating authorities to prepare disclosures containing the entirety of the
essential facts under consideration. In particular, we do not consider that the
authority need necessarily disclose a spread sheet "duly completed with
the data actually relied on by the investigating authority", as suggested
by the European Union. While this would be one way of complying with Article 6.9,
a narrative description would also suffice in the appropriate circumstances,
provided that such description does not leave uncertainty as to the essential
facts under consideration.[324]
[*original fn]396 Panel Report, China – Broiler Products, para. 7.95.
5.133. While the Panel's reading of the scope and
meaning of Article 6.9 is not entirely clear, it appears to us that the
Panel considered that a determination of whether an investigating authority has
complied with its obligations under that provision hinges largely on whether
the essential facts under consideration by the investigating authority were in
the possession of an interested party affected by the determination.[325]
However, contrary to what the Panel stated, it does not suffice for an
investigating authority to disclose "the essential facts under
consideration"[326]
but, rather, it must disclose the essential facts under consideration that
"form the basis for the decision whether
to apply definitive measures". To the extent that the Panel suggested that
a narrative description of the data used would constitute sufficient disclosure
simply because the essential facts that the authority is referring to "are
in the possession of the respondent", we disagree. Instead, we agree with
the European Union that, "when the investigating authority has selected from amongst the facts originally provided by the
interested party, [that] party has no way of knowing which facts have been
selected."[327]
We do not see how the mere fact that the investigating authority may be
referring to data that are in the possession of an interested party would mean
that it has disclosed the essential facts "that are salient for a decision
to apply definitive measures, as well as those that are salient for a contrary
outcome … in a coherent way, so as to permit an interested party to understand
the basis for the decision whether or not to apply definitive measures"[328],
and to defend its interests.
5.134. In the light of the above, we find
that the Panel erred in its interpretation of Article 6.9 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement set out in paragraph 7.235 of the
EU Panel Report. The Panel subsequently relied on this erroneous
interpretation of Article 6.9 in finding, in paragraph 7.236 of the
EU Panel Report, that, "[o]ther than observing that MOFCOM
failed to provide actual data that was already in the respondents' possession,
the complainants have not identified any flaws in MOFCOM's narrative
description, or otherwise explained how such description would not have been
sufficient for the relevant exporters to defend its interests."[329]
We therefore reverse the Panel's finding, in paragraphs 7.235 and 7.236,
and the Panel's conclusion, in paragraph 8.7.d.i. of the
EU Panel Report, rejecting the European Union's claim that China
acted inconsistently with Article 6.9 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM
failed to disclose adequately the essential facts in connection with the data underlying MOFCOM's determination
of dumping concerning SMST and Tubacex.
5.135. This brings us to the question of
whether we can complete the legal analysis by ruling on the European Union's
claim that MOFCOM acted inconsistently with Article 6.9 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement by failing to disclose the data underlying MOFCOM's determination
of dumping concerning SMST and Tubacex.[330] Having reviewed MOFCOM's Preliminary and Final
Dumping Disclosures[331], we consider that MOFCOM did not disclose
the essential facts underlying its dumping determinations so as to permit the
companies concerned to understand clearly what data MOFCOM had used, and how
that data had been used to determine the margins of dumping for SMST and
Tubacex. Accordingly, we find that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.9
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
because MOFCOM failed to disclose adequately the data underlying its determination of dumping concerning SMST and Tubacex.
5.136. Each of the three participants has
appealed different aspects of the Panel's findings relating to MOFCOM's injury
determination. Before turning to our analysis of the issues raised by the
participants on appeal, we first summarize briefly the relevant obligations
under Articles 3.1, 3.2, 3.4, and 3.5 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement
regarding the conduct of injury investigations.[332]
5.137. The Appellate Body has found
that Article 3.1 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement "is an
overarching provision that sets forth a Member's fundamental, substantive
obligation" concerning the injury determination, and informs the more
detailed obligations in the succeeding paragraphs.[333]
Article 3.1 states:
A determination of injury for purposes of Article VI of
GATT 1994 shall be based on positive evidence and involve an objective
examination of both (a) the
volume of the dumped imports and the effect of the dumped imports on prices in
the domestic market for like products, and (b) the
consequent impact of these imports on domestic producers of such products.
5.138. As the Appellate Body has
found, the term "positive evidence" focuses on the facts underpinning
and justifying the injury determination.[334]
It relates to the quality of the evidence that the investigating authorities
may rely on in making a determination, and requires the evidence to be
affirmative, objective, verifiable, and credible.[335]
Furthermore, the Appellate Body has interpreted the term "objective
examination" as requiring an injury investigation under Article 3 to
"conform to the dictates of the basic principles of good faith and
fundamental fairness", and to be conducted "in an unbiased manner,
without favouring the interests of any interested party, or group of interested
parties, in the investigation".[336]
5.139. Several of the remaining paragraphs
of Article 3 then elaborate on the elements that must be objectively
examined, based on positive evidence, pursuant to Article 3.1. Article 3.2
specifies the content of an investigating authority's consideration regarding
the volume of dumped imports and the effect of such imports on domestic prices.
Articles 3.4 and 3.5 concern the consequent impact of the dumped imports
on the domestic industry. Specifically, Article 3.4 sets out the economic
factors that must be evaluated in the examination of the impact of the dumped
imports on the domestic industry, while Article 3.5 requires an
investigating authority to demonstrate that dumped imports are causing injury
to the domestic industry.[337]
5.140. These paragraphs of Article 3
thus contemplate a "logical progression" in the investigating
authority's examination leading to an ultimate determination of whether dumped
imports are causing material injury to the domestic industry.[338] This process entails a consideration of the volume of dumped imports
and their price effects, and requires an examination of the impact of such
imports on the state of the domestic industry as revealed by a number of economic
factors and indices. These various elements are linked through a causation and
non-attribution analysis between the dumped imports and the injury to the
domestic industry, taking into account all factors that must be considered and
evaluated.[339]
5.141. Article 3 does not prescribe a
specific methodology to be relied on by an investigating authority in its
determination of injury.[340] Nor is there a prescribed template or format that an investigating
authority must adhere to in making its determination of injury, provided that
its determination comports with the disciplines that apply under the discrete
paragraphs of Article 3. These disciplines are necessary, interlinked
elements of a single, overall analysis addressing the question of whether
dumped imports are causing injury to the domestic industry. Indeed, by its
terms, Article 3.5 states that "[i]t must be demonstrated that the
dumped imports are, through the effects of dumping, as set forth in
paragraphs 2 and 4, causing injury" to the domestic industry. Thus, the inquiries under Articles 3.2 and 3.4 should not be viewed
in isolation, as they are necessary components to answering the ultimate
question in Article 3.5 as to whether dumped imports are causing injury to
the domestic industry.[341] The interpretation of Articles 3.2, 3.4, and 3.5 should
therefore be consistent with the role they play in the overall framework of an
injury determination.
5.142. With these considerations in mind,
we turn to address the complainants' appeals as they relate to the Panel's
assessment, under Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement,
of MOFCOM's price effects analysis. Thereafter, we examine the complainants'
claims that the Panel erred in its findings under Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement regarding MOFCOM's impact analysis. Finally, we
address the appeals by the complainants and China regarding the Panel's
assessment of MOFCOM's causation analysis.
5.143. Before the Panel, Japan and the European Union
submitted that MOFCOM's consideration of whether there had been a significant
price undercutting by the imports of Grade B and Grade C HP-SSST was
inconsistent with Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement,
on three grounds. First, the complainants argued that MOFCOM's analysis of the
price effects of Grade C dumped imports was analytically and factually
flawed because MOFCOM improperly compared the price of Grade C dumped
imports with the price of domestic Grade C, despite significant differences
between the quantities of imported and domestic products sold. Second, the
complainants asserted that MOFCOM improperly found price undercutting on the
basis that the price of Grade C dumped imports was lower than the price of
domestic Grade C products, without considering evidence suggesting that Grade C
dumped imports did not place downward pressure on domestic prices, or prevent
an increase in the prices of those domestic products.[342]
Third, the complainants submitted that MOFCOM improperly extended, without any
analysis or explanation, its finding of price undercutting in respect of Grades B
and C to the domestic like product as a whole, including domestic Grade A.[343]
5.144. The Panel addressed the three
grounds of the complainants' claims separately. The Panel concluded that
MOFCOM's failure to account properly for differences in quantities when
comparing the price of Grade C dumped imports with the domestic Grade C
price is inconsistent with Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[344]
However, the Panel rejected the complainants' claims that MOFCOM acted
inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.2 by failing to consider whether Grade C
dumped imports had any price undercutting effect on domestic Grade C
products, in the sense of placing downward pressure on those domestic prices by
being sold at lower prices.[345]
The Panel also rejected the complainants' claims that MOFCOM acted
inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.2 by improperly extending its
finding of price undercutting in respect of Grades B and C to the domestic
like product as a whole, including domestic Grade A.[346]
5.145. On appeal, Japan and the European Union
claim that the Panel erred in rejecting their claim that MOFCOM's determination
of price undercutting in respect of Grade C imports was inconsistent with Articles 3.1
and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by failing to consider whether Grade C
dumped imports had any price undercutting effect on domestic Grade C
products, in the sense of placing downward pressure on those domestic prices by
being sold at lower prices.[347]
The European Union also appeals the Panel's assessment of whether MOFCOM's
findings of price undercutting in respect of Grades B and C were
sufficient to comply with MOFCOM's obligation to consider whether or not the
prices of the dumped imports had a significant effect on the prices of the
domestic product as a whole, including Grade A.[348]
We address each of the issues raised on appeal in turn.
5.146. Before the Panel, Japan and the European Union
asserted that MOFCOM improperly found price undercutting on the basis that the
price of Grade C dumped imports was less than the price of domestic Grade C,
without also considering evidence suggesting that Grade C dumped imports
did not lead to any effect on the
domestic prices such as lost sales volumes, downward pressure, or a prevention
in the increase of those domestic prices.[349]
The complainants argued that a determination of price undercutting cannot be
based solely on the existence of a mathematical difference between import and
domestic prices. Instead, given that Article 3.2 is concerned with
"the effect of the dumped imports on prices", the complainants contended
that an investigating authority must also consider whether any price difference
enabled the dumped imports to have an effect on domestic prices, such as a
"loss of domestic sales volumes or at least [having] placed downward
pressure on domestic prices".[350]
5.147. The Panel recalled the Appellate Body's
observation that Article 3.2 establishes a "link" between the
price of subject imports and the price of domestic like products by requiring
that a comparison be made between the two.[351]
The Panel considered that the phrase "whether the effect of" in Article 3.2
applies only in respect of price depression or suppression, on the basis that
the text of Article 3.2 does not refer to "whether the effect of
subject imports is price undercutting".[352]
The Panel considered, therefore, that the question of whether there had been
significant price undercutting within the meaning of Article 3.2 "was
a simple factual issue" that could be answered by means of "a
comparison of prices for domestic and imported product[s]".[353]
5.148. The Panel acknowledged the
complainants' references to recognized dictionary definitions of the term
"undercut" that spoke to the notion of "supplanting" or
"rendering unstable".[354]
However, noting that there was no explicit reference to the notion of
"supplanting" or "rendering unstable" in the text or
context of Article 3.2, the Panel saw no reason why an investigating
authority should not simply consider whether dumped imports "sell at lower
prices than" comparable domestic products.[355]
5.149. The Panel further reasoned that, if
an investigating authority were required to show that price undercutting by dumped
imports had the effect of depressing or suppressing prices, as suggested by the
complainants, this would duplicate the other price effects considerations
provided for in Article 3.2. According to the Panel, the fact that Article 3.2
identifies three distinct price effects, and distinguishes between price
undercutting, on the one hand, and price depression and price suppression, on
the other hand, suggests that there is no need to establish price depression or
suppression when considering the existence of price undercutting, or vice versa.[356]
The Panel therefore found that, while price undercutting by imports may lead to
lost domestic sales, or to price depression or price suppression, there is no
requirement in Article 3.2 to demonstrate the existence of these other
phenomena when considering the existence of price undercutting.[357]
5.150. Based on this analysis, the Panel
rejected the claims by the complainants that MOFCOM acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1
and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by failing to consider whether Grade C
dumped imports had any price undercutting effect on domestic Grade C
products, in the sense of placing downward pressure on those domestic prices by
being sold at lower prices.[358]
5.151. On appeal, Japan claims that the
Panel erred in its interpretation of Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
by finding that the question of whether price undercutting exists is a
"simple factual" question that "can be answered … by a
comparison of prices for domestic and imported product[s]", and that
"the existence of price undercutting itself provides the requisite insight
into the effect of the dumped imports (and the relationship of subject import
prices with domestic prices)".[359]
Japan submits that the Panel appears to have considered "that an
investigating authority may conclude the price effect analysis under Articles 3.1
and 3.2 by simply finding that import prices are mathematically lower than the
price of a domestic like product."[360]
Japan submits that the mere fact of dumped import prices being mathematically
lower than comparable domestic prices does not, in and of itself, provide a
"meaningful basis" for conducting a further causation analysis under Article 3.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[361]
5.152. The European Union, for its
part, claims that the Panel erred in finding that the obligation in Article 3.2
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement can be met, and was met in this case, on the
basis of the fact that, in 2010, the price of the dumped imports under
consideration was below the price of the domestic product being compared.[362]
Given MOFCOM's decision to conduct a grade‑by‑grade analysis, the European Union
submits that MOFCOM was required under Articles 3.1 and 3.2 to consider
more than the "mere juxtaposition" of the price of the dumped imports
under consideration and the price of the domestic product being compared.[363]
In particular, it was required to consider whether the juxtaposition of the
price of the dumped imports under consideration and the price of the domestic
product being compared, together with other relevant facts - such
as specifically identified quantitative differences, inverse price movements, a
sudden and substantial increase in the domestic prices, an increase in the
market share of domestic Grade C products, and an absence of
substitutability – have explanatory force for the effect of the prices of the
dumped imports under consideration on the prices of the domestic product being
compared.[364]
5.153. By contrast, China agrees with the
Panel's interpretation of "price undercutting" in Article 3.2,
and supports the Panel's finding that an investigating authority can
"simply consider whether subject imports 'sell at lower prices than'
comparable domestic products".[365]
5.154. The second sentence of Article 3.2
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement reads:
With regard to the
effect of the dumped imports on prices, the investigating authorities shall
consider whether there has been a significant price undercutting by the dumped
imports as compared with the price of a like product of the importing Member,
or whether the effect of such imports is otherwise to depress prices to a
significant degree or prevent price increases, which otherwise would have
occurred, to a significant degree.
5.155. The second sentence of Article 3.2
begins with the clause "[w]ith regard to the effect of the dumped imports
on prices". The definition of the word
"effect" is, inter alia,
"something accomplished, caused, or produced; a result, a consequence".[366] By referring
to "the effect of the dumped imports", Article 3.2 postulates
certain inquiries with regard to the effect of those
imports on domestic prices.[367]
In particular, an investigating authority is required to consider whether there
has been a "significant price undercutting"
by the dumped imports as compared with the price of a like product of the
importing Member; or "whether the effect of such imports is otherwise to
depress prices to a significant degree or prevent price increases, which
otherwise would have occurred, to a significant degree."[368]
With regard to the latter inquiry, the Appellate Body has noted that, to
examine whether the effect of
dumped imports "is otherwise to depress prices to a
significant degree or prevent price increases", "an
investigating authority is required to consider whether a first variable – that
is, subject imports – has explanatory force for the occurrence of significant
depression or suppression of a second variable – that is, domestic
prices."[369]
5.156. The Appellate Body has further
noted that the two inquiries under the second sentence of Article 3.2 are
separated by the words "or" and "otherwise".[370]
The elements that are relevant to a consideration of whether there has
been "significant price undercutting" may, therefore, "differ
from those relevant to the consideration of significant price depression and
suppression".[371]
We do not read Article 3.2 as suggesting that the "effect" of
price undercutting must either be price depression or price suppression.
Instead, we agree with the Panel that, while price undercutting by imports may lead to price depression or price suppression, "there
is no requirement in Article 3.2 to
demonstrate the existence of these other phenomena when considering the
existence of price undercutting."[372]
5.157. Having said this, we recall that
the focus of these appeals is on the meaning and scope of an investigating
authority's obligation to consider whether there has been "significant
price undercutting" within the meaning of the second sentence of Article 3.2
of the Anti-Dumping Agreement.
5.158. Beginning with the ordinary meaning
of the term "price undercutting", we note that dictionary definitions
of the word "undercut" include: "sell at lower prices
than"; and "make unstable or less firm, undermine".[373]
These definitions cover a range of possible meanings. However, in order to
determine the ordinary meaning of the term "price undercutting", it
should be read in the context in which it appears in Article 3.2. With
this in mind, we recall that the introductory part of the second sentence –
i.e. "With regard to the effect of the
dumped imports on prices" – requires an investigating authority to
consider whether there has been a significant price
undercutting by the dumped imports as compared with the price of a
like product of the importing Member. The meaning of "effect" is
"a result" of something else.[374]
In the context of Article 3.2, this suggests inquiries as to the
"effect" of dumped imports on domestic prices, and each inquiry links
the dumped imports with the prices of the like domestic products.[375]
With respect to "price undercutting", the Appellate Body has found
that Article 3.2 thus expressly establishes "a link between the price
of subject imports and that of like domestic products" by requiring that a
comparison be made between the two.[376]
5.159. Still in this regard, we observe
that the term "price undercutting" in Article 3.2 is used in
present participle, suggesting that the inquiry under Article 3.2 concerns
pricing conduct that continues over time. Hence, Article 3.2 does not ask
the question of whether an investigating authority can identify an isolated
instance of the dumped imports being sold at lower prices than the domestic
like products. Rather, a proper reading of "price undercutting" under
Article 3.2 suggests that the inquiry requires a dynamic assessment of
price developments and trends in the relationship between the prices of the
dumped imports and those of domestic like products over the entire period of
investigation (POI). An examination of such developments and trends includes
assessing whether import and domestic prices are moving in the same or contrary
directions, and whether there has been a sudden and substantial increase in the
domestic prices.
5.160. We note that the Panel described
the investigating authority's obligation to consider whether there has been
price undercutting as consisting of "a simple factual issue – is there
price undercutting or not? – which can be answered, as Article 3.2
suggests, by a comparison of prices for domestic and imported product[s]."[377]
The Panel also found that an investigating authority should "simply consider whether subject imports 'sell at lower prices than'
comparable domestic products".[378]
As we see it, the Panel appears to have assumed that price undercutting, under Article 3.2,
is merely concerned with the question of whether there is a mathematical
difference, at any point in time during the POI, between the prices of the
dumped imports and the comparable domestic products. We disagree. As discussed
above, while price undercutting involves situations where imports are being
sold at prices lower than the domestic like
products, an inquiry into price undercutting under Article 3.2 is not
satisfied by a static examination of whether there is a mathematical difference
at any point in time during the POI without any assessment of whether or how
these prices interact over time. Rather, as noted above, Article 3.2
requires a dynamic assessment of price developments and trends in the
relationship between the prices of the dumped imports and those of domestic
like products over the duration of the POI.
5.161. Moreover, we note that the term
"price undercutting" in Article 3.2 is qualified by the word
"significant", which is relevantly defined as "important,
notable, consequential".[379]
As noted above, with respect to "price undercutting", Article 3.2
expressly establishes a link between the price of subject imports and that of
like domestic products, by requiring that a comparison be made between the two.[380]
This comparison contemplates a dynamic assessment of price developments and
trends in the relationship between the prices of the dumped imports and those
of domestic like products over the duration of the POI. The significance of the price undercutting found on the
basis of that dynamic assessment is a question of the magnitude of the price
undercutting.[381]
What amounts to significant price undercutting – that
is, whether the undercutting is important, notable, or consequential – will
therefore necessarily depend on the circumstances of each case. In order to
assess whether the observed price undercutting is significant, an investigating
authority may, depending on the case, rely on all positive evidence relating to
the nature of the product or product types at issue, how long the price
undercutting has been taking place and to what extent, and, as appropriate, the
relative market shares of the product types with respect to which the authority
has made a finding of price undercutting. In all cases, an investigating
authority must, pursuant to Article 3.1, objectively examine all positive
evidence, and may not disregard relevant evidence suggesting that prices of
dumped imports have no, or only a limited, effect on domestic prices.[382]
5.162. Furthermore, we recall that Article 3
contemplates a "logical progression" in the investigating authority's
examination leading to an ultimate determination of whether dumped imports are
causing material injury to the domestic industry.[383]
Indeed, as the Appellate Body has explained, the outcome of the price effects
inquiry under Article 3.2 must be one that enables the investigating
authority to advance its analysis so as to serve as a meaningful basis for its
determination as to whether subject imports, through such price effects, are
causing injury to the domestic industry.[384]
A proper assessment of price effects under Article 3.2 is, therefore, a
necessary building block for the ultimate determination of injury.
5.163. Turning to the case before us, we
observe that the Panel, in its interpretation, focused only on the term "price
undercutting" in Article 3.2, and appears not to have accorded any
importance to the word "significant" or its implications for the
inquiry required under Article 3.2. We are not persuaded that an outcome
of a price effects inquiry under Article 3.2 that consists of a mere
mathematical comparison is one that could serve as a meaningful basis for an
investigating authority's determination of injury and causation. The fact that Article 3.2
expressly establishes "a link between the price of subject imports
and that of like domestic products, by requiring that a comparison be made
between the two"[385],
does not mean that an investigating authority can comply with its obligations
under Article 3.2 by simply considering "whether subject imports
'sell at lower prices than' comparable domestic products".[386]
While an examination of whether there is a price differential between imported
and domestic products may be a useful starting point for an analysis of price
undercutting, it does not provide a sufficient basis for an investigating
authority to satisfy its obligation under Article 3.2.
5.164. In the light of the above, we find
that the Panel erred in its interpretation of Article 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement in finding that, in its consideration of whether there has been a
significant price undercutting, an investigating authority may "simply
consider whether subject imports 'sell at lower prices than' comparable
domestic products".[387]
The Panel's finding rejecting the complainants' claims regarding MOFCOM's analysis
of whether there was significant price undercutting by Grade C dumped
imports was based on the Panel's erroneous interpretation of Article 3.2.[388]
We therefore reverse the Panel's findings, in paragraphs 7.130 and 7.144
of the Panel Reports, paragraph 8.2.a.i of the Japan Panel Report, and paragraph
8.7.b.i. of the EU Panel Report, regarding MOFCOM's finding of price
undercutting with respect to Grade C HP‑SSST.
5.165. This brings us to the question of
whether we can complete the legal analysis, as requested by the complainants,
and find that MOFCOM's consideration of price undercutting in respect of Grade C
HP-SSST is inconsistent with Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement,
including because MOFCOM failed to consider whether Grade C dumped imports
had any price undercutting effect on domestic Grade C products. In
previous cases, the Appellate Body has completed the legal analysis with a
view to facilitating the prompt settlement and effective resolution of the
dispute.[389]
The Appellate Body has completed the legal analysis when sufficient
factual findings by the panel and undisputed facts on the panel record allowed
it to do so.[390]
5.166. Turning to the case before us, we
note China's assertion that, to the extent that the complainants have made
arguments challenging the comparability of the prices between the Grade C
dumped imports and domestic Grade C, we should exclude such arguments from
our consideration.[391]
However, we see no reason why, in our assessment of the claims on appeal, we
would be precluded from taking into account the totality of the parties' legal
arguments to the extent that they are relevant to the issue raised on appeal.
5.167. We note the Panel's finding that
China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement because MOFCOM did not properly establish that the prices of imports
and domestic like products were "comparable" for the purpose of
considering price undercutting by imports of Grade C products given that
it failed "to properly account for differences in quantities when
comparing the price of Grade C subject imports with the domestic Grade C
price".[392]
This finding by the Panel, not appealed by China, implies that MOFCOM could not
have had an objective basis to determine the existence of price undercutting
for Grade C HP-SSST.
5.168. Moreover, we note, as did the
Panel, that "MOFCOM failed to account for record evidence that trends in
domestic prices by grade had no apparent relationship in terms of magnitude or
direction with trends in import prices."[393]
The Panel stated that this was particularly apparent in respect of domestic Grade C,
"the price of which increased by 112.80% from 2009-2010, without any
corresponding movement in prices for subject imports" of Grade C,
"which actually fell over that period".[394]
As explained above, in order properly to carry out an analysis of whether there
had been significant price undercutting by dumped imports of Grade C,
MOFCOM would have been required, pursuant to Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement, to undertake a dynamic assessment of price developments
and trends in the relationship between the prices of the dumped imports of Grade C
and those of the domestic Grade C over the duration of the POI. Yet, we
note that MOFCOM did not explain the basis for its finding that imports of Grade C
were underselling domestic Grade C despite the fact that the price of
domestic Grade C "increased by 112.80% from 2009-2010",
while the prices of dumped imports of Grade C
"actually fell over that period".[395]
5.169. As explained above, the inquiry under
Article 3.2 is concerned with the effect of the dumped imports on the
prices of domestic like products. It was therefore not sufficient for MOFCOM to
make a finding of price undercutting based only on the fact that, in 2010,
there was a mathematical difference between the prices of the imports of Grade C
HP‑SSST and those of domestic Grade C HP‑SSST. Instead, MOFCOM ought to
have taken into account whether that mathematical difference amounted to
significant price undercutting in the light of the facts underlying the
investigation and the considerations we explained above. To our minds, an
objective examination would have taken into account all the positive evidence
relating to, inter alia, the contrary
price movements of the Grade C imports and domestic Grade C, as well
as the limited period during which the perceived mathematical difference
occurred.
5.170. We further
recall that the provisions of Article 3 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
contemplate a "logical progression" in the investigating authority's
examination leading to an ultimate determination of whether dumped imports are
causing material injury to the domestic industry.[396] Accordingly, the outcome of the price
effects inquiry under Article 3.2 must be one that enables the
investigating authority to advance its analysis and to have a meaningful basis
for its determination as to whether dumped imports, through such price effects,
are causing injury to the domestic industry.[397] We do not see how MOFCOM, under the
specific facts of this case, could have provided a "meaningful basis"
for an analysis of whether the dumped imports were causing injury without
considering "record evidence that trends in domestic prices by grade had
no apparent relationship in terms of magnitude or direction with trends in
import prices".[398]
5.171. In the light of the above, we find
that MOFCOM's assessment of whether there had been a significant price
undercutting by Grade C imports from Japan and the European Union, as
compared with the price of domestic Grade C, is inconsistent with Articles 3.1
and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.
5.172. Having addressed the first issue
raised on appeal under Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement,
we now turn to the European Union's claim that the Panel erred in finding
that MOFCOM was not required to make a finding of price undercutting for the
product as a whole, including Grade A HP-SSST.
5.173. Before the Panel, the complainants
submitted that China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM extended its finding of price
undercutting in respect of imports of Grades B and C HP‑SSST to the
domestic like product as a whole, including domestic Grade A HP‑SSST.[399]
5.174. The Panel did not agree with the
complainants that MOFCOM was required under Articles 3.1 and 3.2 to find
price undercutting in respect of the domestic like product as a whole,
encompassing the three product types (Grades A, B, and C).[400]
The Panel noted that, when an investigating authority considers the existence
of price undercutting for the purpose of Article 3.2, it need only
consider the existence of price undercutting in respect of the dumped imports
at issue. For the Panel, where dumped imports are of different grades, it is
appropriate to consider price undercutting with respect to the comparable
domestic grades.[401]
5.175. The Panel noted the complainants'
argument that Article 3.1 refers to "the effect of the dumped imports
on prices in the domestic market for like
products".[402]
According to the complainants, the use of the definite article "the"
in conjunction with "domestic market for like products" necessarily
constitutes a reference to the entire domestic market and, therefore, the like
product as a whole. The Panel disagreed and saw nothing in Article 3.1 to
suggest that the existence of price undercutting must be considered in respect
of the entire range of the like product in the domestic market of the importing
Member. For the Panel, the reference to "the" domestic market simply
meant that prices in the domestic market should be used, rather than those in
any other market. The Panel noted, in that context, that there can be one or
more domestic like products corresponding to the imports subject to an anti‑dumping
investigation. Thus, the Panel found that, while the text of Article 3.1
"leaves open the possibility of more than one like product, it does not …
establish that price undercutting must be found with respect to the entire range
of goods making up the domestic like product(s)."[403]
5.176. The Panel also rejected the
complainants' argument that MOFCOM improperly found the relevant price
undercutting to be "significant", given that the majority[404]
of domestic production (of Grade A products) was unaffected by such price
undercutting. In the Panel's view, this argument was predicated on the
complainants' understanding that MOFCOM was required by Article 3.2 to
establish that dumped imports had a price undercutting effect in respect of the
domestic like product as a whole,
including domestic Grade A. Relying on the panel's finding in US – Upland Cotton, the Panel considered that the
significance of price undercutting by dumped imports of Grades B and C
should be assessed in relation to the price of domestically produced Grades B
and C, and not in relation to other factors, such as the proportion of domestic
production for which no price undercutting was found.[405]
Furthermore, the Panel recalled that price undercutting must be established on
the basis of a comparison of the prices of comparable goods. As a result, there
may well be domestic product models or grades for which no price undercutting
is established. The Panel considered that this fact should not preclude a
finding of "significant" price undercutting. The Panel noted, however,
that this fact may become relevant in the consideration of causation of injury,
pursuant to Article 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[406]
5.177. On appeal, the European Union
notes that there "were no relevant imports of Grade A", and that
most of the domestic sales were of Grade A.[407]
Yet, MOFCOM found that price undercutting by imported Grades B and C had a
significant effect on the domestic product, without conducting any
cross-grade analysis. In the European Union's view, the Panel
accepted this conclusion solely on the basis of its erroneous finding that Articles 3.1
and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement do not require any consideration of the
effect of the price of the dumped product on the price of the domestic product.[408]
5.178. China counters that the Panel
correctly noted that MOFCOM did not make a finding of price undercutting with
respect to the domestic like product as a whole, and that, instead, it found
undercutting only for Grades B and C.[409]
In addition, China submits that the European Union's argument is
predicated on the contention that an investigating authority is always to consider price undercutting for
the domestic like product as a whole, and that the Panel properly rejected that
proposition.[410]
5.179. Turning to the facts of the present
dispute, we note that MOFCOM defined the domestic like product as certain
HP-SSST, encompassing three product types or grades referred to by the Panel as
Grades A, B, and C.[411]
The Panel noted that MOFCOM "conducted grade-by-grade price
comparisons" and found "price undercutting in respect of Grades B
and C".[412]
The Panel also noted that "MOFCOM did not make any finding of price
undercutting in respect of Grade A, because this product was only imported
in 2008, in very small quantities."[413]
5.180. We agree with the Panel that an
investigating authority is not required, under Article 3.2 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement, to establish the existence of price undercutting for
each of the product types under investigation, or with respect to the entire
range of goods making up the domestic like product.[414]
That said, an investigating authority is under an obligation to examine objectively
the effect of the dumped imports on domestic prices. As discussed above, with
respect to its consideration of whether there has been a significant price
undercutting, an investigating authority must undertake a dynamic assessment of
price developments and trends in the relationship between the prices of the
dumped imports and those of the domestic like product over the duration of the
POI, taking into account all relevant evidence including, where appropriate,
the relative market share of each product type. Importantly, and as discussed
above, an investigating authority's consideration of price effects under Article 3.2
must provide a meaningful basis for subsequently determining whether the dumped
imports are causing injury to the domestic industry within the meaning of Article 3.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[415]
We therefore disagree with the Panel that MOFCOM was not required to assess the
significance of price undercutting by the dumped imports in relation to
"the proportion of domestic production for which no price undercutting was
found".[416]
5.181. In its investigation, MOFCOM
observed that, during the POI, the dumped imports and domestic sales were
concentrated in different segments of the HP‑SSST market.[417]
On the one hand, the majority of Chinese domestic HP‑SSST production related to
Grade A.[418]
As such, the majority of domestic sales was of Grade A. The market share
held by Grade A dumped imports in 2008 was only 1.45%.[419]
There were no Grade A dumped imports thereafter. On the other hand, during
the POI, the dumped imports of Grades B and C each held a market share of
around 90% of its respective market segment.[420]
We further recall that Japan argued before the Panel, and China did not
dispute, that Grade B is approximately double the price of Grade A,
and Grade C is approximately triple the price of Grade A.[421]
In the case before us, we consider that an objective examination by MOFCOM of
whether there had been a significant price undercutting by the dumped imports as
compared with the prices of the domestic like product (encompassing all three
product types) should have taken into account the relevant market shares of the
respective product types. Likewise, a proper analysis of price effects ought to
have taken into account the fact that there were significant differences in the
prices of these product types. As
discussed above, an investigating authority may not disregard evidence
suggesting that the dumped imports have no, or only a limited, effect on
domestic prices.
5.182. In the light of the above, we reverse
the Panel's finding, in paragraphs 7.143, 7.144, and 8.7.b.i. of
the EU Panel Report; and find instead that MOFCOM's assessment of
whether there had been a significant price undercutting by the dumped imports,
as compared with the prices of the domestic like product, is inconsistent with Articles 3.1
and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.
5.183. Japan and the European Union
claim that the Panel erred in its interpretation and application of Articles 3.1
and 3.4 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement in rejecting their claims that MOFCOM was
required to undertake a segmented analysis of the impact of dumped imports on
the state of the domestic industry, having found no significant increase in the
volume of dumped imports, and having found price effects with respect to Grades B
and C only. In addition, Japan asserts that the Panel erred in finding that
Japan's claim that MOFCOM failed to examine whether dumped imports provided
explanatory force for the state of the domestic industry fell outside the
Panel's terms of reference.
5.184. Before the Panel, the complainants
submitted that MOFCOM's impact analysis was inconsistent with Articles 3.1
and 3.4 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement on several grounds. The Panel addressed
three of the claims pursued by the complainants. The Panel rejected the
complainants' claims that MOFCOM acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1
and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by assessing the impact of dumped imports
on the domestic industry producing all three grades of HP-SSST, even though it
found no significant increase in the volume of dumped imports[422],
and found price effects with respect to Grades B and C only. The Panel
also disagreed with the complainants that MOFCOM acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1
and 3.4 by failing to weigh properly the positive and negative injury factors.
However, the Panel agreed with the complainants that MOFCOM failed to evaluate
the magnitude of the margins of dumping, contrary to Articles 3.1 and 3.4
of the Anti-Dumping Agreement. The latter two findings of the Panel are not the
subject of these appeals.
5.185. We begin by addressing Japan's
claim under Article 6.2 of the DSU. Thereafter, we will review the
complainants' appeal of the Panel's legal findings and conclusions concerning
the interpretation and application of Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement.
5.186. Japan contends that the Panel acted
inconsistently with Article 6.2 of the DSU in finding that Japan's claim
regarding MOFCOM's alleged failure to examine whether dumped imports provided
explanatory force for the state of the domestic industry under Articles 3.1
and 3.4 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement was outside its terms of reference. The
Panel made this finding on the basis that the claim was not sufficiently
identified in Japan's panel request.
5.187. China requests that we uphold the
Panel's finding. In addition, China takes issue with what it views as Japan's
attempt to rely on the arguments concerning the absence of any explanatory
force in support of its claim on appeal that the Panel erred in rejecting the complainants'
claims that MOFCOM was required by Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement to undertake a segmented impact analysis. China submits
that, given that the Panel found Japan's "explanatory force" claim to
be outside its terms of reference, this aspect of Japan's appeal should be
rejected.[423]
5.188. Japan's panel request states, in
relevant part:
Japan considers that the measures at issue are inconsistent with, at
least, China's obligations under the following provisions of the Anti-Dumping
Agreement:
1. Articles 3.1, 3.2, 3.4,
and 3.5 because China's injury determination was not based on positive evidence
and did not involve an objective examination of the volume of the dumped
imports under investigation, the effect of those imports on prices in the
domestic market for like products, and the consequent impact of those imports
on domestic producers of such products. Specifically:
(a) …
(b) China's analysis of the impact
of the dumped imports on the domestic industry: (i) failed to make an objective
examination, based on positive evidence, of the impact of subject imports on
the domestic industry based on the volume of such imports and their effect on
prices; (ii) failed to evaluate the magnitude of the margin of dumping; and
(iii) failed to objectively determine the relative importance and weight to be
attached to relevant economic factors and indices, and improperly disregarded
the majority of those factors and indices indicating that the domestic industry
did not suffer material injury. Accordingly, China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1
and 3.4 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement.[424]
5.189. We recall our discussion in section
5.1.1.2 of these Reports[425]
of the requirements that a complainant must satisfy in its panel request
pursuant to Article 6.2 of the DSU. Based on our reading of the plain
language in Japan's panel request, we understand Japan to have made three
claims under Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement – namely
that, in conducting its impact analysis, China: "(i) failed to make
an objective examination, based on positive evidence, of the impact of subject imports
on the domestic industry based on the volume of such imports and their effect
on prices; (ii) failed to evaluate the magnitude of the margin of dumping; and
(iii) failed to objectively determine the relative importance and weight
to be attached to relevant economic factors and indices, and improperly
disregarded the majority of those factors and indices indicating that the
domestic industry did not suffer material injury."[426]
5.190. Japan contends that its statement
in the panel request, that "China's analysis of the impact of the dumped
imports on the domestic industry … failed to make an objective examination,
based on positive evidence, of the impact of subject imports on the domestic
industry based on the volume of such imports and their effect on prices",
encompassed two separate claims – namely: (a) that MOFCOM failed to examine
"the consequent impact", and thus a logical connection with its
volume and price effects conclusions; and (b) that MOFCOM failed to examine the
"explanatory force" of dumped imports.[427]
5.191. We do not see, in Japan's panel
request, a claim under Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement regarding MOFCOM's alleged failure to examine whether dumped imports
provided "explanatory force" for the state of the domestic industry.[428]
The reference to "explanatory force" is drawn from the Appellate Body's
interpretation of Article 3.4 in its report in China – GOES.
This reference formed part of the Appellate Body's reasoning in
interpreting Article 3.4 in that dispute and should not be read to create
an obligation that is distinct from that expressed in Article 3.4.
Accordingly, we view Japan's submissions, insofar as they refer to
"explanatory force", as setting out arguments, based on the Appellate Body's
reasoning in China – GOES, in support of
Japan's claims under Article 3.4. These claims were properly within the
Panel's terms of reference, and were addressed by the Panel.
5.192. Further, we note that China takes
issue with what it views as Japan's attempt to rely on new arguments concerning
the absence of any explanatory force in support of its claim on appeal that the
Panel erred in rejecting the complainants' claims that MOFCOM was required by Articles 3.1
and 3.4 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement to undertake a segmented impact analysis.
We recall that, before the Panel, Japan argued that MOFCOM improperly
considered the impact of dumped imports on the domestic industry as a whole, in
respect of all three product grades, even though it had only found price
effects in respect of Grades B and C. In its claim under Article 3.4,
Japan argued that MOFCOM's reliance on its flawed and partial price effects
analysis for purposes of its impact examination does not constitute "an
objective examination 'of the explanatory force
of subject imports for the state of the domestic industry' as a whole".[429]
We therefore disagree with China to the extent that it contends that Japan's
arguments concerning "explanatory force" under Article 3.4 are new
arguments.
5.193. In sum, we do not consider that
Japan's arguments regarding "explanatory force" could constitute
grounds for a separate "claim" under Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the
Anti‑Dumping Agreement. Accordingly, there was no basis for the Panel to consider,
as it did, whether such "claim" was properly within the scope of its
terms of reference. Consequently, we declare the Panel's findings, in paragraphs 6.29-6.31
and footnote 274 of the Japan Panel Report, to be moot and of no legal
effect.
5.194. We begin by recalling the relevant
findings of the Panel, before turning to the specific issues raised by the
complainants on appeal.
5.195. Before the Panel, Japan and the European Union
submitted that MOFCOM's impact analysis was at odds with, and did not follow
from, its volume and price effects analyses. The complainants asserted that,
having found no significant increase in volume whatsoever and price effects
with respect to only Grades B and C, to ensure a logical progression of
inquiry, MOFCOM should have analysed the impact of the dumped imports only on
the segment of the domestic industry producing Grades B and C. China
disagreed, arguing that Article 3.4 requires MOFCOM to have assessed the
impact of dumped imports on the domestic industry as a whole.
Moreover, China argued that the two domestic producers making up the domestic
industry are "producers of all three grades of the like product"[430],
such that it is not possible to distinguish any part of the domestic industry
that is producing only Grade A.[431]
5.196. The Panel considered that the
complainants' claims regarding the scope of MOFCOM's impact analysis were
premised on their interpretation of Article 3.2 of the Anti-Dumping
Agreement, and reiterated its finding that, "in finding price undercutting
in respect of Grades B and C, MOFCOM was not required by Article 3.2
to consider the effect of subject Grade B
and C imports on domestic Grade A."[432]
The Panel considered on this basis that MOFCOM's failure to conduct such a
cross-grade price analysis did not preclude a finding that the segment of the
domestic industry producing Grade A products could be impacted by dumped
imports. The Panel further reasoned that the complainants' approach to Article 3.4
was overly "focused on the causal connotations of the term 'impact'"[433],
and overlooked the obligation in Article 3.4 to evaluate the state of the
"domestic industry" as defined by Article 4.1 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.
The Panel recalled that, in the present case, "MOFCOM defined the domestic
industry as comprising two domestic producers accounting for a major proportion
of total domestic production of the domestic product like the subject
imports."[434]
According to the Panel, an evaluation of the state of the domestic industry
envisaged by Article 3.4 must therefore consider the state of those
two producers, with respect to their production of all types of HP-SSST. Thus,
the Panel saw no basis in Article 3.4 "for limiting this evaluation
to the state of those two domestic producers with respect to their production
of only Grades B and C".[435]
5.197. The Panel clarified that it was not
suggesting that the scope of MOFCOM's price effects conclusions was of "no
relevance to the remainder of MOFCOM's injury analysis".[436]
Instead, it noted that "a limited finding of price undercutting will have
obvious implications for an authority's assessment of whether dumped imports
caused material injury to the domestic industry."[437]
However, for the Panel, this was "an assessment to be made pursuant to Article 3.5,
rather than 3.4, of the Anti-Dumping Agreement."[438]
5.198. Based on the foregoing, the Panel
rejected the complainants' claims that China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1
and 3.4 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM was required to, but did
not, undertake a segmented impact analysis and, instead, assessed the impact of
dumped imports on the domestic industry as a whole, even though it found no
significant increase in the volume of dumped imports and found price effects
with respect to HP-SSST of Grades B and C only.[439]
5.199. On appeal, Japan and the European Union
argue that the Panel erred in its interpretation and application of Articles 3.1
and 3.4 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement because the Panel failed properly to take
into account the logical progression of inquiry contemplated under the various
paragraphs of Article 3. In particular, Japan argues that, if an
investigating authority, pursuant to the inquiry under Article 3.2, finds
no increase in the volume of imports, and finds price effects only for certain,
but not all, grades of the product, the investigating authority should conduct
its analysis under Article 3.4 on the premise that those grades for which
no price effects were found were not impacted by the dumped imports. In Japan's
view, failing to do so would violate an investigating authority's obligation to
make an objective examination of the consequent impact of the dumped imports
based on positive evidence.
5.200. The European Union, for its
part, argues that the Panel failed to take into consideration what the European Union
refers to as a "unitary analysis": one which recognizes that it is
"highly problematic" to distinguish between the concept of injury and
the concept of causation, given that only what is caused by the dumped imports
is correctly characterized as "injury" within the meaning of
footnote 9 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[440]
Accordingly, if, in the application of Article 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement, an investigating authority determines that a particular thing is a
non-attribution factor, then, at the same time, anything caused by that
non-attribution factor is not "injury" within the meaning of
footnote 9 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement. The European Union
argues that "[t]his necessarily means that it is not part of the 'impact
of the dumped imports on the domestic industry' within the meaning of Article 3.4."[441]
According to the European Union, in the present case, given that MOFCOM
did not find volume and price effects arising out of imports of Grade A
HP-SSST, Grade A should have been considered as a "non-attribution
factor" within the meaning of Article 3.5, and should therefore not
have formed part of the impact analysis under Article 3.4.[442]
5.201. China requests that we reject the
appeals by the complainants and uphold the Panel's findings. China notes that Article 3.4
contemplates that an investigating authority must derive an understanding of
the impact of dumped imports on the basis of the examination of the state of
the industry. China considers that the obligation to derive an understanding of
the impact of the dumped imports on the domestic industry must be distinguished
from the obligation to determine that the dumped imports are causing injury.
China emphasizes that "the 'requirement to conduct a non-attribution
analysis regarding all factors causing injury to the domestic industry' is laid
down in Article 3.5, rather than in Article 3.4."[443]
Furthermore, China highlights that Article 3.4 requires an investigating
authority to derive an understanding of the impact of dumped imports on the
state of the domestic industry as defined in Article 4.1 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement. This requirement applies irrespective of whether the consideration
under Article 3.2 reveals price undercutting with respect to all domestic
like products, or only with respect to some of such domestic like products.[444]
5.202. Article 3.4 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement provides:
The examination of the impact of the dumped imports on the domestic
industry concerned shall include an evaluation of all relevant economic factors
and indices having a bearing on the state of the industry, including actual and
potential decline in sales, profits, output, market share, productivity, return
on investments, or utilization of capacity; factors affecting domestic prices;
the magnitude of the margin of dumping; actual and potential negative effects
on cash flow, inventories, employment, wages, growth, ability to raise capital
or investments. This list is not exhaustive, nor can one or several of these
factors necessarily give decisive guidance.
5.203. As discussed at paragraph 5.140 above,
the various paragraphs of Article 3 contemplate a "logical
progression" in the investigating authority's inquiry leading to an
ultimate determination of whether dumped imports are causing material injury to
the domestic industry.[445]
As part of this logical progression of inquiry, Article 3.4 requires an
investigating authority to examine "the impact of the dumped imports
on the domestic industry". This examination must include "an evaluation
of all relevant economic factors and indices having a bearing on the state of
the industry". Article 3.4 then lists certain factors that "are
deemed to be relevant in every investigation and which must always be evaluated
by the investigating authorities".[446]
Importantly, the Appellate Body has stressed that the evaluation of the
relevant factors must respect the overarching principles set out in Article 3.1,
requiring investigating authorities to conduct an objective examination based
on positive evidence.[447]
5.204. While the second sentence of Article 3.2
requires an investigating authority to consider the effect of the dumped
imports on prices, the focus of Article 3.4 is
on the state of the domestic industry.[448]
The Appellate Body has clarified that it would be compatible with Article 3.4
for investigating authorities to evaluate factors having a bearing on the state
of the domestic industry on the basis of an evaluation of specific parts,
sectors, or segments within the domestic industry.[449]
Such a sectoral analysis "may be highly pertinent, from an economic
perspective, in assessing the state of an industry as a whole".[450]
As we see it, while there is no exclusive methodology prescribed for an
investigating authority to conduct an examination under Article 3.4, an
investigating authority's examination of the relationship between the dumped
imports and the state of the domestic industry must be one that enables the
investigating authority to derive an understanding about the impact of the
dumped imports on the domestic industry as a whole.
5.205. Article 3.4 does not merely
require an examination of the state of the domestic industry, but contemplates
that "an investigating authority must derive an understanding of the impact of subject imports on the basis of such an
examination".[451]
Consequently, Article 3.4 is concerned with "the relationship between
subject imports and the state of the domestic industry, and this relationship
is analytically akin to the type of link contemplated by the term 'the effect of'
under Article[] 3.2".[452]
In other words, Article 3.4 requires an examination of the
"explanatory force" of subject imports for the state of the domestic
industry.[453]
As noted, the Appellate Body stated in China – GOES that
the inquiries under Article 3.2, and the examination required under Article 3.4,
are necessary in order to answer the ultimate question in Article 3.5 as
to whether dumped imports are causing injury to the domestic industry. The Appellate Body
has clarified that, similar to the consideration under Article 3.2, the
examination under Article 3.4 "contributes to,
rather than duplicates, the overall determination required under Article[] 3.5".[454]
However, whilst an investigating authority is required to examine
the impact of dumped imports on the domestic industry pursuant to Article 3.4,
it is not required to demonstrate
that dumped imports are causing injury to the domestic industry, which is an
analysis specifically mandated by Article 3.5.[455]
5.206. Turning to the specific facts of
this case, we recall that there were no imports of Grade A HP-SSST after
2008, and that MOFCOM did not make a finding of price undercutting in respect
of Grade A.[456]
We also recall that MOFCOM defined the domestic industry as comprising two
domestic producers accounting for a major proportion of total domestic
production of the domestic product comprising Grades A, B, and C.[457]
5.207. As noted, Article 3.4 requires
the evaluation of all relevant economic factors and
indices having a bearing on the state of the industry. These factors include
actual and potential decline in sales, market share, and factors affecting
domestic prices. Article 3.4, read together with Article 3.1,
instructs investigating authorities to evaluate, objectively and on the basis
of positive evidence, the importance and the weight to be attached to all the
relevant factors. In every investigation, this evaluation turns on the
"bearing" that the relevant factors have on the state of the domestic
industry.[458]
5.208. In the present case, MOFCOM found
that dumped imports of Grades B and C each held a market share of around
90% of its respective market segment.[459]
The majority of domestic sales, however, were of Grade A. The market share
held by Grade A dumped imports in 2008 was only 1.45%, and there were no Grade A
imports thereafter.[460]
In the light of these factual findings by MOFCOM, we note the following finding
by the Panel:
We do not mean to suggest that the scope of MOFCOM's price effects
conclusions is of no relevance to the remainder of MOFCOM's injury analysis. As
previously noted, a limited finding of price undercutting will have obvious
implications for an authority's assessment of whether dumped imports caused
material injury to the domestic industry. However, this is an assessment to be
made pursuant to Article 3.5, rather than 3.4, of the Anti-Dumping
Agreement.[461]
5.209. We agree with the Panel that the
results of the inquiries, pursuant to Article 3.2, relating to the volume
of the dumped imports and the effects of the dumped imports on prices are
relevant to the causation analysis required under Article 3.5. However,
unlike the Panel, we consider that the results of these inquiries are also
relevant to the impact analysis required under Article 3.4, given that
this provision requires the evaluation of all relevant
economic factors and indices having a bearing on the state of the industry,
including market share and factors affecting domestic prices. Significantly, as
discussed at paragraph 5.141 above, the disciplines that apply under Article 3,
while distinct, are interlinked and logically progress to answering the
question of whether the dumped imports are causing injury to the domestic
industry. As the Appellate Body stated in EC - Tube or Pipe Fittings, "Article 3.1 and the
succeeding paragraphs of Article 3 clearly indicate that volume and
prices, and the consequent impact on the domestic industry, are closely
interrelated for purposes of the injury determination."[462]
Accordingly, we do not agree with the Panel that, because the results of the
inquiry under Article 3.2 are relevant for an investigating authority's
causation and non‑attribution analyses under Article 3.5, they are not
relevant for the impact analysis under Article 3.4.[463]
5.210. We recall that, in the present
case, the majority of Chinese domestic production consisted of Grade A
HP-SSST[464],
but Chinese producers also produced Grades B and C. We further note that
MOFCOM "defined the domestic industry as comprising two domestic producers
accounting for the major proportion of total domestic production" of
HP-SSST.[465]
We agree with the Panel that it was therefore appropriate for MOFCOM to examine
the impact of the dumped imports on the state of "those two producers,
with respect to their production of all types of HP-SSST".[466]
Contrary to what the European Union appears to suggest, such an approach
would not necessarily mean that the investigating authority's ultimate determination of injury will include injury that is
not attributable to the dumped imports.[467]
Moreover, Article 3.5 expressly requires an investigating authority to
"also examine any known factors other than the dumped imports which at the
same time are injuring the domestic industry, and the injuries caused by these
other factors must not be attributed to the dumped imports."
5.211. Having said this, we note that Article 3.4
does not merely require an examination of the state of the domestic industry,
but contemplates that an investigating authority "must derive an
understanding of the impact of subject imports on
the basis of such an examination."[468]
The evaluation of all relevant economic factors and indices having a bearing on
the state of the industry, including market share and factors affecting
domestic prices, must be such that it provides a "meaningful basis"[469]
for an analysis of whether the dumped imports are, through the effects of
dumping, as set forth in Articles 3.2 and 3.4, causing injury to the
domestic industry. Depending on the particular circumstances of each case, an
investigating authority may therefore be required to take into account, as
appropriate, the relative market shares of product types with respect to which
it has made a finding of price undercutting; and, for example, the duration and
extent of price undercutting, price depression or price suppression, that it
has found to exist.
5.212. In the light of the above, we find
that the Panel erred in its interpretation of Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement to the extent it found that the results of the inquiries
under Article 3.2 are not relevant to the impact analysis under Article 3.4.
We understand the Panel to have relied on its erroneous interpretation of Articles 3.1
and 3.4 in rejecting, in paragraphs 7.170 of the Panel Reports, paragraph 8.2.a.ii
of the Japan Panel Report, and paragraph 8.7.b.ii of the EU Panel Report,
the complainants' claims that China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1
and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM was required to, but did
not, undertake a segmented impact analysis. Accordingly, we reverse
these findings by the Panel. Having found that China acted inconsistently with
its obligations under Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement,
and in the light of the Panel's finding that MOFCOM's analysis of the impact of
dumped imports on the domestic industry is inconsistent with China's
obligations under Articles 3.1 and 3.4 because MOFCOM failed to evaluate
properly the magnitude of the margin of dumping, we do not consider that
additional findings under Articles 3.1 and 3.4 are required to resolve these
disputes.
5.213. Before the Panel, Japan and the European Union
claimed that MOFCOM's causation analysis is inconsistent with Articles 3.1
and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement for several reasons. The Panel found
that MOFCOM's reference to the market shares held by subject imports was
"not sufficient to establish that subject imports, through price
undercutting, had 'a relatively big impact on the price of the like domestic
products', and therefore caused injury to the domestic industry through their
price effects."[470]
In addition, the Panel concluded that, because it had found that certain
aspects of MOFCOM's price effects and impact analyses were inconsistent with Articles 3.2
and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, MOFCOM's subsequent reliance on
those analyses in the context of its causation determination was inconsistent
with Article 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[471]
The Panel also found that China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and
3.5 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM failed properly to ensure that
the injury caused by the decrease in apparent consumption and the increase in
domestic production capacity was not attributed to the dumped imports.[472]
5.214. Each of the participants appeals
different aspects of the Panel's findings. China alleges that the Panel erred
in concluding that Japan's panel request, as it relates to MOFCOM's reliance on
the market share of dumped imports in order to determine causation, provides a
"brief summary of the legal basis of the complaint sufficient to present
the problem clearly", as required by Article 6.2 of the DSU.[473]
China submits that the Panel incorrectly interpreted and applied Article 3.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement in finding that MOFCOM improperly relied on the
market share of dumped imports in determining that such imports, through price
undercutting, caused injury to the domestic industry. China also asserts, in
this regard, that the Panel acted inconsistently with Article 11 of the
DSU by ruling on a claim for which the complainants failed to make a prima facie case.[474]
For their part, Japan and the European Union contend that the Panel acted
inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU in finding that the complainants
had not brought independent claims under Article 3.5 of the Anti-Dumping
Agreement other than those concerning MOFCOM's reliance on the market share of
dumped imports, and MOFCOM's non-attribution analysis. We begin by recalling
the Panel's findings before turning to the specific issues raised in these
appeals.
5.215. The Panel summarized MOFCOM's
causation analysis as follows:
MOFCOM determined that
"the large quantities of imports of the subject products … dumped into
China at low prices" caused material injury to the domestic industry. The
determination was based on the price effects of the subject imports. MOFCOM did
not find that subject imports had any volume effects on the domestic industry,
in light of the fact that the absolute volume of subject imports declined
during the period of investigation. However, MOFCOM did find that the market
share of subject imports as a whole "remained high at
around 50%". MOFCOM also found that the market share held by subject
imports of both Grade B and C was around 90%. MOFCOM considered this
market share relevant in assessing the price undercutting effect of subject
imports. After considering the market share data and pricing information,
MOFCOM found that "the imports of the subject products had a relatively
big impact on the price of domestic like products".[475]
5.216. Based on its review of MOFCOM's
analysis, the Panel found that "MOFCOM [had] failed to account for the
fact that the market share of subject imports had actually dropped from around
90% in 2008 and 2009 to around 50% in 2010 and [the first half of] 2011,
and that domestic market shares increased correspondingly."[476]
The Panel observed that, "[w]hile an investigating authority might
properly determine, given the necessary facts, that high market shares exacerbate
the price effects of dumped imports, an objective and impartial investigating
authority would also consider whether the fact that import market shares are
declining significantly indicates that the price effects are in fact somewhat
attenuated."[477]
5.217. The Panel recalled that the market
share of imported Grade B fluctuated, the market share of imported Grade C
decreased during the POI, and the majority of domestic sales were of Grade A.[478]
The Panel also found that the market share held by Grade A dumped imports
in 2008 was only 1.45%, and that there were no Grade A dumped imports
thereafter.[479]
The Panel noted that, although dumped imports and domestic sales were
concentrated in different segments of the HP-SSST market, "MOFCOM made no
finding of cross‑grade price effects, whereby price undercutting by subject
imports of Grades B and C might be shown to affect the price of domestic
sales of Grade A."[480]
The Panel stated that it:
… would [have] expect[ed]
an objective and impartial investigating authority to have examined and
explained how the 90% market shares of Grade B and C subject imports
enabled those imports, through price effects, to cause injury to the domestic
industry as a whole, notwithstanding the fact that the bulk of domestic
production was of Grade A, the sales and market share of domestic Grade A
increased, the negligible market share of subject imports of Grade A and
the absence of cross-grade price effects, and despite the decline in the
absolute volume of those imports and the declining market share of Grade C
imports and the fluctuating market share of Grade B.[481]
5.218. The Panel added that, in the
absence of any such examination or analysis, it remained "unclear"
how the market shares of imports of Grade B and Grade C HP-SSST were
"relevant in assessing whether subject imports caused injury to a domestic
industry producing primarily Grade A".[482]
5.219. Responding to China's argument that
the existence of cross‑grade price correlation is a "normal feature"
for a single product consisting of high‑end and low‑end grades, the Panel
observed that there was no "meaningful analysis" in MOFCOM's Final
Determination of whether or how this feature manifests itself in the specific
circumstances of this case.[483]
Instead, MOFCOM left open the degree of impact that movements of prices of
imported Grades B and C might have on the price of domestic Grade A,
and made no assessment of whether the effect would be minimal,
or sufficiently pronounced to cause prices for domestic Grade A to
fall by the amounts that they did.[484]
5.220. The Panel also found that MOFCOM
had failed to evaluate record evidence indicating that trends in domestic
prices by grade had no apparent relationship in terms of magnitude or trends in
import prices, noting that
"[a]n objective and impartial investigating authority would not have found
price correlation without at least addressing, and explaining, such contrary
price movements."[485]
The Panel added that, in addition to not making a finding that the prices of
imported Grades B and C had "pushed down" the price of domestic
Grade A, "MOFCOM never considered, and certainly failed to exclude,
the equally logical possibility that Grade B and C subject import prices
declined in response to the decline in domestic Grade A prices in 2009 and
2010, in order to maintain the price differential between the various
grades."[486]
5.221. For these reasons, the Panel
concluded that "MOFCOM's reference to the market shares held by subject
imports was not sufficient to establish that subject imports, through price
undercutting, had 'a relatively big impact on the price of the domestic like
products', and therefore caused injury to the domestic industry through their price
effects."[487]
Having found that MOFCOM's reliance on the market share of dumped imports was
"central" to its ultimate determination that dumped imports, through
their price effects, caused injury to the domestic industry, the Panel
concluded that the flaws in MOFCOM's analysis of the market share of dumped
imports rendered its causation determination inconsistent with Articles 3.1
and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[488]
5.222. We begin by examining China's claim
that the Panel erred in concluding that Japan's panel request, as it relates to
MOFCOM's reliance on the market share of dumped imports in order to determine
causation, provides a "brief summary of the legal basis of the complaint
sufficient to present the problem clearly", as required by Article 6.2
of the DSU. According to China, Japan's panel request, as it relates to
MOFCOM's analysis of causation, was limited to "claims" regarding the
lack of volume effects and flaws in MOFCOM's price effects and
impact analyses, and did not include a claim regarding MOFCOM's reliance on the
market share of dumped imports.[489]
5.223. In response, Japan argues that it
properly raised a claim regarding MOFCOM's reliance on the market share of
dumped imports. Japan further disputes China's contention that its claims under
Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement were limited to a
"volume analysis based claim" and claims based on MOFCOM's price
effects and impact analyses, which are "purely consequential" to the
alleged violations of Articles 3.2 and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement.[490]
5.224. Japan's panel request states, in
relevant part:
Japan considers that the measures at issue are
inconsistent with, at least, China's obligations under the following provisions
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement:
1. Articles 3.1,
3.2, 3.4, and 3.5 because China's injury determination was not based on
positive evidence and did not involve an objective examination of the volume of
the dumped imports under investigation, the effect of those imports on prices
in the domestic market for like products, and the consequent impact of those
imports on domestic producers of such products. Specifically:
…
(c) China's
demonstration of the alleged causal relationship between the imports under
investigation and the alleged injury to the domestic industry was not based on
an objective examination of all relevant evidence before the authorities. In particular, China determined that the
allegedly dumped imports are causing injury despite an absence of a significant
increase in the volume of dumped imports, and based on its flawed price
effects and impact analyses. Accordingly, China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1
and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[491]
5.225. As discussed, the obligations that
apply to an investigating authority's determination of injury are found in Article 3
of the Anti-Dumping Agreement. The first two sentences of Article 3.5 identify
the causal link that must be shown in
reaching an injury determination. These sentences expressly require
investigating authorities to demonstrate that the dumped imports are causing
injury, and stipulate that such "demonstration of a causal relationship
between the dumped imports and the injury to the domestic injury shall be based
on an examination of all relevant evidence
before the authorities".[492] Moreover, the disciplines under Article 3.5
are linked to the fundamental obligations set out in Article 3.1, namely,
that an investigating authority must conduct an "objective
examination" based on "positive evidence".
5.226. In relation to its claims under Article 3.5
of the Anti-Dumping Agreement, Japan stated in its panel request that MOFCOM's
injury determination "did not involve an objective examination of the
volume of the dumped imports under investigation, the effect of those
imports on prices in the domestic market for like products, and the consequent
impact of those imports on domestic producers of such products."[493] Japan submitted, "[i]n
particular", that MOFCOM "determined
that the allegedly dumped imports are causing injury despite an absence of a
significant increase in the volume of dumped imports, and based on its
flawed price effects and impact analyses."[494] With regard to MOFCOM's allegedly "flawed price
effects and impact analyses", we recall that paragraphs 1(a) and 1(b) of
Japan's panel request read as follows:
(a) In its price effects analysis, China failed to conduct
proper analyses with respect to the three different grades of HP-SSST products
under investigation and the HP-SSST products as a whole, and China improperly concluded that the imports
under investigation had an overall significant effect on the prices of like
domestic products. Accordingly, China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1
and 3.2 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement.
(b) China's analysis of the impact of the dumped imports on
the domestic industry: (i) failed to make an objective examination, based
on positive evidence, of the impact of subject imports on the domestic industry
based on the volume of such imports and their effect on prices; (ii) failed to
evaluate the magnitude of the margin of dumping; and (iii) failed to objectively determine the relative
importance and weight to be attached to relevant economic factors and indices,
and improperly disregarded the majority of those factors and indices indicating
that the domestic industry did not suffer material injury. Accordingly, China
acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the Anti-Dumping
Agreement.
5.227. We are of the view that this
language in Japan's panel request, when read together with the reference to Articles 3.1
and 3.5 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement, is sufficiently clear to present, in a
manner consistent with Article 6.2 of the DSU, a problem concerning
MOFCOM's analysis of whether "the dumped imports are, through the effects
of dumping, as set forth in paragraphs 2 and 4, causing injury" to the
domestic industry, as required under Article 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.
We do not see why Japan would have
been obliged to present a separate
"problem" regarding MOFCOM's
"reliance on the market share of subject imports" on separate grounds, distinct from the other issues it raised
with regard to MOFCOM's determination of causation.
5.228. As we understand it, the Panel
characterized the issues raised by the complainants (including Japan), under Article 3.5 of the
Anti‑Dumping Agreement, as a problem relating to whether MOFCOM's
"reliance on the market share of subject imports" constituted a
sufficient basis for MOFCOM's finding of causation under Article 3.5.
In addressing this question, the Panel noted, for example,
that MOFCOM had not explained:
… how the 90%
market shares of Grade B and C subject imports enabled those imports,
through price effects, to cause injury to the domestic industry as a whole,
notwithstanding the fact that the bulk of domestic production was of Grade A,
the sales and market share
of domestic Grade A increased, the negligible market share of subject
imports of Grade A and the absence of cross-grade price effects, and
despite the decline in the absolute volume of those imports and the declining
market share of Grade C imports and the fluctuating market share of Grade B
imports. MOFCOM failed to provide any such explanation. In the absence of any
such examination or analysis, it remains unclear how the market shares of
imports of Grade B and C HP-SSST are relevant in assessing whether subject
imports caused injury to a domestic industry producing primarily Grade A HP-SSST.[495]
5.229. The
Panel's reasoning quoted above makes clear, in our view, that the Panel
referred to the issues raised by the complainants, both in the context of
MOFCOM's price effects and impact analyses, as well as in the context
of causation, as questions going to whether MOFCOM erred in relying
on the "market share" of dumped imports. Rather than referring directly to
factors that MOFCOM did not rely on (or explain) in the context of its causation
analysis, the Panel referred to what MOFCOM, in the Panel's view, did rely on – i.e. the "market share" of dumped
imports. The fact that the Panel described Japan's claim (and the European Union's
claim) in this manner does not mean that it was, therefore, addressing a claim
that was outside the scope of its terms of reference. Nor does it mean that
Japan's panel request does not comply with the standard set out in Article 6.2
of the DSU.
5.230. China asserts that the expression
"in particular", in Japan's panel request, limits the coverage of the
panel request to claims regarding the lack of
volume effects, and flaws in MOFCOM's price effects and impact analyses.[496]
We recall that compliance with the requirements of Article 6.2 of the DSU
must be assessed in the light of the language contained in Japan's panel
request as a whole. The second sentence of
paragraph 1(c) of the panel request starts with the expression
"in particular", and refers to MOFCOM's determination that "the allegedly dumped imports are causing injury despite an absence of a
significant increase in the volume of dumped imports, and based on its
flawed price effects and impact analyses". We understand the expression
"in particular" to indicate that Japan's claims under Articles 3.1
and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement focused on the
manner in which MOFCOM determined that the dumped imports were causing injury, "despite an absence of a
significant increase in the volume of dumped imports, and based on its
flawed price effects and impact analyses".
5.231. China
also argues that the reference in Japan's
panel request to MOFCOM's causation determination being "based on"
MOFCOM's flawed price effects analysis "unambiguously shows that the claim
is purely consequential to the claim of violation of Article 3.2 as
regards the price effects analysis".[497]
In addition, China submits that "the reference to 'flawed' presupposes
a finding that the price effects analysis is found to be violating Article 3.2."[498]
5.232. As noted above, Japan's panel
request refers to MOFCOM's determination that
"the allegedly dumped imports are causing injury despite an absence of a
significant increase in the volume of dumped
imports, and based on its flawed
price effects and impact analyses."[499]
As the Appellate Body has explained, while being "necessary" and
forming the "basis" for the overall causation analysis, the inquiries
under Articles 3.2 and 3.4 do not result in duplicating, but rather
contribute to, the causation analysis under Article 3.5.[500]
While we understand Japan's claims under Article 3.2 to have concerned
MOFCOM's consideration of the relationship between the prices of the dumped
imports and domestic prices, we read the language in
Japan's panel request to indicate that its claims under Article 3.5 were
more broadly concerned with MOFCOM's alleged
failure to demonstrate properly the existence of a "causal
relationship" between the dumped imports and injury to
the domestic industry[501]
on the basis of an examination of "all relevant evidence" before
the investigating authority including: (i)
the volume of the dumped imports and their price
effects listed under Article 3.2; as well as (ii) the results of the
evaluation of all the relevant economic factors and indices having a bearing on
the state of the domestic industry, as required under Article 3.4. Thus,
while Japan may have also brought consequential claims under Article 3.5
flowing from errors under Articles 3.2 and 3.4 of the Anti-Dumping
Agreement, we understand Japan's primary claim under Article 3.5 to have
related to MOFCOM's failure to make an overall determination of causation in the
light of record evidence regarding the volume, price effects, and impact of dumped imports (consisting mainly of Grades B
and C) on the domestic industry (producing mainly Grade A HP-SSST).
5.233. In
the light of the above, we find that the Panel did not act inconsistently with Article 6.2
of the DSU by addressing Japan's claims under Article 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement regarding "MOFCOM's reliance on the market share of subject
imports", in paragraphs 7.180-7.188 of the Japan Panel Report.
5.234. China
argues that, in
making findings regarding "MOFCOM's reliance on the market share of
subject imports", the Panel acted inconsistently with Article 11 of
the DSU by ruling on a claim that had not been articulated by the complainants,
and in relation to which the complainants had raised no arguments. In the
alternative, China argues that the Panel deprived China of its due process rights and
"made the case" for both Japan and the European Union by ruling
on a claim in respect of which the complainants had failed to make a prima facie case.[502]
5.235. Referring to their first and second
written submissions to the Panel and opening statements at the first and second meetings
of the Panel, the complainants submit that they made a prima facie
case regarding MOFCOM's reliance on the market share of dumped imports,
factoring in the same aspects of MOFCOM's price effects and impact analyses
that the Panel considered in its assessment of the matter at
paragraphs 7.181 to 7.188 of the Panel Reports.[503]
The complainants submit that they presented "evidence and
legal argument" to establish that MOFCOM's failure to consider
the market share of dumped imports in the context of all relevant evidence,
including evidence relating to price effects and impact, resulted in a
causation determination that is inconsistent with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[504]
They argue that China appears to divide improperly and artificially their
overarching claim and arguments under Articles 3.1 and 3.5 "into
pieces", when these claims and arguments should instead be considered
"as a whole".[505]
5.236. In US –
Gambling, the Appellate Body
specified that "[a] prima facie
case must be based on 'evidence and legal
argument' put forward by the complaining party in relation to each of the elements of the claim."[506]
The Appellate Body further stated that "[a] complaining party may not
simply submit evidence and expect the panel to divine from it a claim of
WTO-inconsistency. Nor may a complaining party simply allege facts without
relating them to its legal arguments."[507]
Moreover, the evidence and legal argumentation put forward in a prima facie case must be sufficient to identify the
challenged measure and its basic import, to identify the relevant WTO provision
and obligation contained therein, and to explain the basis for the claimed
inconsistency of the measure with that provision.[508]
In Canada – Renewable Energy / Canada – Feed-in Tariff
Program, the Appellate Body explained that, "while a panel
cannot make the case for a complainant, it has the competence 'freely to use
arguments submitted by any of the parties – or to develop its own legal
reasoning – to support its own findings and conclusions on the matter under its
consideration'."[509]
Once a complainant has made out a prima facie
case, a panel is required to develop its own reasoning in order to make an
objective assessment of the matter before it and is required to set out in its
report the basic rationale behind any findings and recommendations that it makes.[510]
Panels and the Appellate Body are not constrained by the parties'
arguments in developing legal reasoning.
5.237. In their first written submissions
to the Panel, the complainants argued that MOFCOM's causation determination
lacks any foundation in its analysis of the volume, price effects, and impact
of dumped imports, and stated that "a finding of causation is dependent upon the outcomes of the investigating
authority's analyses of the previous steps – namely, the volume and price
effects of dumped imports and their impact on the domestic industry producing
like products."[511]
The complainants further referred to alleged flaws in MOFCOM's (i) volume
analysis, (ii) price effects analysis, and (iii) impact analysis to
argue that, "by grounding its causation determination on its volume, price
effects, and impact analyses, which did not support a finding of injury,
[MOFCOM/China] failed to conduct an objective examination, based on positive
evidence, of the existence of a causal link between [the subject imports/HP‑SSST
imports] and [the injury itself/injury], inconsistently with Articles 3.1
and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement."[512]
Both complainants also referred to MOFCOM's determination of causation on the
basis of the "market share" held by dumped imports at the end of the
POI.[513]
5.238. In the light of the above, we
consider that Japan and the European Union put forward sufficient evidence
and legal argument to support their
claims under Article 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement. Accordingly, we find
that the Panel did not act inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU by
ruling on a matter that was not before it, or making the case for the
complainants.
5.239. China alleges that the Panel erred
in its interpretation and application of Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the
Anti‑Dumping Agreement, and acted inconsistently with Article 11 of
the DSU, in concluding that MOFCOM's reliance on the market share of dumped
imports was not sufficient to establish that these imports had "a
relatively big impact on the price of the domestic like products", and
that they caused injury to the domestic industry through their price effects.[514]
5.240. China challenges, in essence, two
aspects of the Panel's assessment. First, China takes issue with the Panel's
review of MOFCOM's analysis of the market share of dumped imports. In this
context, China raises a claim under Article 11 of the DSU as its primary
claim. China then raises a claim regarding the Panel's interpretation and
application of Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement,
alleging that the Panel erred to the extent that it found that "MOFCOM was
required to assess the nature and extent of the injurious effects of the dumped
imports (as distinguished from those of other known factors), in order to find
that the imports of the subject products had an impact on the domestic industry
through their price effects."[515]
5.241. Second, China asserts that the
Panel erred in dismissing MOFCOM's finding of "price correlation" as
a sufficient basis for a demonstration of cross-grade price effects, including,
in particular, the requirement to assess how the market shares of Grade B
and C dumped imports enabled those imports, through price effects, to
cause injury to the domestic industry as a whole, which produces mainly Grade A
products.[516]
As further analysed below, we understand that most of China's arguments raised
in this context relate to the objectivity of the Panel's assessment of the
matter before it, rather than going to the question of whether the Panel
correctly applied the legal standard under Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of
the Anti-Dumping Agreement to the facts of the case.
5.242. In our following analysis, we
begin, therefore, by briefly setting out WTO jurisprudence regarding the
requirements of Article 11 of the DSU. We then analyse the arguments
raised by China in the context of its claim of error under Article 11 of
the DSU. For each issue raised by China, we will also examine separately any
arguments that implicate the Panel's application of the law to the facts.
5.243. In previous disputes, the Appellate Body
has noted that a panel is required to "consider all the evidence presented
to it, assess its credibility, determine its weight, and ensure that its
factual findings have a proper basis in that evidence".[517] Within these parameters, "it is generally within the discretion of
the [p]anel to decide which evidence it chooses to utilize in making
findings."[518]
5.244. A claim that a panel has failed to
conduct an "objective assessment of the matter before it" is "a
very serious allegation".[519] An appellant may not effectively recast its arguments before the panel
under the guise of a claim under Article 11 of the DSU, but must identify
specific errors[520] that are so material that, "taken together or singly"[521], they undermine the objectivity of the panel's assessment of the matter
before it.[522] A challenge under Article 11 of the DSU must "stand by itself
and be substantiated with specific arguments, rather than merely being put
forth as a subsidiary argument or claim in support of a claim of a panel's
failure to construe or apply correctly a particular provision of a covered
agreement."[523]
5.245. With these considerations in mind,
we turn to consider the two specific elements of China's challenge to the
Panel's assessment of MOFCOM's findings on causation.
5.246. With regard to the market share of
dumped imports, the Panel found that:
… although MOFCOM relied
on the fact that the market share of subject imports "remained high at
around 50%", MOFCOM failed to account for the fact that the market share
of subject imports had actually dropped from around 90% in 2008 and 2009 to
around 50% in 2010 and [the first half of] 2011, and that domestic market
shares increased correspondingly. While an investigating authority might
properly determine, given the necessary facts, that high market shares
exacerbate the price effects of dumped imports, an objective and impartial
investigating authority would also consider whether the fact that import market
shares are declining significantly indicates that the price effects are in fact
somewhat attenuated.[524]
5.247. China takes issue with these findings
by the Panel, arguing that the Panel "disregard[ed] the part of MOFCOM's
Final Determination addressing causation and distorts the findings reached by
MOFCOM".[525]
China points to an excerpt of MOFCOM's Final Determination, stating that, in
2008, 2009, and 2010, dumped imports held a market share of 86.20%, 87.03%, and
47.23%, respectively, and that, although the market share of imports
fluctuated, it remained high at around 50% in 2010.[526]
China states that it fails to see how any objective assessment of the quoted
paragraph can lead to a conclusion that MOFCOM relied on a remaining high
market share of 50%, but did not account for the declining market share of
imports.[527]
China also argues that the expression "remained high at around 50%"
in itself shows that MOFCOM took into account the evolution of the market
share, contrary to what the Panel suggested.[528]
5.248. We do not agree with China's
characterization of the Panel's reasoning. Contrary to what China appears to
suggest, the Panel in fact agreed with China that "an investigating
authority might properly determine, given the
necessary facts, that high market shares exacerbate the price effects of dumped
imports."[529] The Panel added, however, that an objective and impartial investigating
authority would "consider whether the fact that import market shares are
declining significantly indicates that the price effects are in fact somewhat
attenuated".[530]
5.249. Other than pointing to the
expression "remained high at around 50%" in MOFCOM's Final
Determination to argue that this "in itself …
shows that MOFCOM took into account the evolution of the market share"[531], China has not pointed to any analysis or explanation in the passage
quoted above or elsewhere in the Final Determination regarding whether or not
such declining market shares of imports indicated that the price effects are in
fact somewhat attenuated. We therefore see no error, nor failure to make an
objective assessment of the matter, in this part of the Panel's analysis.
5.250. We also do not understand the Panel
to have suggested that MOFCOM was required to assess the nature and extent of
dumped imports, as opposed to other known factors, when it noted that MOFCOM
had provided no explanation or analysis of declining market shares of dumped
imports when considering the price effects of such imports. This aspect of the
Panel's analysis related to MOFCOM's assessment of the market share of the
dumped imports, and not to "other known factors" that may also be
injuring the domestic industry, which must be considered in the context of a
non‑attribution analysis.
5.251. China also takes issue with several
aspects of the Panel's assessment of MOFCOM's finding of price correlation,
asserting that this finding was sufficient to demonstrate cross-grade price
effects and, consequently, to satisfy MOFCOM's obligation to assess "how
the 90% market shares of Grade B and C subject imports enabled those
imports, through price effects, to cause injury to the domestic industry as a
whole, notwithstanding the fact that the bulk of domestic production was of Grade A
[and] the negligible market share of subject imports of Grade A and the
absence of cross‑grade price effects".[532]
We address each of China's arguments in turn below.
Whether price correlation can be
assumed for a single product consisting of multiple product grades
5.252. With regard to cross-grade price
effects, China argues that price correlation is a "normal
feature" for a single product consisting of high-end and low-end grades; hence,
China fails to see why an investigating authority would have been required to
do more than MOFCOM did – that is, to state that Grade A products belong
to the same category of products as Grade B and Grade C products and
that "the price changes of the three [grades] are to a certain extent
correlated with one another."[533]
According to China, there was no evidence before MOFCOM to suggest that this
"normal feature" did not manifest itself in relation to HP‑SSST.[534]
Moreover, China submits that the Final Determination included a brief discussion
of the basis on which MOFCOM found price correlation. In any event, China
submits that Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement cannot be
interpreted as requiring MOFCOM to set out the "obvious", that is,
that price correlation follows as a matter of logic from the fact that the high‑end
products (Grades B and C) can substitute for the low-end products (Grade A).[535]
5.253. Japan the European Union
contend that MOFCOM's finding of cross-grade price effects was based solely on
assertions made by the petitioners, without any proper evaluation or analysis
of those assertions. The complainants argue that, if such a finding were
sufficient to justify affirmative causation determinations, it would render
meaningless the requirements for an investigating authority to provide
"reasoned and adequate" explanations of its findings and to conduct
an "unbiased and objective" analysis.[536]
5.254. With respect to China's assertion
that the existence of cross-grade price correlation is a "normal
feature" for a single product consisting of high-end and low-end grades,
the Panel observed that there was "no meaningful analysis in MOFCOM's
Final Determination of whether or how this feature manifests itself in the
specific circumstances of the product at issue".[537]
Instead, after recording the petitioners' argument that price correlation
existed, MOFCOM seemed to have simply accepted that view "without any
consideration of the accuracy thereof".[538]
The Panel added that MOFCOM had asserted that prices of the different grades
were to a "certain extent" correlated with one another, leaving open
the degree of impact that movements of prices of imported Grades B and C
might have on the price of domestic Grade A, and making no assessment of
whether the effect would be minimal, or sufficiently pronounced to cause prices
for domestic Grade A to fall by the amounts that they did.[539]
5.255. We recall that the task of a WTO
panel is to examine whether the investigating authority has adequately
performed its investigative function, and has adequately explained how the
evidence supports its conclusions. It follows from the requirement that the
investigating authority provide a "reasoned and adequate" explanation
for its conclusions that the entire rationale for the investigating authority's
decision must be set out in its report on the determination. This is not to say
that the meaning of a determination cannot be explained or buttressed by
referring to evidence on the record. Yet, in all instances, it is the
explanation provided in the written report of the investigating authorities
(and supporting documents) that is to be assessed in order to determine whether
the determination was sufficiently explained and reasoned.
5.256. In the present case, we disagree
with China to the extent it suggests that MOFCOM could simply
"assume" that price correlation between different grades of HP‑SSST
is a "normal feature" for a single product consisting of high-end and
low-end grades on the basis of assertions made by domestic applicants, and
without any further discussion that would be reflected in its determination of
whether substitutability of lower‑ and higher‑end HP‑SSST actually exists. Nor
do we consider that it was sufficient for MOFCOM merely to state, in its Final
Determination, that the prices of the different grades "were to a certain
extent correlated with one another" without any analysis or explanation,
or supporting evidence, of the degree of impact that movements of prices of
imported Grades B and C might have on the price of domestic Grade A,
and without an assessment of whether the effect would be sufficiently
pronounced to cause prices of domestic Grade A to fall by the amounts that
they did. We fail to see how a mere statement by MOFCOM regarding a
"certain extent" of price correlation between different grades of HP-SSST,
without any further explanation, provides a "meaningful basis"[540]
for an analysis of whether the subject imports are, through the effects of
dumping, as set forth in Articles 3.2 and 3.4, causing injury to the
domestic industry.
5.257. Furthermore, we find no merit in
China's assertion that the Panel should have inferred,
"in line with its duties under Article 11 of the DSU", from
certain references in MOFCOM's Final Determination, that MOFCOM had
"evaluate[d]" the petitioners' argument and had "concluded that
it agreed with the argument".[541]
China argues, in this regard, as follows:
The Panel acknowledges
MOFCOM's reference to the Applicants' argument that "[a] large margin
decrease of the prices of [Grade C] and [Grade B] products, both high‑end
products, will certainly drive down the price of [Grade A] products, so
that a certain price difference among the three can be maintained" before
concluding that "[Grade A] products belong to the same category of
products as [Grade C] and [Grade B] products; that the price changes
of the three are to a certain extent correlated with one another; that while
assessing the impact on the domestic industry by imports of each individual
grade, the Investigation Authority shall also consider the three grades of
products collectively as belonging to the same product category".[542]
5.258. Beyond a reference to the
petitioners' arguments and MOFCOM's statement that the prices of the three
types of HP-SSST "to a certain extent correlated", we are unable to
identify, in the passage referred to by China, any explanation or reasoning
indicating that MOFCOM actually examined the degree of impact that movements of
prices of imported Grades B and C might have on prices of domestic Grade A,
including whether the effect would be sufficiently pronounced to cause prices
for domestic Grade A to fall by the amounts that they did. In assessing
the WTO-consistency of a decision by an investigating authority, it is not for a panel to develop an explanation of the basis for
the investigating authority's conclusions, nor to
"infer" the existence of such a basis as China seems to suggest from
some general economic logic. Rather, it is the task of a panel to examine
whether the investigating authority has adequately
performed its investigative function, and has adequately explained in its
published report (and its related supporting documents) how the evidence
supports its conclusions. We therefore do not agree with China to the extent it
suggests that the Panel should have sought to find a basis, in MOFCOM's Final
Determination, for MOFCOM's statement that the prices of the three types of HP‑SSST
are "to a certain extent correlated".
5.259. China also argues that the Panel
acted inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU by characterizing, as ex post rationalization, China's argument that higher‑grade
imports can "obviously" substitute for lower-grade domestic products.[543]
Referring to the oral statements made by the complainants before the Panel,
China argues that even Japan and the European Union seemed to agree that it
is "obvious that the high end products (B and C) can substitute the low‑end
grade (Grade A)". We recall MOFCOM's finding that "the price
changes of the three [grades] are to a certain extent correlated with one
another"[544],
and that there was no discussion, in MOFCOM's Final Determination, of the basis
on which MOFCOM made that finding. We also note the Panel's finding that there
was "no evidence" on the record that there had been "any
consideration" by MOFCOM of whether higher-grade imported products can substitute
for the lower-grade domestic products.[545]
In the absence of any analysis and explanation by MOFCOM regarding
substitutability of the different grades of HP‑SSST, we see no error in the
Panel's finding that China's argument regarding "'obvious' substitutability"
constituted an "ex post
rationalization" provided by China in the Panel proceedings, "rather
than an element of MOFCOM's analysis".[546]
Instead, we are of the view that the Panel properly focused on the language and
reasoning contained in MOFCOM's Final Determination regarding price correlation
between the different grades of dumped products, rather than on explanations
provided by China during the Panel proceedings.
5.260. China further argues that the Panel
dismissed China's reference to substitutability
on the basis that MOFCOM did not analyse the extent of actual substitution.[547]
While acknowledging that the Panel's focus on actual substitution would be
correct if it were analysing the consistency of a finding of causation based on
volume effects, China emphasizes that MOFCOM's causation analysis was based on
price effects.[548]
China submits that, as an investigating authority has discretion as to how it
carries out its causation analysis, there was no need for MOFCOM to carry out
any additional analysis regarding the actual degree of
substitution.[549]
5.261. The complainants submit that,
notwithstanding whether "actual or logical evidence of substitutability or
price correlation" may exist, the Panel correctly found that there was
"[no] consideration by MOFCOM of how this unspecified degree of
substitutability, and resultant price correlation, might enable Grade B
and C subject imports to cause injury
to the domestic industry's Grade A operations."[550]
The complainants also note that, for dumped imports to have an "effect"
on domestic prices, such imports must be "in fact", or
"actually", substitutable for the domestic like products.[551]
5.262. The Appellate Body has
explained that "[a]n examination of the competitive relationship between
products is … required so as to determine whether such products form part of
the same market."[552]
It also noted that a set of products are in the same market when they "are
in actual or potential competition with each other"[553],
that "a market comprises only those products that exercise competitive
constraint on each other", and that products would be in the same market
"when the relevant products are substitutable".[554]
While the Appellate Body made these statements in the context of examining
claims brought under the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (SCM Agreement),
we read them as supporting the proposition that an analysis of
"substitutability" or "price correlation" may well be
required in cases, such as here, involving a dumped product and a like domestic
product consisting of a range of different product types that are distinguished
by considerable price differences. We note, in particular, that, in order to
make a finding of present material injury under Article 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement, the investigating authority must demonstrate that the dumped imports
(consisting of Grades B and C) have the "effect" of causing
material injury to the domestic industry (producing mainly Grade A). We do
not see how such a finding could be made if the relevant imports are not
substitutable for the domestic like products. Moreover, as noted above, we do
not see how MOFCOM, under the specific facts of this case, could provide a
"meaningful basis" for an analysis of whether the dumped imports are causing
injury, without considering the degree of impact that movements of prices of
imported Grades B and C might have on the price of domestic Grade A.
5.263. With regard to substitutability of
different product types, we note the Appellate Body's explanation that
"whether two products compete in the same market is not determined simply
by assessing whether they share particular physical characteristics or have the
same general uses"; and that "it may also be relevant to consider
whether customers demand a range of products or whether they are interested in
only a particular product type."[555]
We consider these findings to be pertinent to the present disputes, where Japan
argued before the Panel, and China did not dispute,
that "Grade B is about double the price of Grade A, and Grade C
is about triple the price of Grade A."[556]
We also note the physical differences in the dumped products, including, for
example, that the higher‑grade products B and C are capable of enduring the
greater pressures and temperatures produced in ultra-supercritical boilers, and
that the lower-grade product A is used in lower pressure and temperature
environments in supercritical boilers.[557]
Given the considerable price and physical differences between the different
product grades at issue, MOFCOM should, at the very least, have assessed the
existence and the extent of substitutability of lower- and higher‑end HP-SSST
in order to show that "alleged substitutability demonstrates price
correlation" between each product type. As noted by the Panel, there was
no "consideration by MOFCOM of how [the] unspecified degree of
substitutability, and the resultant price correlation, might enable Grade B
and C subject imports to cause injury of the domestic industry's Grade A
operations."[558]
5.264. Additionally, China argues that
there was evidence on the record of actual substitution, and asserts that the
Panel acted contrary to Article 11 of the DSU by disregarding this
evidence simply because it was not referred to in the Final Determination.[559]
China points, in particular, to the following statements made by the
investigated Japanese exporters:
Due to significant
differences in their mechanical and chemical properties, steel tubes used in
ultra-supercritical power plant boilers ([Grade B] and [Grade C]) significantly outperform steel tubes used
in supercritical power plant boilers ([Grade A]) in the aspects of steam resistance
oxidation thickness and fly ash corrosion resistance. Consequently,
their usages are different. [Grade B] and [Grade C] products are used
in the superheaters and reheaters of ultra-supercritical power plant boilers (as well as in
the superheaters and reheaters of supercritical power plant boilers), while [Grade A]
products can only be used in the superheaters and reheaters of supercritical power
plant boilers.[560]
5.265. China also notes that it referred
the Panel to SMI's Injury Questionnaire Response[561],
where SMI states that "the boiler manufacturers in China primarily
use … steel products
other than [Grades B and C] to produce the super-heater and re‑heater of
the supercritical power plant boiler".[562]
The passages to which China refers do not establish that MOFCOM actually
explained and analysed whether imported Grades B and C are
substitutable for domestic Grade A HP-SSST, and the extent of such
substitutability. It was not for the Panel to provide such an explanation, nor
to "infer" the existence of one, contrary to what China seems to
suggest.
5.266. Furthermore, China submits that the
Panel erred in suggesting that MOFCOM was required to assess the extent of the effect of the dumped imports in order to find
a causal link, including whether such effect would be "sufficiently
pronounced to cause prices for domestic Grade A to fall by the amounts
that they did".[563]
Referring to the Appellate Body's findings in US –
Hot-Rolled Steel, China argues that "[a]n investigating
authority's 'explanation of the nature and extent of the injurious effects of
the other factors, as distinguished from the injurious effects of the dumped
imports' should be provided in the non-attribution analysis, not in the first
part of the causation determination."[564]
5.267. We note that China raised a similar
argument regarding MOFCOM's treatment of declining import volumes, which we
have addressed at paragraphs 5.248-5.249 above. With respect to China's
argument as it relates to price correlation,
we do not understand the Panel to have suggested that MOFCOM was required to
assess the nature and extent of dumped imports, as opposed to other known
factors, when it noted that MOFCOM had provided no assessment of the degree of
impact that movements in the prices of imported Grades B and C might have
on the price of domestic Grade A, including whether it would be
"minimal, or sufficiently pronounced to cause prices for domestic Grade A
to fall by the amounts they did".[565]
Contrary price movements
5.268. The Panel found that "MOFCOM
failed to account for record evidence that trends in domestic prices by grade
had no apparent relationship in terms of magnitude or direction with trends in
import prices."[566]
The Panel stated that this was particularly apparent in respect of domestic Grade C,
"the price of which increased by 112.80% from 2009-2010, without any
corresponding movement in prices for subject imports of Grades B and C,
which actually fell over that period."[567]
The Panel also noted that the price of domestic Grade A "increased by
9.35% from 2010 to [the first half of] 2011, whereas the price of imported Grade B
fell by 10.63% during that period".[568]
The Panel expressed concern, noting that "[a]n objective and impartial
investigating authority would not have found price correlation without at least
addressing, and explaining, such contrary price movements."[569]
5.269. China takes issue with the Panel's
finding, arguing that the Panel erred in its interpretation and application of Articles 3.1
and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement and acted contrary to Article 11
of the DSU "by finding that MOFCOM should have addressed contrary price
movement to be able to find price correlation that it could rely on to assess
the impact of imports of Grades B and C on the price of domestic Grade A
sales".[570]
5.270. In particular, China asserts that
the Panel erred "in law" in finding that the contrary price movements
"precluded" MOFCOM from finding price correlation.[571]
China further asserts that the fact that price movements may not be in line
does not detract from the conclusion that they were influenced by one another.[572]
Furthermore, China contends that the Panel ignored the nature of MOFCOM's
finding of price correlation, which related to the effect of the prices of Grades B
and C on the prices of domestic Grade A and was expressly linked to
MOFCOM's assessment of the impact on the domestic industry by imports of each
individual grade.[573]
5.271. We have examined China's arguments
regarding the Panel's assessment of MOFCOM's finding of price correlation
above. There, we disagreed with China to the extent it suggests that MOFCOM
could simply assume price correlation between different grades of HP‑SSST on
the basis of assertions made by domestic applicants, and without any further
discussion by MOFCOM that would be reflected in its Final Determination of
whether such substitutability of lower- and higher‑end HP‑SSST actually exists.
Moreover, contrary to what China suggests, the Panel did not find that MOFCOM
was precluded from finding price correlation given the contrary price
movements. Instead, the Panel found that "MOFCOM failed to account for
record evidence that trends in domestic prices by grade had no apparent
relationship in terms of magnitude or direction with trends in import
prices."[574]
We therefore do not agree with China to the extent it argues that the Panel
erred in its examination of this aspect of MOFCOM's analysis. Rather, as we see
it, the contrary price movements that MOFCOM had determined to exist between
import and domestic prices of HP-SSST would have called for some explanation as
to why MOFCOM nonetheless considered that the prices of the three types of
HP-SSST "to a certain extent correlated".
The possibility that Grade B
and Grade C dumped imports declined in response to the decline in domestic
Grade A prices
5.272. The Panel found that, in addition
to not making a finding that the prices of imported Grades B and C
had pushed down the prices of domestic Grade A, MOFCOM "never
considered, and certainly failed to exclude, the equally logical possibility"
that the opposite might be true, namely that "Grade B and C subject
import prices declined in response to the decline in domestic Grade A
prices in 2009 and 2010, in order to maintain the price differential between
the various grades."[575]
5.273. According to China, this reasoning
by the Panel distorts MOFCOM's finding and disregards the wording of MOFCOM's
Final Determination, contrary to Article 11 of the DSU. While
acknowledging that MOFCOM's reasoning might be brief, China argues that this
does not imply that MOFCOM did not "explore this issue meaningfully".[576] Taking into account that:
(i) MOFCOM found price correlation on the basis of the applicants'
arguments; (ii) "as a matter of logic", the low-end Grade A
cannot substitute Grades B and C; and (iii) MOFCOM found price correlation
in the sense that imported Grades B and C could have an impact on the
price of domestic Grade A, China submits that it fails to see how an
objective assessment of the facts could lead to a conclusion that MOFCOM did
not find that the price correlation concerned the impact of the prices of
imported Grades B and C on domestic Grade A prices.[577]
5.274. We
agree with China that, "as a matter of logic", it would appear that
lower‑grade domestic products
cannot substitute for higher-grade imported products, while the opposite could
be true. Moreover, we note that, having found price undercutting for Grades B
and C, MOFCOM examined the impact of dumped imports on China's domestic
industry, which produces mainly Grade A. Contrary to what China seems to
suggest, this does not mean, however, that MOFCOM "meaningfully" evaluated and
explained whether, as argued by the petitioners, the prices of imported Grades B
and C had pushed down the prices of domestic Grade A. We understand the
Panel to have merely observed that, by not evaluating this issue, MOFCOM failed
to exclude the possibility that imported Grade B and C
prices declined in response to declines in domestic Grade A prices in 2009 and 2010.[578]
We see no error in this statement by the Panel, and do not
consider that the Panel distorted MOFCOM's findings in making this statement.
5.275. China argues that, "to the
extent that the Appellate Body considers that the Panel found that MOFCOM
did not examine the fact that the sales and market share of Grade A
increased as set out above, the Panel acted contrary to Article 11 of the
DSU."[579]
In the alternative, China submits that, "to the extent that the Appellate Body
considers that the Panel found that MOFCOM was obliged to examine the fact that
the sales and market share of Grade A increased in more detail than MOFCOM
did, the Panel erred in its interpretation and application of Articles 3.1
and 3.5."[580]
In addition, with respect to MOFCOM's assessment of "the decline in the
absolute volume of those imports and the declining market share of Grade C
imports and the fluctuating market share of Grade B imports", China
argues that the Panel erred to the extent
that it considered that MOFCOM did not take these factors into account.[581]
5.276. Contrary to what China seems to
suggest, the Panel did not find that MOFCOM "failed to take into
account", or failed to examine "in sufficient detail", the
increase in sales and market share of domestic Grade A, the negligible
market share of dumped imports of Grade A, the decline in the absolute volume
of those imports, the declining market share of Grade C imports, and the
fluctuating market share of Grade B imports. Instead, the Panel considered
that, in the absence of any examination or analysis provided by MOFCOM in its
Final Determination, it remained "unclear how the market shares of imports
of Grade B and C HP-SSST are relevant in assessing whether subject imports
caused injury to a domestic industry producing primarily Grade A HP‑SSST."[582]
We see no error in the Panel's finding in this regard.
5.277. For all these reasons, we uphold
the Panel's findings, in paragraphs 7.188 and 7.205 of the Panel Reports, paragraph 8.1.a.iii
of the Japan Panel Report, and paragraph 8.6.d.iii of the EU Panel
Report, that China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM improperly relied on the market share of
dumped imports, and its flawed price effects and impact analyses, in
determining a causal link between dumped imports and material injury to the
domestic industry, and made no finding of cross-grade price effects whereby
price undercutting by Grade B and C imports might be shown to affect the
price of domestic Grade A HP‑SSST.
5.278. Before the Panel, Japan and the European Union
argued that MOFCOM failed properly to ensure that injury caused by two known
"other factors" – namely: (i) the decline in apparent
consumption; and (ii) the increase in domestic production capacity – was not
attributed to the dumped imports. The complainants submitted that MOFCOM
conducted its non‑attribution analysis regarding these two factors with respect
to all grades of HP-SSST taken together, without considering any possibility
that these other factors may have influenced different segments of the market
differently, despite record evidence before MOFCOM demonstrating that imported
and domestic HP-SSST were concentrated in different segments of the market, and
despite the absence of any cross‑grade price effects of dumped imports of Grades B
and C on the prices of domestic Grade A. The complainants also contended
that MOFCOM's non-attribution analysis would necessarily be flawed if its
initial determination of the causal link between dumped imports and material
injury to the domestic industry itself were flawed.
5.279. The Panel observed that MOFCOM
sought to comply with the non‑attribution requirement contained in Article 3.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by considering whether certain other factors
broke the causal link between dumped imports and material injury to the
domestic industry it had found, stating that such methodology provides an
appropriate basis for ensuring non-attribution.[583]
Referring to previous jurisprudence by the Appellate Body, the Panel
observed that, "before it becomes relevant or necessary for an
investigating authority to separate and distinguish the injury caused by other
factors from the injury caused by subject imports, the investigating authority
must first properly establish that the dumped imports have caused material
injury, and the 'nature and extent' of the injury caused by subject imports and
the injury caused by the other factor(s)."[584]
Recalling its prior conclusion that MOFCOM had failed properly to establish the
causal link between dumped imports and material injury to the domestic
industry, the Panel held that "MOFCOM could not have meaningfully assessed
whether or not injury caused by other factors was sufficient to break that
wrongly-determined causal link."[585]
The Panel therefore considered that it was not necessary to address every
aspect of the parties' non‑attribution arguments in detail.[586]
5.280. In the light of the above, the
Panel concluded that MOFCOM's examination of the injury caused by the decrease
in apparent consumption and the increase in domestic production capacity was
"flawed and not objective".[587]
Consequently, the Panel held that MOFCOM's non-attribution analysis of these
factors was insufficient, and that its determination was thus inconsistent with
Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[588]
5.281. China argues on appeal that the
Panel's findings relating to MOFCOM's non-attribution analysis relied entirely
on MOFCOM's alleged failure to determine properly the causal link between
dumped imports and material injury to the domestic industry.[589]
Referring to its contention that the Panel's findings in relation to MOFCOM's
determination of the causal link (including those made in respect of MOFCOM's
finding of price correlation) should be reversed, China contends that the
Panel's finding that MOFCOM's non-attribution analysis is inconsistent with Articles 3.1
and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement should, as a consequence, also be
reversed.[590]
5.282. Japan and the European Union
disagree with China that the Panel's non-attribution findings in paragraphs 7.200-7.204
of the Panel Reports are "entirely based" on the Panel's findings
regarding MOFCOM's determination of causation.[591]
Referring to paragraphs 7.202‑7.203 of the Panel Reports, the complainants
submit that the Panel independently addressed certain additional aspects of their
non-attribution arguments, and that China presented no argument as to why these
additional reasons do not support the Panel's conclusion that MOFCOM's
non-attribution analysis is inconsistent with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[592]
On this basis, the complainants contend that, even if the Appellate Body
were to reverse the Panel's causation findings based on China's arguments
in these appeals, it would have no basis to reverse the Panel's finding that MOFCOM's
non‑attribution analysis is inconsistent with Articles 3.1 and 3.5, due to
the additional reasons provided by the Panel at paragraphs 7.202-7.203 of the
Panel Reports.[593]
5.283. Article 3.5 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement provides that an investigating authority must, in
its analysis, "examine any known factors other than the dumped imports
which at the same time are injuring the domestic industry" and must ensure
that "the injuries caused by these other factors [are not] attributed to
the dumped imports."[594]
Article 3.5 therefore requires
an assessment that involves "separating and distinguishing
the injurious effects of the other factors from the injurious effects of the
dumped imports".[595]
Further, if the injurious effects of the dumped imports are not appropriately
separated and distinguished from the injurious effects of the other factors, "the
authorities will be unable to conclude that the injury they ascribe to dumped
imports is actually caused by those imports, rather than by the other factors"
and they "would have no rational basis to conclude that the dumped imports
are indeed causing the injury".[596]
5.284. We have upheld the Panel's findings
that China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM improperly relied on the market share of
dumped imports, and its flawed price effects and impact analyses, in
determining a causal link between dumped imports and material injury to the
domestic industry. As we understand it, China's claims on appeal concerning the
Panel's non-attribution analysis are purely consequential in the sense that
they rely on China's arguments made in the context of challenging the Panel's
finding regarding MOFCOM's causation determination. We have rejected those
arguments above, and therefore we also reject China's appeal insofar as it
relates to the Panel's findings regarding MOFCOM's non-attribution analysis.
5.285. In any event, we do not agree with
China that the Panel's findings concerning MOFCOM's non‑attribution analysis
relied entirely on MOFCOM's alleged failure to determine properly the causal
link between dumped imports and material injury to the domestic industry.
Instead, the Panel also found that "MOFCOM's analyses of the injurious
effects of both the decline in apparent consumption and the increase in
domestic production capacity failed to address the fact that subject imports
were comprised almost exclusively of Grades B and C, while the domestic
industry's operations were focused on Grade A" and that "[t]hose
analyses also failed to account for the fact that MOFCOM had not established
that subject imports of Grades B and C had injurious price effects on
domestic Grade A."[597]
5.286. In the light of the foregoing, we uphold
the Panel's findings, in paragraphs 7.204 and 7.205 of the Panel
Reports, paragraph 8.1.a.iv of the Japan Panel Report, and paragraph 8.6.d.iv
of the EU Panel Report, that China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1
and 3.5 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM failed to ensure that the
injury caused by the decrease in apparent consumption and the increase in
domestic production capacity was not attributed to the dumped imports.
5.287. We now turn to the question of
whether Japan and the European Union advanced independent claims under Article 3.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, concerning MOFCOM's reliance on its Article 3.2
price effects and Article 3.4 impact analyses, or whether such claims
were merely consequential, as found by the Panel. Having set out the
Panel's findings and the parties' arguments before the Panel, we provide a
summary of the claims and arguments on appeal, followed by an analysis of the
complainants' claims on appeal.
5.288. The Panel summarized what it
referred to as the complainants "consequential claims" under Article 3.5
of the Anti-Dumping Agreement as follows:
The complainants have
made consequential Article 3.5 claims based on alleged inconsistencies in
MOFCOM's Article 3.2 price effects and Article 3.4 impact analyses.
The complainants recall their claims that MOFCOM's price effects and impact
analyses are respectively inconsistent with Articles 3.2 and 3.4 of
the Anti-Dumping Agreement. They submit that, as a consequence, MOFCOM's
reliance on those price effects and impact analyses to determine causation is
inconsistent with Article 3.5 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement.[598]
5.289. Having recalled its prior findings
that certain aspects of MOFCOM's price effects analysis are inconsistent with Article 3.2,
and that one aspect of its impact analysis is inconsistent with Article 3.4
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, the Panel found that MOFCOM's subsequent
reliance on the WTO-inconsistent aspects of its price effects and impact
analyses in determining that dumped imports caused material injury to the
domestic industry undermined MOFCOM's causation analysis, and rendered MOFCOM's
causation determination inconsistent with Article 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement.[599]
5.290. The Panel emphasized, however, that
it "had not upheld all aspects" of the complainants' claims under Articles 3.2
and 3.4, and that those aspects of the complainants' claims under Articles 3.2
and 3.4 that it had rejected "[could not] form the basis for any
consequential Article 3.5 claims".[600]
While the Panel was of the view that many of the issues raised by the
complainants in the context of their Article 3.2 and Article 3.4
claims could have formed "the basis for
independent claims" under Article 3.5, it considered that the
complainants had neither identified any relevant independent Article 3.5
claims in their written submissions, nor identified arguments explaining how
alleged flaws in MOFCOM's price effects and impact analyses resulted in
independent violations of Article 3.5 as distinct from violations of Article 3.2
or 3.4.[601]
Accordingly, the Panel found that the complainants "ha[d] not advanced any
independent Article 3.5 claims, other than those concerning MOFCOM's
reliance on market shares, and MOFCOM's non‑attribution analysis, concerning
MOFCOM's price effects and impact analyses."[602]
5.291. On appeal, Japan and the European Union
take issue with the Panel's findings in paragraph 7.192 of the Panel
Reports, submitting that the Panel failed to make an objective assessment of
the matter before it, as required by Article 11 of the DSU, by failing to
examine the complainants' claims of independent violations of Articles 3.1
and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement arising from MOFCOM's price effects
and impact analyses.[603]
The complainants further request us to complete the legal analysis and evaluate
on the basis of the Panel's factual findings and undisputed facts on the record
whether independent violations of Articles 3.1 and 3.5 arise in those
instances where the complainants' claims under Articles 3.2 and 3.4
were rejected by the Panel or the Appellate Body.[604]
More specifically, Japan requests us to find that China violated Articles 3.1
and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because: (i) MOFCOM improperly found
that imports of Grade C had explanatory force for price undercutting
effects on domestic Grade C; (ii) MOFCOM improperly extended its findings
of price undercutting in respect of Grades B and C to the domestic like
product as a whole; (iii) MOFCOM improperly found the domestic industry as a whole
to be impacted by dumped imports despite finding no price effects with respect
to Grade A; and (iv) MOFCOM failed to examine whether dumped imports
had explanatory force for the state of the domestic industry.[605]
5.292. In response, China submits that the
Panel correctly concluded that the complainants did not raise independent
claims under Article 3.5 (other than those concerning MOFCOM's reliance on
market shares and MOFCOM's non-attribution analysis). China further argues that
the Panel did not fail to make an objective assessment of the matter before it,
as required by Article 11 of the DSU, and requests us to reject the
complainants' appeals.[606]
5.293. In order to
determine whether the Panel erred in finding that "the complainants have
not advanced any independent
claims under Article 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, other than those concerning MOFCOM's reliance
on market shares, and MOFCOM's non-attribution analysis, concerning MOFCOM's
price effects and impact analyses", we begin by reviewing the language found in the
complainants' panel requests.[607]
5.294. As noted above, after claiming the
inconsistency of China's price effects and impact analyses under, respectively,
Articles 3.1 and 3.2 and Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement, Japan stated in paragraph 1(c) of its panel request that:
China's demonstration of
the alleged causal relationship between the imports under investigation and the
alleged injury to the domestic industry was not based on an objective
examination of all relevant evidence before the authorities. In particular,
China determined that the allegedly dumped imports are causing injury despite
an absence of a significant increase in the volume of dumped imports, and based
on its flawed price effects and impact analyses. Accordingly, China acted
inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.
5.295. In paragraph 5 of its panel
request, after claiming the inconsistency of China's price effects and impact
analyses under, respectively, Articles 3.1 and 3.2 and Articles 3.1
and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, the European Union specified its
relevant claims under Articles 3.1 and 3.5 as follows:
Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because China
failed to conduct an objective examination, based on positive evidence, of the
causal relationship between the imports under investigation and the alleged
injury to the domestic industry. China determined that the allegedly dumped
imports are causing injury despite an absence of a significant increase in the
volume of dumped imports, based on improper price effects analyses and based on
flawed impact analyses, including improper evaluation of or failure to consider
relevant economic factors and indices having a bearing on the state of the
domestic industry.
5.296. In the light of this language in
the complainants' panel requests, we understand the complainants to have sought
to challenge MOFCOM's causation analysis on several grounds, including on the basis of alleged flaws in MOFCOM's price
effects and impact analyses. While the complainants raised many of the same
arguments in support of their claims under Article 3.5 as they did in
support of their claims under Articles 3.2 and 3.4 of the Anti-Dumping
Agreement[608],
we see no error in the Panel's finding that the complainants had not claimed,
before the Panel, that MOFCOM's price effects and impact analyses, taken alone,
resulted in independent violations of Article 3.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement. We therefore uphold the Panel's finding,
in paragraph 7.192 of the Panel Reports, that the complainants had not
advanced independent Article 3.5 claims – other than those concerning
MOFCOM's reliance on market shares and MOFCOM's non‑attribution analysis – concerning
MOFCOM's price effects and impact analyses.
5.297. Having said that, we understand the
key contention underlying the
complainants' overall claims under Article 3.5 to relate to MOFCOM's
failure to conduct a cross-grade price
analysis. In particular, we understand the complainants to have
claimed that MOFCOM did not address or explain how the volume and price effects
of imports of Grade B and Grade C HP-SSST were relevant in assessing
whether such imports (of Grades B and C) caused material injury to the domestic
industry producing primarily Grade A HP-SSST. The complainants raised the
same overall concern in the context of their claims under Articles 3.2 and
3.4 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement, arguing, inter alia,
that: (i) MOFCOM improperly extended its findings of price undercutting in
respect of Grades B and C to the domestic like product as a whole; (ii) MOFCOM
improperly found the domestic industry as a whole to be impacted by dumped
imports despite its finding that there was no price undercutting with respect
to Grade A; and (iii) MOFCOM failed properly to examine whether the
dumped imports (consisting primarily of Grades B and C) had explanatory
force for the state of the domestic industry (producing primarily Grade A
HP‑SSST).[609]
While the Panel did not find that the concerns expressed by the complainants
were the subject of "independent claims" under Article 3.5, the
Panel observed in the context of its Article 3.5 analysis, inter alia, that "MOFCOM made no finding of cross‑grade
price effects, whereby price undercutting by subject imports of Grades B
and C might be shown to affect the price of domestic sales of Grade A"[610],
and found that the flaws in MOFCOM's analysis of the market share of dumped
imports rendered its causation determination inconsistent with Articles 3.1
and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[611]
We have agreed with the Panel's reasoning in this regard.
5.298. In sum, we find that the
Panel did not act inconsistently with Article 6.2 of the DSU by addressing
Japan's claims under Article 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement regarding
"MOFCOM's reliance on the market share of subject imports", in
paragraphs 7.180-7.188 of the Japan Panel Report. We also find that the Panel did not
act inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU by ruling on a matter that
was not before it, or making the case for the complainants. We uphold
the Panel's findings, in paragraphs 7.188 and 7.205 of the Panel Reports, paragraph 8.1.a.iii
of the Japan Panel Report, and paragraph 8.6.d.iii of the EU Panel Report,
that China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM improperly relied on the market share of
the dumped imports, and its flawed price effects and impact analyses, in
determining a causal link between dumped imports and material injury to the
domestic industry, and made no finding of cross-grade price effects whereby
price undercutting by Grade B and C imports might be shown to affect the
price of domestic Grade A HP‑SSST. We also uphold the Panel's
findings, in paragraphs 7.204 and 7.205 of the Panel Reports, paragraph
8.1.a.iv of the Japan Panel Report, and paragraph 8.6.d.iv of the EU Panel
Report, that China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because MOFCOM failed properly to ensure that the
injury caused by the decrease in apparent consumption and the increase in
domestic production capacity was not attributed to the dumped imports. Finally,
we find that the Panel did not act inconsistently with Article 11
of the DSU in concluding, in paragraph 7.192 of the Panel Reports, that the
complainants had not advanced independent Article 3.5 claims – other than
those concerning MOFCOM's reliance on market shares and MOFCOM's
non-attribution analysis – concerning MOFCOM's price effects and impact
analyses.
5.299. We now turn to address the European Union's
claim that the Panel erred in its interpretation and application of Articles 17.7
and 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement and Article 18.2 of the DSU, when
ruling on certain preliminary issues raised by the European Union
regarding the additional working procedures adopted by the Panel to protect
business confidential information (BCI).[612]
We start by setting out the relevant findings by the Panel and the context in
which the Panel made these findings.
5.300. Following consultations with the
parties, on 27 September 2013, the Panel adopted additional working procedures
concerning BCI (BCI Procedures).[613]
Paragraphs 1 and 2 of the BCI Procedures originally provided:
(1) These procedures apply to any business confidential information
(BCI) that a party wishes to submit to the Panels. For the purposes of these
procedures, BCI is defined as any information that has been designated as such
by the Party submitting the information, that is not available in the public
domain, and the release of which could seriously prejudice an essential
interest of the person or entity that supplied the information to the Party. In this regard, BCI shall include information that was previously
submitted to China's Ministry of Commerce ("MOFCOM") as BCI in the
anti‑dumping investigation at issue in these disputes. However,
these procedures do not apply to information that is available in the public
domain. In addition, these procedures do not apply to any BCI if the person who
provided the information in the course of the aforementioned investigation
agrees in writing to make the information publicly available.
(2) The first time that a
party submits to the Panels BCI as defined above from an entity that submitted
that information in the anti‑dumping investigation at issue in these disputes,
the party shall also provide, with a copy to the other parties, an authorizing
letter from the entity. That letter shall authorize China, the European Union
and Japan to submit in these disputes, in accordance with these procedures, any
confidential information submitted by that entity in the course of the
investigation at issue.[614]
5.301. The European Union objected to
two aspects of the BCI Procedures adopted by the Panel.[615]
First, the European Union took issue with the language in
paragraph 1, quoted above, according to which BCI, in the WTO panel
proceedings, "shall include information that was previously
submitted to … MOFCOM[] as BCI in the anti‑dumping
investigation at issue in these disputes."[616]
The European Union argued that the effect of this language was to
delegate, in absolute terms, to non‑WTO entities or persons (i.e. the parties
involved in a domestic anti-dumping investigation) the issue of whether or not
certain information should be granted additional protection in the context of
WTO dispute settlement.[617]
Disagreeing with this proposition, the European Union claimed that it is
for WTO Members to request, or not,
additional protection for information that they submit in the context of WTO
panel proceedings, and for WTO panels to
rule on such requests. The European Union observed, in this regard, that a
WTO Member may indicate to a panel, for example, that certain information that
was previously treated as confidential by an investigating authority is no
longer sensitive, or, conversely, that information submitted by another WTO
Member to a panel should be designated as confidential.[618]
5.302. The European Union also
objected to the language in paragraph 2 of the Panel's BCI Procedures,
whereby a WTO Member providing information to the panel that had been
previously submitted to the authority in the underlying anti‑dumping
investigation as confidential was required to obtain and provide to the panel evidence of prior written authorization from
the entity that had originally submitted that information to the domestic
investigating authority. The European Union argued that such a requirement
would mean that a particular firm, or submitting entity involved in a domestic
anti‑dumping proceeding, could "simply withhold the authorization and
effectively limit the information that may be submitted in WTO dispute
settlement".[619]
The European Union submitted that Article 17.7 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement makes clear that a Member is not required to obtain authorization
before providing confidential information to WTO panels.[620]
5.303. China responded that the aspects of
the Panel's BCI Procedures challenged by the European Union added to,
rather than detracted from, the protection provided by the DSU, and that the
additional protection provided by the Panel for information previously
submitted to MOFCOM as BCI was in consonance with the confidentiality
requirements in Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement. China further
submitted that "an authorizing letter is a necessary instrument to ensure
compliance by the investigating authority with its obligations under Article 6.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement"[621],
and that it is not uncommon to require the presentation of such a letter in WTO
dispute settlement proceedings concerning trade remedies.
5.304. The Panel agreed with the European Union
that the original wording of the first paragraph of the BCI Procedures
suggested that BCI designation is determined by the entity submitting the
information to MOFCOM. The Panel therefore amended paragraph 1 of the BCI Procedures to read,
in relevant part, that "BCI shall include information that was previously treated by … MOFCOM … as BCI in the anti‑dumping
investigation at issue in these disputes."[622]
However, insofar as the European Union had argued that the designation of
BCI should not depend on the investigating authority's determination to treat
information as confidential in the underlying anti-dumping proceedings, the
Panel considered that the procedures it had adopted did not detract from the ability
of WTO Members to designate information as confidential under Article 18.2
of the DSU. The Panel considered that, even though the designation of
confidential information in anti‑dumping proceedings under Article 6.5 of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement is distinct from the designation of BCI for purposes
of DSU proceedings, as contemplated in Article 18.2 of the DSU, these
designations are "closely related".[623]
According to the Panel, this relationship finds support in the text of Article 17.7
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement[624],
which, as a special or additional rule and procedure in Appendix 2 to the
DSU, prevails over the DSU to the extent that there is a difference between
these two sets of provisions.[625]
The Panel further stated that it understood the term "confidential
information" in Article 17.7 to refer to "the confidential
information previously examined by the investigating authority and treated as
confidential pursuant to Article 6.5" and subsequently provided to a
dispute settlement panel pursuant to Article 17.7.[626]
The Panel considered, therefore, that "Article 17.7 envisages that
confidential information on the investigating authority's record – obtained
from a 'person, body or authority' – may be provided to a panel, and imposes on
the panel a non-disclosure obligation similar to that imposed on the authority
by the last sentence of Article 6.5."[627]
Based on this reasoning, the Panel declined to modify further paragraph 1 of
the BCI Procedures in the manner proposed by the European Union.
5.305. With regard to paragraph 2 of the original
BCI Procedures, the Panel found that the provision of
confidential information to the Panel did not amount to its disclosure to the public, and rejected, on this basis,
China's argument that WTO Members must provide an authorizing letter from the
entity that submitted the confidential information in the underlying anti‑dumping
proceedings before they can "provide" such information to a WTO panel
in the context of a dispute under the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[628]
The Panel therefore accepted the European Union's request to delete
paragraph 2 of the BCI procedures, which set out a requirement for
parties to provide an authorizing letter from the entity that submitted
confidential information in the underlying proceedings, when submitting such
information to the Panel. The Panel communicated the amended BCI Procedures to
the parties on 22 May 2014.[629]
5.306. Although the Panel agreed to make
certain amendments to its original BCI Procedures, on appeal, the European Union
submits that the Panel nonetheless erred in its interpretation and
application of Articles 6.5 and 17.7 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.[630]
The European Union considers, in particular, that the Panel delegated,
"in absolute terms", to MOFCOM the power to decide what information will
be granted additional protection in the context of WTO dispute settlement
proceedings "without any possibility of review by the Panel".[631]
In doing so, the Panel effectively found that designation of information as
confidential by an investigating authority in the context of municipal
anti-dumping proceedings pursuant to Article 6.5 is determinative
of designation pursuant to Article 17.7 in the context of WTO panel
proceedings.[632] The European Union submits, in
this regard, that the principles articulated by the panel and the Appellate Body
in EC and certain member States –
Large Civil Aircraft, according to which the question of designation
is to be settled by the WTO adjudicator, are grounded in the provisions of the
DSU and "do not vary according to the particular covered agreement that is
under consideration".[633]
The European Union also maintains that, contrary to the Panel's suggestion
that there may be a difference between Article 17.7 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement and Article 18.2 of the DSU such that the special or additional
rule in Article 17.7 prevails, the phrase "person, body or
authority" in Article 17.7 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement and the term
"Member" in Article 18.2 of the DSU do not mean that there is a
difference or conflict between these provisions. For the European Union,
"[t]hese terms are simply consistent with the fact that, pursuant to Article 13.1
of the DSU, a panel has the authority to seek information or technical advice
from any individual or body which it deems appropriate."[634]
The European Union further contends that the Panel acted inconsistently
with Article 11 of the DSU insofar as it foreclosed, through the adoption
of the BCI Procedures, "the possibility for the Panel to make an objective
assessment of a relevant matter, within the meaning of that provision."[635]
5.307. The European Union also
objects to the Panel's analysis of the requirement set out in paragraph 2 of
the Panel's original BCI Procedures regarding the requirement that a WTO Member
provide an authorizing letter from the entity that submitted confidential
information in the underlying anti‑dumping proceedings when submitting such
information to the panel.[636]
Even though the Panel deleted this requirement from its original BCI
Procedures, the European Union submits that the Panel's reasoning
effectively implies that, in order for a WTO Member to designate information
previously found to be confidential within the meaning of Article 6.5 as non‑confidential, within the meaning of Article 17.7, a
prior written authorizing letter would be necessary.[637]
5.308. China responds that the term
"confidential information" under Article 17.7 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement "refers to information submitted as confidential pursuant to Article 6.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement"[638],
and that, regardless of whether or not "good cause" is shown within
the meaning of Article 6.5, an investigating authority may not disclose
any information provided on a confidential basis by a party to an investigation
without its authorization.[639]
Therefore, in China's view, "as a matter of WTO law" and
"regardless of whether or not this is confirmed in a panel's
BCI Procedures", information submitted as confidential to an
investigating authority should be designated as confidential before the panel
examining the underlying anti‑dumping proceedings, and should not be disclosed
without "specific permission or formal authorization" from the party
that submitted such information in the underlying anti‑dumping proceedings.[640]
5.309. China further submits that the BCI
Procedures did not preclude the possibility to have a review of the question of
designation by a WTO adjudicator on the basis of objective criteria.[641]
China observes that a WTO adjudicator can review whether it is information that is designated as
confidential, rather than arguments, claims, or reasoning, and whether additional protection is warranted for that information.
China, however, does not consider that the question of "designation of information as confidential is subject to
review by a WTO adjudicator"[642],
in particular, given the absence of a reference to a showing of "good
cause" in either Article 17.7 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, or Articles 18.2
and 13.1 of the DSU. China also argues that the balance between competing
interests in the context of designation of information is struck by:
(i) the ability to designate
information as confidential; and (ii) the obligation to provide a non‑confidential
summary of such information.
5.310. As a preliminary matter, we note
China's argument that it may not be necessary for us to examine the issues
raised by the European Union on appeal as such examination would not
contribute to the prompt and satisfactory settlement of this dispute.[643]
Article 17.12 of the DSU stipulates that the Appellate Body shall
address each of the issues of law and legal interpretations raised during the
appellate proceedings. As we see it, the Panel's analysis of the meaning and
scope of Articles 6.5 and 17.7 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement and Article 18.2
of the DSU are clearly issues of law, which, if properly raised on appeal, we
are required to address. We consider the Panel's finding that "the phrase
'confidential information' in Article 17.7 refers to the confidential
information previously examined by the investigating authority and treated as
confidential pursuant to Article 6.5 – and which is now provided to a
dispute settlement panel pursuant to Article 17.7"[644]
– to be a core element of the Panel's interpretation of Articles 6.5
and 17.7 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement. As such, it is a "legal
interpretation developed by the Panel" in the sense of Article 17.6
of the DSU and, therefore, can be subject to appellate review.
5.311. Turning to our analysis of the
issues raised by the European Union on appeal, we recall the general rule
in Article 18.2 of the DSU that provides, inter alia,
that written submissions to the Appellate Body "shall be treated as
confidential". We further note that, under Article 12.1 of the DSU,
WTO panels are required to follow the Working Procedures in Appendix 3 to the
DSU, unless they decide otherwise "after consulting the parties to the
dispute". Panels may decide that additional procedures are appropriate in
a given case and adopt, for example, procedures providing for additional
protection of sensitive business information in order to allow a participant to
present its arguments and evidence without undue risk of disclosure of such
information. In determining the scope and content of such procedures, the panel
must consider the effect they may have on the exercise by the panel of its adjudicative
duties under the DSU and other covered agreements, the parties' rights to due
process, the rights of the third parties, and the rights and systemic interests
of other WTO Members.[645]
Any additional procedures adopted by a panel to protect the confidentiality of
sensitive business information should go no further than necessary to guard
against a determined risk of harm (actual or potential) that could result from
disclosure, and must be consistent with the relevant provisions of the DSU and other
covered agreements (including the Anti‑Dumping Agreement).[646]
The obligation rests upon the panel to adjudicate any disagreement or dispute
that may arise under those procedures regarding the designation or the
treatment of information as business confidential. In addition, where
necessary, a panel must draw appropriate inferences from a party's failure to
provide requested information to the panel.
5.312. Having said that, we note that the
framework for the treatment of confidential information in municipal anti‑dumping
proceedings is set out in Articles 6.5, 6.5.1, and 6.5.2 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement.[647]
In the context of such domestic proceedings, it is for the investigating
authorities to assess objectively whether a submitting
party has adequately substantiated a request to treat certain
information as "confidential" within the meaning of Article 6.5.
If the investigating authority determines that an interested party has made a
proper showing of "good cause", the information at issue "shall
not be disclosed without specific permission of the party submitting it".
Footnote 17 to Article 6.5 further clarifies that "Members are aware
that in the territory of certain Members disclosure pursuant to a
narrowly-drawn protective order may be required."
5.313. A different set of rules regulates
confidential treatment of information provided by a WTO
Member to a panel or the Appellate Body in the context of WTO dispute settlement proceedings. As
noted, Article 18.2 of the DSU specifically provides that "[w]ritten
submissions to the panel or the Appellate Body shall be treated as
confidential, but shall be made available to the parties to the dispute." Parties to a dispute are free to
disclose statements of their own positions to the public, but "shall treat
as confidential information submitted by another Member to the panel or the Appellate Body
which that Member has designated as confidential".[648]
5.314. Article 13.1 of the DSU
further provides that "[a] panel shall have the right to seek information
and technical advice from any individual or body which it deems
appropriate". WTO Members "should respond promptly and fully to any
request by a panel for such information as the panel considers necessary and
appropriate". Confidential information that is provided to a panel under Article 13.1
"shall not be revealed without formal authorization from the individual,
body, or authorities of the Member providing the information". These
provisions apply generally in WTO dispute settlement proceedings.
5.315. In EC and
certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft, the Appellate Body
observed that the confidentiality requirements in Articles 17.10
and 18.2 of the DSU, as well as in paragraph VII:1 of the Rules of
Conduct for the Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement
of Disputes[649],
are set out "at a level of generality that may need to be particularized
in situations in which the nature of the information provided requires more
detailed arrangements to protect adequately the confidentiality of that
information."[650]
Whether a panel would consider that there is a need to adopt, based on the
authority it enjoys under Article 12 of the DSU, special procedures for
the additional protection of BCI, will therefore vary from case to case.
Nevertheless, it is important to distinguish between the general layer of
confidentiality that applies in WTO dispute settlement proceedings, as foreseen
in Articles 18.2 and 13.1 of the DSU, and the additional layer of
protection of sensitive business information that a panel may choose to adopt,
usually at the request of a party. In the context of WTO disputes brought under
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, Article 17.7 of that Agreement stipulates that
"[c]onfidential information provided to the panel shall not be disclosed
without formal authorization from the person, body or authority providing such
information."[651]
Thus, while Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement regulates the issue
of designation of information in domestic anti‑dumping duty proceedings, Article 17.7
deals with the issue of confidentiality in an anti-dumping proceeding before a
WTO panel.
5.316. As we see it, in its reasoning, the
Panel conflated: (i) the confidentiality obligations under the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement setting the framework for confidential treatment of information that
is applicable in the context of domestic
anti-dumping proceedings; and (ii) the confidentiality obligations applicable
in WTO dispute settlement proceedings. In
addition, the Panel also conflated: (i) confidentiality requirements
generally applicable in WTO proceedings or in anti‑dumping proceedings as
foreseen in the above-mentioned provisions of the DSU and the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement; and (ii) the additional layer of protection of sensitive
business information provided under special procedures adopted by a panel for the
purposes of a particular dispute.[652]
Contrary to what the Panel appears to have suggested, whether information
treated as confidential pursuant to Article 6.5 of the Anti-Dumping
Agreement, and submitted by a party to a WTO panel under the confidentiality
requirements generally applicable in WTO dispute settlement, should receive
additional confidential treatment as BCI is to be determined in each case by the
WTO panel.
5.317. For these reasons, we declare
moot and of no legal effect the Panel's findings and legal reasoning
developed in paragraphs 7.21‑7.25 and 7.27-7.29 of the EU Panel
Report. We do not consider it necessary to make further findings on this matter
in order to resolve the present dispute.
6.1. In the appeal of the Panel Report, China – Measures Imposing Anti‑Dumping Duties on High‑Performance
Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes ("HP‑SSST") from Japan,
WT/DS454/R and Add.1 (Japan Panel Report), for the reasons set out in this
Report:
a. with respect to the Panel's
findings under Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, the Appellate Body:
i.
finds that the Panel did not err in its
interpretation and application of Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement;
ii. finds that the Panel did not act inconsistently
with Article 11 of the DSU and Article 17.6(i) of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement;
and, consequently,
iii. upholds the Panel's findings, in paragraphs 7.290,
7.297-7.303, and 8.1.b. of the Japan Panel Report, that China acted
inconsistently with Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because
MOFCOM permitted the full text of the reports contained in appendix V and
appendix VIII to the petition, appendix 59 to the petitioners'
supplemental evidence of 1 March 2012, and the appendix to the
petitioners' supplemental evidence of 29 March 2012 to remain
confidential without objectively assessing the petitioners' showing of "good
cause";
b. with respect to the Panel's
findings under Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, the Appellate Body:
i.
finds that the Panel erred in its interpretation of
Article 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement in finding that, in its
consideration of whether there has been a significant price undercutting, an
investigating authority may simply consider whether dumped imports sell at
lower prices than comparable domestic products;
ii. reverses the Panel's findings, in paragraphs 7.130,
7.144, and 8.2.a.i of the Japan Panel Report, rejecting Japan's claim that
MOFCOM acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
by failing to consider whether Grade C dumped imports had any price
undercutting effect on domestic Grade C products, in the sense of placing downward pressure on those domestic prices by
being sold at lower prices; and
iii. completes the legal analysis and finds that MOFCOM's
assessment of whether there had been a significant price undercutting by Grade C
imports, as compared with the price of domestic Grade C, is inconsistent
with Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement;
c. with respect to the Panel's
findings under Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, the Appellate Body:
i.
finds that Japan's argument, that MOFCOM failed to
examine whether dumped imports provided explanatory force for the state of the
domestic industry, did not constitute a separate claim under Articles 3.1
and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement; and consequently declares moot and of
no legal effect the Panel's findings in paragraphs 6.29-6.31 and
footnote 274 of the Japan Panel Report; and
ii. finds that the Panel erred in its interpretation of
Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement to the extent it found
that the results of the inquiries under Article 3.2 are not relevant to
the impact analysis under Article 3.4; and consequently reverses
the Panel's findings in paragraphs 7.170 and 8.2.a.ii of the Japan Panel Report;
d. with respect to the Panel's
findings under Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement,
the Appellate Body:
i.
finds that the Panel did not act inconsistently
with Article 6.2 of the DSU by addressing Japan's claims under Article 3.5
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement regarding "MOFCOM's reliance on the
market share of subject imports", in paragraphs 7.180-7.188 of the
Japan Panel Report;
ii. finds that the Panel did not act inconsistently
with Article 11 of the DSU by ruling on a matter that was not before it,
or making the case for Japan;
iii. upholds the Panel's findings, in paragraphs 7.188,
7.205, and 8.1.a.iii of the Japan Panel Report, that China acted inconsistently
with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because
MOFCOM improperly relied on the market share of dumped imports, and its flawed
price effects and impact analyses, in determining a causal link between dumped
imports and material injury to the domestic industry, and made no finding of
cross-grade price effects whereby price undercutting by Grade B and C
imports might be shown to affect the prices of domestic Grade A HP‑SSST;
iv. upholds the Panel's finding, in paragraphs 7.204,
7.205, and 8.1.a.iv of the Japan Panel Report, that China acted inconsistently
with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because
MOFCOM failed to ensure that the injury caused by the decrease in apparent
consumption and the increase in domestic production capacity was not attributed
to the dumped imports; and
v. finds that the Panel did not act inconsistently
with Article 11 of the DSU, in concluding, in paragraph 7.192 of the
Japan Panel Report, that Japan had not advanced independent Article 3.5
claims – other than those regarding MOFCOM's reliance on market shares and
MOFCOM's non-attribution analysis – concerning MOFCOM's price effects and
impact analyses.
6.2. The Appellate Body recommends
that the DSB request China to bring its measures found in this Report, and in
the Japan Panel Report as modified by this Report, to be inconsistent
with the Anti‑Dumping Agreement and the GATT 1994, into conformity
with its obligations under those Agreements.
Signed in the original in Geneva this 25th day
of September 2015 by:
_________________________
Peter
Van den Bossche
Presiding
Member
_________________________ _________________________
Thomas Graham Ricardo
Ramírez-Hernández
Member Member
6 FINDINGS AND
CONCLUSIONS IN THE APPELLATE BODY
REPORT WT/DS460/AB/R
6.1. In the
appeal of the Panel
Report, China – Measures Imposing Anti‑Dumping Duties on
High‑Performance Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes ("HP‑SSST") from the European Union,
WT/DS460/R and Add.1 (EU Panel Report), for the reasons set out in this
Report:
a. with respect to the Panel's findings
under Articles 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, the Appellate Body:
i.
upholds the Panel's findings, in paragraphs 7.49
and 7.51 of the EU Panel Report, that the European Union's panel
request complies with the requirement in Article 6.2 of the DSU to provide
a brief summary of the legal basis of the complaint sufficient to present the
problem clearly in respect of the European Union's claims under Articles 2.2.1
and 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement; and that these claims were thus
within the Panel's terms of reference;
ii. finds that the Panel did not err in its
interpretation and application of Article 2.2.2 of the Anti-Dumping
Agreement;
iii. finds that the Panel did not act inconsistently
with Articles 11 and 12.7 of the DSU and Article 17.6(i) of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement;
and consequently
iv. upholds the Panel's finding, in paragraphs 7.66
and 8.6.a. of the EU Panel Report, that China acted inconsistently
with Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement by failing to determine
an SG&A amount for SMST on the basis of actual data pertaining to
production and sales in the ordinary course of trade of the like product;
b.
with respect to the Panel's findings under Article 6.7 and
paragraph 7 of Annex I to the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, the Appellate Body
upholds the Panel's finding, in paragraphs 7.101 and 8.6.c. of
the EU Panel Report, that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.7 and paragraph 7
of Annex I by rejecting SMST's request for rectification only on the basis
that it was not provided prior to verification;
c. with respect to the Panel's
findings under Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, the Appellate Body:
i.
finds that the Panel did not err in its
interpretation and application of Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement;
ii. finds that the Panel did not act inconsistently
with Article 11 of the DSU and Article 17.6(i) of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement;
and consequently
iii. upholds the Panel's finding, in paragraphs 7.290,
7.297-7.303, and 8.6.e. of the EU Panel Report, that China acted
inconsistently with Article 6.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because
MOFCOM permitted the full text of the reports contained in appendix V and appendix
VIII to the petition, appendix 59 to the petitioners' supplemental
evidence of 1 March 2012, and the appendix to the petitioners'
supplemental evidence of 29 March 2012 to remain confidential without
objectively assessing the petitioners' showing of "good cause";
d. with respect to the Panel's
findings under Article 6.9 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, the Appellate Body:
i.
finds that the Panel erred in its interpretation
and application of Article 6.9 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement; and
consequently reverses the Panel's findings, in paragraphs 7.235, 7.236,
and 8.7.d.i. of the EU Panel Report, rejecting the European Union's
claim that China acted inconsistently with Article 6.9 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement because MOFCOM failed to disclose adequately the essential facts in
connection with the data underlying MOFCOM's determination of dumping
concerning SMST and Tubacex; and
ii. completes the legal analysis and finds that China acted
inconsistently with Article 6.9 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement because
MOFCOM failed to disclose adequately the essential facts in connection with the
data underlying MOFCOM's determination of dumping concerning SMST and Tubacex;
e. with respect to the Panel's
findings under Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, and in
connection with MOFCOM's price effects analysis, the Appellate Body:
i.
finds that the Panel erred in its interpretation of
Article 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement in finding that, in its
consideration of whether there has been a significant price undercutting, an
investigating authority may simply consider whether dumped imports sell at
lower prices than comparable domestic products;
ii. reverses the Panel's findings, in
paragraphs 7.130, 7.144, and 8.7.b.i. of the EU Panel Report,
rejecting the European Union's claim that MOFCOM acted inconsistently with
Articles 3.1 and 3.2 by failing to consider whether Grade C dumped
imports had any price undercutting effect on domestic Grade C products, in
the sense of placing downward pressure on those domestic prices by being sold
at lower prices;
iii. completes the legal analysis and finds that MOFCOM's
assessment of whether there had been a significant price undercutting by Grade C
imports, as compared with the price of domestic Grade C, is inconsistent
with Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement; and
iv. reverses the Panel's findings, in
paragraphs 7.143, 7.144, and 8.7.b.i. of the EU Panel Report; and finds
instead that MOFCOM's assessment of whether there had been a significant price
undercutting by the dumped imports, as compared with the prices of the domestic
like product, is inconsistent with Articles 3.1 and 3.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement;
f. with respect to the Panel's
findings under Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement,
and in connection with MOFCOM's impact analysis, the Appellate Body finds
that the Panel erred in its interpretation of Articles 3.1 and 3.4 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement to the extent it found that the results of the inquiries
under Article 3.2 are not relevant to the impact analysis under Article 3.4;
and consequently reverses the Panel's findings in paragraphs 7.170 and
8.7.b.ii of the EU Panel Report;
g. with respect to the Panel's finding
that China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement,
the Appellate Body:
i.
finds that the Panel did not act inconsistently
with Article 11 of the DSU by ruling on a matter that was not before it,
or, making the case for the European Union;
ii. upholds the Panel's findings, in
paragraphs 7.188, 7.205, and 8.6.d.iii of the EU Panel Report, that
China acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
because MOFCOM improperly relied on the market share of dumped imports, and its
flawed price effects and impact analyses, in determining a causal link between
dumped imports and material injury to the domestic industry, and made no
finding of cross‑grade price effects whereby price undercutting by Grade B
and C imports might be shown to affect the price of domestic Grade A HP‑SSST;
iii. upholds the Panel's finding, in
paragraphs 7.204, 7.205, and 8.6.d.iv of the EU Panel Report, that China
acted inconsistently with Articles 3.1 and 3.5 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
because MOFCOM failed to ensure that the injury caused by the decrease in
apparent consumption and the increase in domestic production capacity was not
attributed to the dumped imports; and
iv.
finds that the Panel did not act inconsistently
with Article 11 of the DSU, in concluding, in paragraph 7.192 of the
EU Panel Report, that the European Union had not advanced independent Article 3.5
claims – other than those concerning MOFCOM's reliance on market shares and
MOFCOM's non-attribution analysis – concerning MOFCOM's price effects and
impact analyses; and
h. with respect to the Panel's
designation of business confidential information (BCI) and its adoption of BCI
Procedures, the Appellate Body declares moot and of no legal effect
the Panel's findings and legal reasoning developed in paragraphs 7.21‑7.25
and 7.27-7.29 of the EU Panel Report, and does not find it necessary to
make further findings on this matter in order to resolve the present dispute.
6.2. The Appellate Body recommends
that the DSB request China to bring its measures found in this Report, and in
the EU Panel Report as modified by this Report, to be inconsistent with the
Anti‑Dumping Agreement and the GATT 1994, into conformity with its
obligations under those Agreements.
Signed in the original in Geneva this 25th day
of September 2015 by:
_________________________
Peter
Van den Bossche
Presiding
Member
_________________________ _________________________
Thomas Graham Ricardo
Ramírez-Hernández
Member Member
__________
[10] And Addendum thereto,
WT/DS454/R/Add.1, 13 February 2015.
[11] And Corr. 1 and Addendum thereto,
WT/DS460/R/Add.1, 13 February 2015.
[12] The Panel issued its findings in
the form of a single document containing two separate reports. The cover page,
preliminary pages, descriptive part, sections 1-6, 7.1-7.2, and 7.5-7.11,
and the Annexes contained in the Addendum are common to both Panel Reports.
Section 8.1 relates to the Japan Panel Report WT/DS454/R only; and
Sections 7.3-7.4 and 8.2 relate to the EU Panel Report WT/DS460/R
only. We refer to these two reports collectively as the "Panel
Reports".
[13] Request for the Establishment of a
Panel by Japan, WT/DS454/4, 11 April 2013 (Japan's panel request).
[14] Request for the Establishment of a
Panel by the European Union, WT/DS460/4, 16 August 2013
(European Union's panel request).
[15] On 29 July 2013, the
Director‑General composed the Panel to hear Japan's complaint in DS454. On
11 September 2013, the European Union and China agreed to
compose the Panel to hear the European Union's complaint in DS460 with the
same persons hearing Japan's complaint. (Panel Reports, para. 1.5)
[16] For ease of reference, we refer to
the Panels in DS454 and DS460 collectively as the "Panel".
[17] Panel Reports, para. 1.10 and
Annex A-2.
[18] Preliminary Determination Notice,
8 May 2012 (Panel Exhibits JPN-6-CH and JPN-6-EN, and EU-17); and
Preliminary Determination, 8 May 2012 (Panel Exhibits JPN-7-CH and
JPN-7-EN, and EU-18).
[19] Final Determination Notice,
8 November 2012 (Panel Exhibits JPN-1-CH and JPN-1-EN, and EU-29);
and Final Determination, 8 November 2012 (Panel Exhibits JPN-2-CH and
JPN-2-EN, and EU-30).
[20] Panel Reports, paras. 1.1 and
2.1. The period of investigation (POI) for the determination of dumping was
from 1 July 2010 to 30 June 2011, and the POI for the determination of injury
was from 1 January 2008 to 30 June 2011. (MOFCOM's Preliminary Determination
(Panel Exhibits JPN-7-EN and EU-18), internal p. 2)
[21] MOFCOM's Final Determination
(Panel Exhibits JPN-2-EN and EU-30), internal p. 1.
[22] MOFCOM's Final Determination
(Panel Exhibits JPN-2-EN and EU-30), internal pp. 19-20.
[23] See Petition by the PRC Industry
(Panel Exhibits JPN-3-CH and JPN-3-EN, and EU-1), internal pp. 9‑10; and
MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN-2-EN and EU-30) internal pp.
23‑28. Japan argued before the Panel that Grade A is the least expensive
and lowest grade product; Grade B is in the middle, in terms of both price
and grade; and Grade C is the most expensive and highest grade product.
Due to differences in the chemical and mechanical properties of these products,
manufacturers of ultra‑supercritical boilers rely on Grades B and C, while
Grade A is used mainly in supercritical boilers. (Japan's first written
submission to the Panel, para. 15)
[24] Panel Reports,
paras. 3.1-3.6.
[25] On 17 September 2015, a correction to a clerical error in
para. 8.9 of the EU Panel Report was circulated in document
WT/DS454/R/Corr.1, WT/DS460/R/Corr.1.
[26] Japan Panel Report,
para. 8.1.a.
[27] Japan Panel Report,
para. 8.2.a.
[28] Jointly, Jiangsu Wujin
Stainless Steel Pipe Group Co., Ltd. and Changshu Walsin Specialty Steel
Co., Ltd.
[29] Japan Panel Report,
para. 8.1.b.
[30] Japan Panel Report,
para. 8.1.c.
[31] Japan Panel Report,
para. 8.1.d.
[32] Japan Panel Report,
para. 8.2.c.
[33] Japan Panel Report,
para. 8.2.b. The Panel made additional findings of inconsistency under
Articles 7.4, 12.2, and 12.2.2 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement (Japan Panel
Report, paras. 8.1.e, 8.1.f, 8.2.d, and 8.3), and consequential findings
of inconsistency under Article 1 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement and
Article VI of the GATT 1994 (Japan Panel Report, para. 8.1.g). None
of these findings have been appealed.
[34] EU Panel Report, para. 8.9,
as amended in document WT/DS454/R/Corr.1, WT/DS460/R/Corr.1.
[35] EU Panel Report, para. 8.9.
[36] EU Panel Report, para. 8.6.a.
[37] EU Panel Report, para. 8.8.
[38] EU Panel Report, para. 8.6.b.
[39] EU Panel Report, para. 8.6.c.
[40] EU Panel Report, para. 8.6.d.
[41] EU Panel Report, para. 8.7.b.
[42] EU Panel Report, para. 8.7.a.
[43] EU Panel Report, para. 8.7.c.
[44] EU Panel Report, para. 8.6.e.
[45] EU Panel Report, para. 8.6.f.
[46] EU Panel Report, para. 8.6.g.
[47] EU Panel Report, para. 8.7.d.
The Panel made additional findings of inconsistency under Articles 7.4,
12.2, and 12.2.2 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement (EU Panel Report,
paras. 8.6.h, 8.6.i, 8.7.e, and 8.8), and consequential findings of
inconsistency under Article 1 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement and
Article VI of the GATT 1994 (EU Panel Report, para. 8.6.j). None of
these findings have been appealed.
[48] Japan Panel Report,
para. 8.4; EU Panel Report, para. 8.10.
[49] Japan Panel Report,
para. 8.5; EU Panel Report, para. 8.11.
[50] Pursuant to Articles 16.4 and
17 of the DSU.
[51] Pursuant to Rules 20 and 21,
respectively, of the Working Procedures for Appellate Review, WT/AB/WP/6, 16 August 2010 (Working Procedures).
[52] Pursuant to Articles 16.4 and
17 of the DSU.
[53] Pursuant to Rule 23 of the Working Procedures.
[54] Pursuant to Articles 16.4 and
17 of the DSU.
[55] Pursuant to Rules 20 and 21,
respectively, of the Working Procedures.
[56] Pursuant to Articles 16.4 and
17 of the DSU.
[57] Pursuant to Rule 23 of the Working Procedures.
[58] WT/AB/WP/6, 16 August 2010.
[59] In its appellee's submission, the
European Union referred to Article 5 of the DSU that provides that
good offices, conciliation, or mediation may be requested and take place
"at any time". The European Union suggested that a "procedural possibility" that
it could envisage would be to invite informally the participants to
"indicate whether or not they would be prepared to voluntarily participate
in a short informal meeting". For the European Union, the purpose of
the meeting would be to ascertain whether the parties would be
able to reach an agreement concerning the Panel's findings under
Article 2.2.2 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, "or indeed any
other matter pending in this appeal". (European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 215) At the oral hearing, China was given an opportunity
to comment.
[60] Pursuant to Rules 22 and 23(4) of
the Working Procedures.
[61] Pursuant to Rule 24(1) of the
Working Procedures.
[62] Pursuant to Rule 24(2) of the
Working Procedures.
[63] Japan explained that, given the
procedural history of these disputes and current workload of the
Appellate Body, Japan was of the view that the appellate proceedings
should not be further delayed. Japan requested the Appellate Body to provide
the participants and third participants with the reasons for the eventual delay
in the circulation of the Appellate Body Reports in these proceedings,
together with an estimate of the period within which it would circulate its
Reports.
[64] The European Union clarified
that it did not seek from the Appellate Body any further specific
explanations regarding the timetable for the above appeal proceedings. The
European Union stated that it was confident that the Appellate Body
would do what it could to comply with all the provisions of the DSU, including
Article 17.5, taking into account the resource constraints upon it.
[65] Pursuant to the
Appellate Body communication on "Executive Summaries of Written
Submissions in Appellate Proceedings" and "Guidelines in Respect of
Executive Summaries of Written Submissions in Appellate Proceedings".
(WT/AB/23, 11 March 2015)
[66] Pursuant to the
Appellate Body communication on "Executive Summaries of Written
Submissions in Appellate Proceedings" and "Guidelines in Respect of Executive Summaries
of Written Submissions in Appellate Proceedings". (WT/AB/23, 11
March 2015)
[67] We recall that Article 2.1 of
the Anti‑Dumping Agreement identifies a product as "dumped" where the
product is introduced into the commerce of another country at less than its
"normal value". "Normal value" is understood by that
provision to be the "comparable price, in the ordinary course of trade,
for the like product when destined for consumption in the exporting
country."
[68] Article 2.2.1.1 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement stipulates that "costs shall normally be calculated on the basis
of records kept by the exporter or producer under investigation, provided that
such records are in accordance with the generally accepted accounting
principles of the exporting country and reasonably reflect the costs associated
with the production and sale of the product under consideration."
[69] European Union's panel
request, para. 1.
[70] See EU Panel Report,
para. 7.32 (referring to European Union's first written submission to
the Panel, paras. 167, 170, and 172-174).
[71] EU Panel Report, para. 7.39
(referring to China's first written submission to the Panel, paras. 51-53
and 71; second written submission to the Panel, para. 5; and opening
statement at the second Panel meeting, para. 51).
[72] EU Panel Report, para. 7.39
(referring to China's first written submission to the Panel, paras. 54-55;
response to Panel question No. 10, paras. 35 and 38; second written
submission to the Panel, paras. 4, 6-7, 18, and 27; and opening statement
at the second Panel meeting, paras. 51 and 55-56). China argued that
Article 2.2.2 contains multiple obligations. According to China, the
"actual data" requirement in Article 2.2.2 is distinct from the
requirement relating to data pertaining to sales and production in the ordinary
course of trade, which is contained in the same provision. (China's
first written submission to the Panel, para. 67; opening statement at
the first Panel meeting, paras. 19-21; response to Panel question
No. 7, paras. 33-34; second written submission to the Panel,
para. 21; opening statement at the second Panel meeting,
paras. 52‑55; comments on European Union's response to Panel
question No. 81, para. 22)
[73] EU Panel Report, para. 7.39
(referring to China's first written submission to the Panel, paras. 52,
55, and 71; second written submission to the Panel, para. 5; and
opening statement at the second Panel meeting, para. 51).
[74] EU Panel Report, para. 7.39
(referring to China's first written submission to the Panel, paras. 54-55;
second written submission to the Panel, para. 57; and opening statement at
the second Panel meeting, para. 51).
[75] EU Panel Report, para. 7.39.
[76] EU Panel Report, para. 7.39.
[77] EU Panel Report, para. 7.39
(referring to China's first written submission to the Panel, para. 65;
opening statement at the first Panel meeting, para. 19; second written
submission to the Panel, paras. 4-7; and comments on
European Union's response to Panel question No. 81, para. 21).
[78] EU Panel Report, para. 7.47
(quoting Appellate Body Reports, China – Raw Materials,
para. 220; and referring to Appellate Body Reports, Korea – Dairy, para. 124; and EC – Fasteners (China), para. 598).
[79] EU Panel Report, para. 7.47
(quoting Appellate Body Report, US – Carbon Steel,
para. 127).
[80] EU Panel Report, para. 7.47
(referring to the preliminary ruling of the panel in US –
Countervailing and Anti‑Dumping Measures (China) dated 7 May 2013,
para. 3.35, contained in document WT/DS449/4).
[81] EU Panel Report, para. 7.47.
(fn omitted)
[82] EU Panel Report, para. 7.49.
[83] EU Panel Report, para. 7.49.
[84] EU Panel Report, para. 7.51.
[85] EU Panel Report, para. 7.51.
[86] EU Panel Report, para. 7.51.
Taking this view, the Panel considered it unnecessary to address the
European Union's and China's arguments relating to whether
Article 2.2.2 contains multiple obligations. The Panel also rejected
China's argument that the European Union's panel request was
"expressly limited", by the use of the words "in
particular", to the obligation for the SG&A amounts to be based on
actual data. (EU Panel Report, fn 108 to para. 7.51)
[87] In addition, Article 6.2 contains two further requirements, namely,
that the request be made in writing and that it indicate whether consultations
were held. (See Appellate Body Report, Korea – Dairy,
para. 120)
[88] Appellate Body Report, US – Carbon Steel, para. 124.
[89] See Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 562.
[90] Appellate Body Report, US – Carbon Steel, para. 127.
[91] Appellate Body Report, EC and certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft, para. 787
(referring to Appellate Body Reports, EC – Bananas III,
para. 143; and US – Carbon Steel,
para. 127).
[92] Appellate Body Report, EC and certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft,
para. 787.
[93] See Appellate Body Reports, China – Raw Materials, paras. 230-232.
[94] See Appellate Body Report, EC – Selected Customs Matters, para. 130.
[95] See Appellate Body Report, EC – Selected Customs Matters, para. 153.
[96] Appellate Body Report, Korea – Dairy, para. 139.
[97] Appellate Body Report, Korea – Dairy, para. 139.
[98] Appellate Body Report, Korea – Dairy, para. 124 (referring to
Appellate Body Reports, Brazil – Desiccated
Coconut, fn 21 at p. 22, DSR 1997:I, p. 186; EC – Bananas III, paras. 145 and 147; and India – Patents (US), paras. 89 and 92-93).
[99] Appellate Body Reports, China – Raw Materials, para. 220; US –
Countervailing and Anti-Dumping Measures (China), para. 4.8
(both quoting Appellate Body Report, US – Oil Country Tubular
Goods Sunset Reviews, para. 162).
[100] Appellate Body Reports, China – Raw Materials, para. 220 (referring to
Appellate Body Report, Korea – Dairy,
para. 124); US – Countervailing and Anti-Dumping
Measures (China), para. 4.8.
[101] Appellate Body Report, EC and certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft,
paras. 639‑640 (referring to Appellate Body Report, US – Carbon Steel, para. 126, in turn
referring to Appellate Body Report, Brazil
– Desiccated Coconut, p. 22, DSR 1997:I, p. 186). See also
Appellate Body Reports, EC – Chicken
Cuts, para. 155; and US –
Zeroing (Japan) (Article 21.5 – Japan), para. 108.
[102] China's appellant's submission,
para. 51.
[103] China's appellant's submission,
para. 52 (quoting European Union's panel request, para. 1,
first sentence: "This is clear from the first sentence at stake: an
alleged violation of 'Articles 2.2, 2.2.1, 2.2.1.1 and 2.2.2 of the
Anti‑Dumping Agreement because China did not determine the amounts
for administrative, selling and general costs and for profits on the basis of
records and actual data by the exporters or producers under
investigation'"). (emphasis added by China)
[104] China's appellant's submission,
paras. 55-58.
[105] European Union's appellee's
submission, paras. 60-62.
[106] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 65.
[107] EU Panel Report, para. 7.31
(quoting European Union's panel request, para. 1).
[108] See China's appellant's
submission, para. 60.
[109] Appellate Body Report, US – Countervailing and Anti-Dumping Measures (China),
para. 4.17 (referring to Appellate Body Report, US – Carbon
Steel, para. 130, in turn referring to Appellate Body
Report, Korea – Dairy, para. 124).
[110] Such statements may, as they are
here, be introduced by terms such as "because" and "in
particular".
[111] Appellate Body Report, EC – Selected Customs Matters, para. 153.
[112] Fns omitted; emphasis added.
[113] See Appellate Body Report, EC – Selected Customs Matters, para. 153.
[114] See Appellate Body Report, EC – Tube or Pipe Fittings, para. 97.
[115] China's appellant's submission,
paras. 61-62.
[116] China also accepts,
as within the Panel's terms of reference, the European Union's claim under
Article 2.2.1.1 that the data used by MOFCOM to calculate an amount for
SG&A costs did not correspond to the records kept by SMST, given the
reference in the European Union's panel request to the records of the
exporters.
[117] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 52.
[118] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 53.
[119] Appellate Body Report, EC – Tube or Pipe Fittings, para. 97.
[120] China's appellant's submission,
paras. 62-63.
[121] China's appellant's submission,
para. 63 (quoting Appellate Body Report, EC – Bed
Linen, para. 80). (emphasis original)
[122] China's appellant's submission,
para. 66.
[123] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 69. (emphasis original)
[124] China's appellant's submission,
para. 53.
[125] We note that, in EC – Fasteners (China), the Appellate Body found that
China's panel request referred explicitly to four claims under
Articles 6.2 and 6.4 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement relating to: (i) the
composition of the domestic industry; (ii) data concerning normal value
determination; (iii) information on the adjustments for differences affecting
price comparability; and (iv) Eurostat data on which total
EU production and consumption figures were based; and that an additional
claim regarding the "disclosure of the identity of complainants and
supporters" did not fall
"within the scope of any of the four above descriptions".
(Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China),
paras. 596-597)
[126] See China's appellant submission,
para. 67.
[127] China's appellant submission,
para. 80.
[128] EU Panel Report, para. 7.31 (quoting
European Union's panel request, para. 1) (emphasis added)
[129] EU Panel Report, para. 7.53
(quoting European Union's first written submission to the Panel,
para. 160).
[130] EU Panel Report, para. 7.55.
[131] EU Panel Report, para. 7.55
(referring to updated English version of Table 6 annexed to SMST's Dumping
Questionnaire Response (Panel Exhibit CHN-19-EN (BCI))).
[132] EU Panel Report, para. 7.59.
[133] EU Panel Report, para. 7.65.
[134] EU Panel Report, para. 7.65
(referring to SMST's Supplemental Dumping Questionnaire Response (Panel
Exhibits CHN-10-CH and CHN-10-EN (BCI), and EU‑14 (BCI)), internal
p. 4; and SMST's Dumping Questionnaire Response (Panel Exhibit EU-10
(BCI)), internal p. 69).
[135] See EU Panel Report,
para. 7.66 and fn 130 thereto.
[136] EU Panel Report, para. 7.66
(referring to SMST's Dumping Questionnaire Response (Panel
Exhibit CHN-5-EN (BCI)), internal p. 17; MOFCOM's Preliminary Dumping
Disclosure to SMST (Panel Exhibit CHN-12-EN (BCI)), internal pp. 2-3;
MOFCOM's Preliminary Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN‑7-EN and EU-18),
internal p. 27; MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN-2-EN
and EU-30), internal p. 38; European Union's first written
submission to the Panel, para. 168; and China's first written submission
to the Panel, paras. 98, 107, and 116; response to Panel question
No. 22(b)(iii), para. 78; and second written submission to the Panel,
para. 42).
[137] EU Panel Report, para. 7.66.
[138] EU Panel Report, para. 7.66.
[139] EU Panel Report, para. 7.66.
[140] EU Panel Report, para. 7.66.
[141] China's appellant's submission,
para. 94.
[142] China's appellant's submission,
para. 96.
[143] China's appellant's submission,
para. 97.
[144] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 187.
[145] Updated English version of Table 6
annexed to SMST's Dumping Questionnaire Response (Panel Exhibit CHN-19-EN
(BCI)).
[146] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 188.
[147] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 190.
[148] China's appellant's submission,
para. 99.
[149] China's appellant's submission,
para. 99.
[150] EU Panel Report, fn 137 to para. 7.66.
[151] China's appellant's submission,
para. 100.
[152] China's appellant's submission,
para. 101.
[153] China's appellant's submission,
para. 107 (quoting MOFCOM's Preliminary Dumping Disclosure to SMST (Panel
Exhibit CHN‑12‑EN (BCI)), internal p. 2).
[154] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 194. (fn omitted)
[155] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 195. (fn omitted)
[156] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 195.
[157] European Union's appellee's
submission, paras. 196-197 (referring to China's appellant's submission,
para. 108).
[158] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 197.
[159] China's appellant's submission,
para. 101.
[160] EU Panel Report, para. 7.66.
[161] EU Panel Report, para. 7.66.
[162] China's appellant's submission,
para. 109 (quoting EU Panel Report, para. 7.66).
[163] China's
appellant's submission, para. 109.
[164] China's appellant's submission,
para. 109. (emphasis original)
[165] SMST's Dumping Questionnaire
Response (Panel Exhibits CHN-5-EN (BCI) and EU-10 (BCI)), internal p. 17.
[166] MOFCOM's Preliminary Dumping
Disclosure to SMST (Panel Exhibit CHN-12-EN (BCI)), internal p. 2. (emphasis
added)
[167] EU Panel Report, para. 7.66.
(emphasis added)
[168] EU Panel Report, para. 7.66.
(emphasis added)
[169] China's appellant's submission,
para. 111.
[170] China's appellant's submission,
para. 112.
[171] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 203.
[172] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 204.
[173] Appellate Body Report, US – Tyres (China),
para. 123.
[174] China's appellant's submission,
para. 111.
[175] Panel Report, para. 7.66.
[176] China's appellant's
submission, para. 89 (quoting China's second written submission to the
Panel, para. 39 (emphasis original)). See also para. 87. Before the
Panel, China submitted that there is a difference between the Chinese
characters for "cost" and "value", and that SMST only
requested MOFCOM not to use the information in Table 6.3 in the "cost or
constructed cost calculation". According to China, SMST thus never requested MOFCOM to
disregard the SG&A amounts in that table. (China's second written
submission to the Panel, paras. 39-42)
[177] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 163 (referring to SMST's Dumping Questionnaire Response
(Panel Exhibits CHN-5-EN (BCI) and EU-10 (BCI)), internal p. 16). (emphasis
original)
[178] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 163 (referring to China's second written submission to
the Panel, paras. 39-42). (emphasis original)
[179] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 163.
[180] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 163 (referring to Articles 2.3, 2.4, 5.2(ii), and
9.3.3 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement).
[181] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 163. The European Union notes that, whereas in some
instances the Anti-Dumping Agreement refers specifically to COP
(Articles 2.2 and 2.2.1), in other instances it refers particularly and
expressly to SG&A costs (Articles 2.2, 2.2.1, and 2.2.2), or to costs
generally (Articles 2.2.1, 2.2.1.1, fns 5 and 6, and Article 2.4).
[182] EU Panel Report, fn 137 to
para. 7.66 (referring to China's opening statement at the first Panel
meeting, para. 19). See also China's first written submission to the
Panel, para. 65; second written submission to the Panel, para. 6; and
comments on European Union's response to Panel question No. 81, para. 21.
[183] We also note that certain of
China's claims on appeal refer to both Article 11 of the DSU and
Article 17.6(i) of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement. China, however, does not
develop separate arguments concerning the latter in its submissions. We recall,
in this regard, the Appellate Body's finding in US – Hot‑Rolled
Steel that both Article 17.6(i) of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement
and Article 11 of the DSU "require[] panels to 'assess' the facts and
this … clearly necessitates an active review or examination of the pertinent
facts", and that "it is inconceivable that Article 17.6(i)
should require anything other than that panels make an objective
'assessment of the facts of the matter'." (Appellate Body
Report, US – Hot-Rolled Steel, para. 55
(emphasis original)) Accordingly, the two provisions set out a similar standard
of review. We understand that this is not in dispute.
[184] European Union's other
appellant's submission, paras. 70 and 78.
[185] European Union's other
appellant's submission, paras. 70 and 78 (referring to China's Notice of
Appeal, para. 5.a.i‑ii).
[186] EU Panel Report, para. 7.93.
[187] EU Panel Report, para. 7.93
(referring to European Union's first written submission to the Panel,
paras. 98-99 and 109).
[188] EU Panel Report, para. 7.93
and fn 178 thereto.
[189] EU Panel Report, para. 7.95
(referring to China's first written submission to the Panel, paras. 216‑222).
[190] EU Panel Report, para. 7.98
and fn 194 thereto.
[191] EU Panel Report, para. 7.99.
MOFCOM requested that SMST prepare "two complete sets of questionnaire
responses and supplemental questionnaire responses for verification including
all data, information and manuscripts or original copies of the supporting
materials". In particular, MOFCOM requested "working sheets of Tables
6-3, 6-4 and 6-5". (MOFCOM's Verification Notification to SMST (Panel
Exhibit CHN-11-EN), internal pp. 2-3; China's first written submission to
the Panel, para. 202)
[192] EU Panel Report, para. 7.99.
[193] EU Panel Report, para. 7.99.
[194] EU Panel Report, para. 7.99.
(emphasis added) In its Final Determination, MOFCOM stated with regard to
SMST's rectification request:
During verification, SMST Italia raised the point that certain financial
expenses were entered more than once in the questionnaire response, and
requested for adjustments to be made. On the ground that the company did not raise this point before the onsite verification started,
the Investigation Authority decided to deny the above request.
(Panel Exhibits JPN-2-EN and EU-30, internal pp. 38-39 (emphasis added))
[195] EU Panel Report, para. 7.100
(quoting China's first written submission to the Panel, para. 218).
(emphasis added)
[196] EU Panel Report, para. 7.100
(referring to United States' third party written submission to the Panel,
paras. 7 and 12).
[197] EU Panel Report, para. 7.100.
[198] EU Panel Report, para. 7.100.
[199] EU Panel Report, para. 7.100.
The Panel noted that, in the Verification Disclosure to SMST, MOFCOM stated
that SMST "provided the relevant materials supporting that certain
expenses were double counted". (EU Panel Report, fn 201 to
para. 7.100)
[200] EU Panel Report, para. 7.101.
[201] China's appellant's submission,
para. 127.
[202] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 124. (emphasis original)
[203] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 125.
[204] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 127.
[205] Article 6.7 reads, in
relevant part:
In order to verify information provided or to obtain further details,
the authorities may carry out investigations in the territory of other Members
as required, provided they obtain the agreement of the firms concerned and notify
the representatives of the government of the Member in question, and unless
that Member objects to the investigation. The procedures described in Annex I
shall apply to investigations carried out in the territory of other Members.
[206] The third sentence of
Article 6.7 further provides: "Subject to the requirement to protect
confidential information, the authorities shall make the results of any
[investigations carried out under Article 6.7] available, or shall provide
disclosure thereof pursuant to [Article 6.9], to the firms to which they
pertain and may make such results available to the applicants."
[207] We note that Article 6.6
includes the qualification "[e]xcept in circumstances provided for in
paragraph 8". In this regard, we note that it would not be possible for
investigating authorities to "satisfy themselves as to the accuracy of the
information" in circumstances where interested parties refuse access to,
or otherwise do not provide, such information. The Appellate Body
made a similar statement regarding Article 12.5 of the Agreement on
Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (SCM Agreement) in US – Carbon
Steel (India). (See Appellate Body Report, US – Carbon
Steel (India), fn 1077 to para. 4.418)
[208] Alternatively, an investigating
authority may, for example, send additional questionnaires to a respondent, as
contemplated under Article 6.1 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement, and request
written responses to such questionnaires.
[209] See Appellate Body Reports, EC – Tube or Pipe Fittings, para. 138; EC – Bed Linen (Article 21.5 – India), para. 136;
and US – Carbon Steel (India),
para. 4.418.
[210] Including the interests of the
party submitting particular information in having that information taken into
account. (See Article 6.1 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement, which reads, in
relevant part: "All interested parties in an anti-dumping investigation
shall be given … ample opportunity to present in writing all evidence which
they consider relevant in respect of the investigation in question.")
[211] See Appellate Body Report, US – Hot-Rolled Steel, para. 86. See also
Article 6.14 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement, which reads, in relevant part:
"The procedures set out above are not intended to prevent the authorities
of a Member from proceeding expeditiously with regard to initiating an
investigation, reaching preliminary or final determinations … or from applying
provisional or final measures".
[212] The panel in EC – Salmon
(Norway) said that it could not "see how the mere fact that …
cost information was submitted after the on-the-spot investigation means that
it could not be used without 'undue difficulties'." (Panel Report, EC – Salmon (Norway), para. 7.367)
[213] EU Panel Report, para. 7.100
(quoting China's first written submission to the Panel, para. 218).
(emphasis added)
[214] EU Panel Report, para. 7.100.
[215] Panel Report, EC – Salmon
(Norway), para. 7.367.
[216] EU Panel Report, para. 7.99
(referring to MOFCOM's Verification Disclosure to SMST (Panel Exhibit
EU-23-EN), internal p. 3; and SMST's Comments on Final Dumping Disclosure
(Panel Exhibit EU-28-EN (BCI)), p. 2).
[217] EU Panel Report, para. 7.99.
[218] China's response to questioning at
the oral hearing.
[219] EU Panel Report, para. 7.100.
[220] EU Panel Report, para. 7.99.
(emphasis added)
[221] China's response to questioning at
the oral hearing.
[222] European Union's other
appellant's submission, paras. 84 and 107-108.
[223] EU Panel Report, para. 7.102.
[224] Panel Reports, para. 7.303.
[225] Panel Reports, para. 7.285.
The Panel noted that the complainants accepted that the petitioners had
demonstrated "good cause" for treating as confidential the names of
the third parties providing the reports and considered that the petitioners'
concerns could have been addressed by withholding such names. (Ibid., fn 452 to
para. 7.285)
[226] Panel Reports, para. 7.287.
[227] Panel Reports, para. 7.287.
[228] Panel Reports, para. 7.290.
The Panel noted that "the complainants also argue[d] that the petitioners
[had] failed to show 'good cause' for treating as confidential the full text of
the four confidential reports at issue." The Panel decided to start its
review with MOFCOM's assessment of the alleged showing of "good
cause". (Ibid., fn 461 to para. 7.290)
[229] Panel Reports, fn 460 to
para. 7.290.
[230] Panel Reports, para. 7.291
(referring to Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China),
paras. 537‑539).
[231] Panel Reports,
paras. 7.292-7.296.
[232] Panel Reports, para. 7.298. The Panel disagreed with China that
MOFCOM's statement also applied to the two remaining appendices at issue.
(Ibid.)
[233] Panel Reports, para. 7.299
(quoting MOFCOM's Preliminary Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN-7-EN and
EU-18), internal p. 33; and MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits
JPN-2-EN and EU-30), internal p. 46). (emphasis added by the Panel)
[234] Panel Reports, para. 7.299.
[235] Panel Reports, para. 7.299.
(emphasis original)
[236] Panel Reports, para. 7.300.
[237] Panel Reports, para. 7.301
(quoting China's first written submission to the Panel, para. 725).
[238] Panel Reports, para. 7.302
and fn 487 thereto.
[239] Panel Reports, para. 7.302.
[240] Panel Reports, para. 7.303.
[241] China's appellant's submission,
paras. 284-286 and 290.
[242] China's appellant's submission,
paras. 288-289; other appellant's submission, paras. 195‑196
(referring to Panel Report, Mexico – Steel Pipes and
Tubes, paras. 7.380 and 7.382; and Appellate Body
Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 539
and fn 784 thereto).
[243] Japan's appellee's submission,
para. 61; European Union's appellee's submission, para. 268
(referring to Panel Reports, paras. 7.299-7.300 and 7.302).
[244] Japan's and the
European Union's responses to questioning at the oral hearing.
[245] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), paras. 536-537. The
Appellate Body also stated that the "question of whether information
is 'by nature' confidential depends on the content
of the information. Information that is 'provided on a confidential
basis' is not necessarily confidential by reason of its content, but rather,
confidentiality arises from the circumstances in which it is provided to the
authorities. These two categories may, in practice, overlap." (Ibid., para. 536
(emphasis original))
[246] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 537.
[247] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 537.
[248] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 539. (fn omitted)
[249] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 541.
[250] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 542. (fns omitted) The
Appellate Body noted that:
Article 6.5.1 serves to balance the goal of ensuring that the
availability of confidential treatment does not undermine the transparency of
the investigative process[]. In respect of information treated as confidential
under Article 6.5, Article 6.5.1 obliges the investigating authority
to require that a non-confidential summary of the information be furnished, and
to ensure that the summary contains "sufficient detail to permit a
reasonable understanding of the substance of the information submitted in
confidence". The sufficiency of the summary provided will therefore depend
on the confidential information at issue, but it must permit a reasonable
understanding of the substance of the information withheld in order to allow
the other parties to the investigation an opportunity to respond and defend
their interests.
(Ibid. (fns omitted))
[251] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 539.
[252] As the Appellate Body in EC – Fasteners (China) noted, "[t]he confidentiality of
information that is 'by nature' confidential will often be readily apparent.
Article 6.5 provides illustrative examples of information that falls into
the category of 'by nature' confidential, including information that is
sensitive 'because its disclosure would be of significant competitive advantage
to a competitor or because its disclosure would have a significantly adverse
effect upon a person supplying the information or upon a person from whom that
person acquired the information'." (Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 536)
[253] In this respect, we note that the
Appellate Body found that "the examples provided in Article 6.5
in the context of information that is 'by nature' confidential are helpful in
interpreting 'good cause' generally, because they illustrate the type of harm
that might result from the disclosure of sensitive information, and the
protectable interests involved." The Appellate Body emphasized that
"[t]hese examples are only illustrative, however, and … consider[ed] that
a wide range of other reasons could constitute 'good cause' justifying the
treatment of information as confidential under Article 6.5."
(Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China),
para. 538)
[254] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 539.
[255] Panel Reports, fn 482 to
para. 7.299.
[256] Panel Reports, fn 482 to
para. 7.299.
[257] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 539.
[258] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 537.
[259] In its Injury Disclosure and Final
Determination, MOFCOM summarized in a footnote the reasons provided by the
petitioners for confidential treatment of the full text of the two reports as
follows:
According to the reason provided by the petitioners for confidential
treatment, a certain authoritative institute in the domestic stainless steel
tube industry provided information on domestic and international markets for
certain high‑performance stainless steel seamless tubes. To do this, the
institute in question spent a large amount of time and energy on the research,
analysis and selection of relevant data and information, and provided the final
report to the petitioners at a certain price. If the petitioners were to
disclose the full report itself and the name of the said institute, it would on
the one hand create obstacles for this institute to carry out similar research
in the future (for example, a third party may not want to cooperate with the
institute on its future researches) and on the other hand seriously affect the
prospects of the institute to sell reports with same or similar information and
data to other third parties. In addition, it would also cause serious negative
impacts on the daily operations of the institute. Therefore, at the request of
this institute, the petitioners applied for confidential treatment for the full
text of the report.
(Panel Reports, para. 7.296 (quoting MOFCOM's Final Determination
(Panel Exhibits JPN-2-EN and EU‑30), internal p. 46, fn 18; and
MOFCOM's Injury Disclosure (Panel Exhibits JPN-23-EN and EU-24), internal
p. 22, fn 17 (translation amended by Panel Exhibit CHN-16-EN, and
accepted by the complainants in Panel Exhibits JPN‑29 and EU‑32)))
[260] Panel Reports, paras. 7.299-7.300.
[261] Panel Reports, para. 7.302.
[262] China's Notice of Appeal,
para. 5.e.ii; Notice of Other Appeal, para. 5.c.ii; appellant's
submission, para. 294; other appellant's submission, para. 201.
[263] China's appellant's submission,
para. 295; other appellant's submission, para. 202.
[264] China's appellant's submission,
para. 295; other appellant's submission, para. 202 (referring to
Appellate Body Reports, US – Tyres (China),
para. 329; and US – Countervailing Duty
Investigation on DRAMs, paras. 187-188); responses to
questioning at the oral hearing.
[265] Panel Reports, para. 7.299.
[266] China's appellant's submission,
paras. 301-303; other appellant's submission, paras. 208-210.
[267] China's appellant's submission,
para. 301; other appellant's submission, para. 208 (referring to
Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China),
para. 553). (emphasis original)
[268] Japan's appellee's submission,
para. 72; European Union's appellee's submission, para. 278.
[269] Japan's appellee's submission,
para. 74; European Union's appellee's submission, para. 281.
[270] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 542.
[271] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 544.
[272] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 544. (fn omitted)
[273] Panel Reports, para. 7.304.
[274] Panel Reports, para. 7.299
and fn 482 thereto.
[275] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 542.
[276] Panel Reports, para. 7.324.
[277] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), paras. 553-554.
[278] China's appellant's submission,
para. 304; other appellant's submission, para. 211 (referring to
Joint Working Procedures of the Panels of 22 May 2014, as modified, contained
in document WT/DS454/R/Add.1, WT/DS460/R/Add.1, Annex A-1, para. 7).
[279] China's appellant's submission, fn
300 to para. 304; other appellant's submission, fn 210 to para. 211.
[280] China's appellant's submission,
paras. 274-275; other appellant's submission, paras. 180-181.
[281] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 285; Japan's appellee's submission, para. 78.
[282] European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 285; Japan's appellee's submission, para. 78.
[283] China's appellant's submission,
para. 276; other appellant's submission, para. 182.
[284] Japan's panel request, p. 2;
European Union's panel request, p. 2.
[285] Japan's first written submission
to the Panel, para. 271; European Union's first written submission to
the Panel, para. 85.
[286] Japan's first written submission
to the Panel, paras. 272 and 280; European Union's first written
submission to the Panel, para. 88.
[287] European Union's response to
Panel question No. 67, para. 144; Japan's response to Panel question
No. 67, para. 49 (quoting Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 539).
[288] China's appellant's submission,
para. 274; other appellant's submission, para. 180.
[289] Joint Working Procedures of the
Panels of 22 May 2014, as modified, contained in document WT/DS454/R/Add.1,
WT/DS460/R/Add.1, Annex A-1, para. 7.
[290] Appellate Body Report, Thailand – H‑Beams, para. 135 (quoting
Appellate Body Report, Canada – Aircraft,
para. 185).
[291] Appellate Body Reports, Canada – Renewable Energy / Canada – Feed-in Tariff
Program, para. 5.215 (quoting Appellate Body Report, EC – Hormones, para. 156; and referring to
Appellate Body Report, US – Certain EC Products,
para. 123).
[292] In particular, the European Union takes issue with the Panel's
findings in paras. 7.234‑7.236 and 8.7.d.i. of the EU Panel Report.
(European Union's Notice of Other Appeal, para. 10 and fn 14 thereto)
We note that Japan has not appealed the Panel's findings under Article 6.9
of the Anti-Dumping Agreement regarding this aspect of MOFCOM's determination
of dumping margins for Kobe and SMI.
[293] In particular, Japan claimed that
MOFCOM failed to disclose the data used to
determine the existence of dumping and the dumping margins for SMI and Kobe.
(Japan's second written submission to the Panel, para. 89) The
European Union, in turn, argued that MOFCOM failed to disclose the data
forming the basis of the dumping determination for SMST and Tubacex.
(European Union's second written submission to the Panel, para. 53)
[294] EU Panel Report, para. 7.226.
[295] EU Panel Report, para. 7.230.
[296] EU Panel Report, para. 7.230.
[297] EU Panel Report, para. 7.235
(referring to Panel Report, China – X-Ray Equipment,
para. 7.402).
[298] EU Panel Report, para. 7.235
(referring to Panel Report, China – Broiler Products,
para. 7.95).
[299] EU Panel Report, para. 7.235.
[300] EU Panel Report, para. 7.235
(quoting European Union's first written submission to the Panel,
para. 111).
[301] EU Panel Report, para. 7.235.
[302] EU Panel Report, para. 7.236.
[303] EU Panel Report, para. 7.236.
[304] EU Panel Report, para. 7.236.
[305] EU Panel Report, para. 7.236.
[306] Specifically, the
European Union takes issue with paras. 7.234-7.236 and 8.7d.i of the
EU Panel Report. (European Union's Notice of Other Appeal, para. 10
and fn 14 thereto; other appellant's submission, fn 155 to
para. 179)
[307] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 181.
[308] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 187 (quoting Panel Report,
EC – Salmon (Norway), para. 7.805).
[309] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 188.
[310] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 189.
[311] China's appellee's submission,
para. 323.
[312] China's appellee's submission,
para. 333.
[313] China's appellee's submission,
para. 334. (emphasis original)
[314] EU Panel Report, para. 7.238
(referring to Panel Reports, EC – Salmon (Norway),
para. 7.805; and China – Broiler Products,
para. 7.91).
[315] Appellate Body Report, EC – Hormones, para. 132.
[316] This suggests that disclosure of
facts that are essential in the process of reaching a decision must occur in a timely fashion to
give interested parties an opportunity to comment on or challenge the essential
facts that are "under consideration" by the investigating authority
in the process of assessing whether or not to apply anti-dumping measures.
[317] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 240.
[318] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 240. (fns omitted; emphasis
original)
[319] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 240.
[320] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 240.
[321] See Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 241.
[322] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, fn 390 to para. 240; Panel Report, EC – Salmon (Norway), para. 7.805.
[323] While disclosure may take various
forms, we note our agreement with the United States that, "[w]ithout a
full disclosure of the entirety of the
essential facts under consideration underlying the dumping determination, it is
difficult to see how a party would be in a position to identify whether the
determination contains clerical or mathematical errors, or whether the
investigating authority actually did what it purported to do. Such failure to
provide this information would result in an interested party being unable to
defend its interests because it could not identify in the first instance the
particular issues that are adverse to its interests." (United States'
third participant's submission, para. 36 (fn omitted; emphasis
original))
[324] EU Panel Report, para. 7.235
and fn 396 thereto. (fns 395 and 397 omitted)
[325] See EU Panel Report,
para. 7.235. We agree with the United States that, "to the extent
that the Panel relied on the fact that such data was already in the possession
of a given respondent, this would not result in the disclosure of such
essential facts to other respondents or the domestic industry." (United
States' third participant's submission, fn 27 to para. 36)
[326] EU Panel Report, para. 7.235.
[327] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 189. (emphasis original)
[328] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 240.
[329] EU Panel Report, para. 7.236.
[330] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 190.
[331] See MOFCOM's Final Dumping
Disclosure to SMST (Panel Exhibit EU-25-EN (BCI), internal pp. 2‑5);
MOFCOM's Final Dumping Disclosure to the EU (Panel Exhibit EU-27-EN), internal
pp. 14‑21; and MOFCOM's Preliminary Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN-7-EN
and EU-18), internal pp. 25‑29.
[332] Footnote 9 of the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement defines the word
"injury" as "material injury to a domestic industry, threat of
material injury to a domestic industry or material retardation of the
establishment of such an industry".
[333] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 126 (quoting Appellate Body
Report,
Thailand – H-Beams, para. 106).
[334] Appellate Body Report, US – Hot-Rolled Steel, para. 193.
[335] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 126 (referring to
Appellate Body Report,
US – Hot-Rolled Steel, para. 192).
[336] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 126 (quoting Appellate Body
Report,
US – Hot-Rolled Steel, para. 193).
[337] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 127.
[338] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 128.
[339] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 128.
[340] Appellate Body Report, EC – Bed Linen (Article 21.5 – India), paras. 113
and 118. Thus, "it is for the investigating authorities in the first
instance to determine the analytical methodologies that will be applied in the
course of an investigation." (See Panel Report, Thailand –
H-Beams, para. 7.159)
[341] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 128.
[342] Panel Reports, paras. 7.105
and 7.118.
[343] Panel Reports, para. 7.105.
See also para. 7.132.
[344] Panel Reports, para. 7.115.
[345] Panel Reports, para. 7.130.
[346] Panel Reports, para. 7.143.
[347] Japan's appellant's submission,
para. 2; European Union's other appellant's submission,
para. 109.
[348] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 134.
[349] Panel Reports, paras. 7.105
and 7.118.
[350] Panel Reports, para. 7.117.
[351] Panel Reports, para. 7.124
(quoting Appellate Body Report, China – GOES,
para. 137).
[352] Panel Reports, para. 7.126.
[353] Panel Reports, para. 7.126.
[354] Panel Reports, paras. 7.127‑7.128
(referring to Japan's second written submission to the Panel, para. 21;
and Oxford English Dictionary online,
definition of "undercut", available at: <http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/211547>, accessed
30 January 2014).
[355] Panel Reports, para. 7.128.
[356] In this regard, the Panel noted
that Article 6.3(c) of the SCM Agreement refers separately to price
undercutting, price depression, price suppression, and "lost sales".
In the Panel's view, this provision strongly suggests, therefore, that the
phenomenon of lost sales is distinct from price undercutting. (See Panel
Reports, fn 251 to para. 7.129)
[357] Panel Reports, para. 7.129.
[358] Panel Reports, para. 7.130.
[359] Japan's appellant's submission,
para. 13 (referring to Panel Reports, para. 7.126).
[360] Japan's appellant's submission,
para. 13.
[361] Japan's appellant's submission,
para. 31.
[362] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 113.
[363] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 114 (referring to Appellate Body
Report, China – GOES, paras. 129-132).
[364] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 114.
[365] China's appellee's submission,
para. 137 (referring to Panel Reports, para. 7.128).
[366] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 135 (quoting Shorter
Oxford English Dictionary, 6th edn, A. Stevenson (ed.)
(Oxford University Press, 2007), Vol. 1, p. 798).
[367] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 135.
[368] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 136.
[369] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 136.
[370] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 137.
[371] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 137.
[372] Panel Reports, para. 7.129.
(emphasis added)
[373] Shorter
Oxford English Dictionary, 6th edn, A. Stevenson (ed.) (Oxford
University Press, 2007), Vol. 2, p. 3423.
[374] The definition of the word
"effect" is, inter alia,
"something accomplished, caused, or produced; a result, a
consequence". (Shorter
Oxford English Dictionary, 6th edn, A. Stevenson (ed.)
(Oxford University Press, 2007), Vol. 1, p. 798) See also
Appellate Body Report, China – GOES,
para. 135.
[375] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 135.
[376] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 136.
[377] Panel Reports, para. 7.126.
[378] Panel Reports, para. 7.128.
(emphasis added)
[379] Shorter
Oxford English Dictionary, 6th edn, A. Stevenson (ed.) (Oxford
University Press, 2007), Vol. 2, p. 2833. See also
Appellate Body Report, US – Upland Cotton,
para. 426; and Panel Report, US – Upland Cotton,
para. 7.1326.
[380] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 136.
[381] See e.g. Panel Report, EC – Salmon (Norway), para. 7.638.
[382] In this respect, the
Appellate Body also clarified that, although there is no explicit
requirement in Article 3.2, a failure to ensure price comparability is
inconsistent with the requirement under Article 3.1 that a determination
be based on "positive evidence" and involve an "objective
examination" of the effect of dumped imports on the prices of domestic
like products. (Appellate Body Report, China – GOES,
para. 200)
[383] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 128.
[384] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 154.
[385] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 136.
[386] Panel Reports, para. 7.128.
[387] Panel Reports, para. 7.128.
[388] See Panel Reports,
paras. 7.116 and 7.121.
[389] See Appellate Body Reports, US – Countervailing Measures (China), para. 4.82; Australia – Salmon, paras. 117-136; US – Wheat Gluten, paras. 80‑92; and Canada – Aircraft (Article 21.5 – Brazil),
paras. 43-52.
[390] See Appellate Body Reports, US – Countervailing Measures (China), para. 4.82; US – Gasoline, p. 19, DSR 1996:I, p. 18; Canada – Periodicals, p. 24, DSR 1997:I, p. 469; EC – Poultry, para. 156; EC –
Hormones, para. 222; US – Shrimp,
paras. 123-124; Japan – Agricultural
Products II, para. 112; US – FSC,
para. 133; Australia – Salmon,
paras. 117-118; US – Lamb,
paras. 150 and 172; US – Section 211
Appropriations Act, para. 352; EC and
certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft, paras. 1174‑1178;
and US – Large Civil Aircraft (2nd
complaint), paras. 1272-1274.
[391] China's appellee's submission,
paras. 139-140 and 174-175.
[392] Panel Reports, para. 7.115.
[393] Panel Reports, para. 7.186.
[394] Panel Reports, para. 7.186.
[395] Panel Reports, para. 7.186.
(emphasis added)
[396] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 128.
[397] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 154.
[398] Panel Reports, para. 7.186.
[399] Panel Reports, para. 7.105.
See also para. 7.132.
[400] Panel Reports, para. 7.139.
[401] Panel Reports, para. 7.139.
[402] Panel Reports, para. 7.141.
(emphasis original)
[403] Panel Reports, para. 7.141.
[404] At fn 270 to para. 7.142
of the Panel Reports, the Panel highlighted that the complainants' estimate
that only about 20% of domestic production concerned Grade B or C
products, with the remaining +/-80% concerning Grade A products. (Japan's
first written submission to the Panel, para. 148; European Union's
first written submission to the Panel, para. 243) The Panel also noted
that China challenged the accuracy of Japan's estimates, but did not provide
actual numbers. The Panel considered it unnecessary to examine this discrepancy
in any detail, since China, in any event, acknowledged that "the
majority" of domestic HP-SSST production related to Grade A. (China's
comments on Japan's response to Panel question No. 84, para. 31)
[405] Panel Reports, para. 7.142
(referring to Panel Report, US – Upland Cotton,
paras. 7.1325 and 7.1328).
[406] Panel Reports, para. 7.142
and fn 273 thereto.
[407] European Union's
other appellant's submission, para. 138.
[408] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 138 (referring to Panel Reports,
para. 7.138).
[409] China's appellee's submission,
para. 197 (quoting Panel Reports, para. 7.137).
[410] China's appellee's submission,
para. 207.
[411] MOFCOM's Final Determination
(Panel Exhibits JPN-2-EN and EU-30), internal pp. 23-28. In MOFCOM's Final
Determination, Grade A corresponds to TP347HFG, Grade B corresponds
to S30432, and Grade C corresponds to TP310HNbN. We note that MOFCOM's
definition of the domestic like product was not the subject of a claim by the
complainants before the Panel.
[412] Panel Reports, para. 7.137.
[413] Panel Reports, para. 7.137.
[414] Panel Reports, para. 7.141.
[415] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, paras. 149 and 154.
[416] Panel Reports, para. 7.142.
[417] Panel Reports, para. 7.182.
[418] Panel Reports, fn 270 to
para. 7.142.
[419] Panel Reports, para. 7.182
(referring to MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN-2‑EN and EU-30),
internal p. 65).
[420] Panel Reports, para. 7.182
(referring to MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN-2‑EN and EU-30),
internal p. 66 (translation amended by Panel Exhibit CHN-16-EN, and
accepted by the complainants in Panel Exhibits JPN-29 and EU-32)).
[421] Panel Reports, fn 333 to
para. 7.184.
[422] In its Final Determination, MOFCOM
noted:
Based on data provided by foreign producers in their Response to Questionnaire for Producers/Exporters of Other
Countries/Regions and relevant subsequent supplemental materials,
during the period of investigation, the import volumes of the subject products
from the EU and Japan decreased year by year from 20,100 tons in 2008 to 16,400
tons in 2009, a decrease of 18.49% from 2008, and to 4500 tons in 2010, a
decrease of 72.79% from 2009. From January to June 2011, the import volume of
the subject products was 2600 tons, down 21.89% year on year.
(Panel Exhibits JPN-2-EN and EU-30, internal p. 43)
[423] China's appellee's submission,
para. 243 (referring to Japan's appellant's submission, paras. 49, 55‑61,
and 63-66).
[424] Japan's panel request,
pp. 1-2.
[425] Supra,
paras. 5.11-5.16.
[426] Japan's panel request, para. 1(b).
[427] Japan's appellant's submission,
para. 73.
[428] See Panel Reports,
paras. 6.29-6.31.
[429] Japan's first written submission
to the Panel, para. 165. (emphasis added; fn omitted)
[430] China's second written submission
to the Panel, para. 179.
[431] Panel Reports,
paras. 7.148-7.149.
[432] Panel Reports,
para. 7.152. (emphasis original)
[433] Panel Reports,
para. 7.153.
[434] Panel Reports,
para. 7.153.
[435] Panel Reports,
para. 7.153.
[436] Panel Reports, fn 281 to
para. 7.152.
[437] Panel Reports, fn 281 to
para. 7.152.
[438] Panel Reports, fn 281 to
para. 7.152.
[439] Panel Reports, para. 7.170.
[440] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 154.
[441] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 155.
[442] European Union's response to
questioning at the oral hearing.
[443] China's appellee's submission,
para. 249 (quoting Appellate Body Report,
China – GOES, paras. 128 and
149-150).
[444] China's appellee's submission,
para. 251.
[445] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 128.
[446] Appellate Body Report, US – Hot-Rolled Steel, para. 194 (referring to
Appellate Body Report, Thailand – H‑Beams,
fn 36 to para. 128).
[447] Appellate Body Report, US – Hot-Rolled Steel, paras. 196‑197.
[448] We observe that Article 4.1
of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement defines the term "domestic
industry" as the "domestic producers as a whole of the like
products" or "[domestic producers] whose collective output of the
products constitutes a major proportion of the total domestic production".
[449] Appellate Body Report, US – Hot-Rolled Steel, para. 195.
[450] Appellate Body Report, US – Hot-Rolled Steel, para. 195 (referring to Panel
Report, Mexico – Corn Syrup, fn 30 to
para. 7.154). (emphasis added)
[451] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 149. (emphasis original)
[452] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 149.
[453] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 149.
[454] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 149. (emphasis original)
[455] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 150.
[456] Panel Reports, para. 7.137
(referring to MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN-2-EN and EU‑30),
internal p. 53).
[457] MOFCOM's Final Determination
(Panel Exhibits JPN-2-EN and EU-30), internal p. 28. See also Panel
Reports, para. 7.153. The two domestic producers are Jiangsu Wujin
Stainless Steel Pipe Group Co., Ltd. and Changshu Walsin Specialty Steel Co.,
Ltd.
[458] Appellate Body Report, US – Hot-Rolled Steel, paras. 196-197.
[459] Panel Reports, para. 7.182
(referring to MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN-2-EN and EU‑30),
internal p. 66 (translation amended by Panel Exhibit CHN-16-EN, and accepted by
the complainants in Panel Exhibits JPN-29 and EU-32)).
[460] Panel Reports, para. 7.182
(referring to MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN-2-EN and EU‑30),
internal p. 65).
[461] Panel Reports, fn 281 to para. 7.152.
[462] Appellate Body Report, EC – Tube or Pipe Fittings, para. 115.
[463] We note, moreover,
that the Panel's reading of Article 3.4 appears to have been premised on
its interpretation of Article 3.2 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement, which we
have reversed above. (See Panel Reports, para. 7.152)
[464] Panel Reports, fn 270 to
para. 7.142, and fn 324 to para. 7.182.
[465] Panel Reports, para. 7.153.
[466] Panel Reports, para. 7.153.
[467] See European Union's other
appellant's submission, paras. 154-156.
[468] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 149. (emphasis original)
[469] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, paras. 145 and 154.
[470] Panel Reports, para. 7.188.
[471] Panel Reports, para. 7.191.
[472] Panel Reports, para. 7.204.
We note that the Panel referred interchangeably in its discussion to the
"decline" or "decrease in apparent consumption" and the
"drop" or "decline in domestic demand". (See e.g. Panel
Reports, paras. 7.169, 7.196, and 7.203)
[473] China's other appellant's
submission, para. 57.
[474] China's appellant's submission, para. 165;
other appellant's submission, para. 70.
[475] Panel Reports, para. 7.171
(quoting MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN‑2‑EN and EU‑30),
internal pp. 65‑67 (translation amended by Panel Exhibit CHN-16-EN and
accepted by the complainants in Panel Exhibits JPN-29 and EU-32); and referring
to China's first written submission to the Panel, paras. 516‑518). See
also Panel Reports, para. 7.172 (referring to MOFCOM's Final Determination
(Panel Exhibits JPN‑2‑EN and EU‑30), internal p. 66.
[476] Panel Reports, para. 7.181
(referring to MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN‑2‑EN and EU‑30),
internal pp. 43‑49).
[477] Panel Reports, para. 7.181.
[478] Panel Reports, para. 7.182
(referring to MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN‑2‑EN and EU‑30),
internal pp. 44 and 66).
[479] Panel Reports, para. 7.182
(referring to MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN‑2‑EN and EU‑30),
internal p. 65).
[480] Panel Reports, para. 7.182.
[481] Panel Reports, para. 7.182.
[482] Panel Reports, para. 7.182.
[483] Panel Reports,
paras. 7.183-7.184.
[484] Panel Reports, para. 7.185
(referring to MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN‑2‑EN
and EU‑30), internal p. 48).
[485] Panel Reports, para. 7.186
and fn 335 thereto (referring to China's second written submission to the
Panel, para. 155).
[486] Panel Reports, para. 7.187.
[487] Panel Reports, para. 7.188.
[488] Panel Reports, paras. 7.188
and 7.205.
[489] China's other appellant's
submission, paras. 58-59 and 61 (referring to Panel Report,
US – Corrosion-Resistant Steel Sunset Review,
para. 7.53; and Japan Panel Report, para. 7.188). China
also argues that Japan's subsequent submissions to the Panel confirm the
limited scope of Japan's panel request. (China's other appellant's submission,
para. 66)
[490] Japan's appellee's submission,
para. 16 (referring to China's other appellant's submission,
para. 49).
[491] Japan's panel request,
pp. 1-2.
[493] Japan's panel request,
para. 1.
[494] Japan's panel request,
para. 1(c).
[495] Japan Panel Report,
para. 7.182.
[496] China's other appellant's submission,
para. 62. We have discussed the legal standard applicable under
Article 6.2 of the DSU at paras. 5.11-5.16 of these Reports.
[497] China's other appellant's
submission, para. 64.
[498] China's other appellant's
submission, para. 64. (emphasis added)
[499] Japan's panel request,
para. 1(c). (emphasis added)
[500] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, paras. 147 and 149.
[501] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, paras. 147 and 149.
[502] See China's appellant's
submission, para. 165; and other appellant's submission, paras. 91
and 98.
[503] Japan's appellee's submission,
para. 25; European Union's appellee's submission, para. 241.
[504] Japan's appellee's submission,
para. 25 (emphasis original; fn omitted); European Union's appellee's
submission, para. 241.
[505] Japan's appellee's submission,
para. 26; European Union's appellee's submission, para. 242
(quoting Appellate Body Reports, US – Carbon Steel,
para. 127; Korea – Dairy,
paras. 124-127; and Thailand – H‑Beams,
para. 95). (emphasis added by Japan and the European Union)
[506] Appellate Body Report, US – Gambling, para. 140 (quoting Appellate Body
Report,
US – Wool Shirts and Blouses, p. 16,
DSR 1997:I, p. 336). (emphasis added in US –
Gambling)
[507] Appellate Body Report, US – Gambling, para. 140 (referring to
Appellate Body Report, Canada – Wheat Exports and
Grain Imports, para. 191).
[508] Appellate Body
Report, US – Gambling, para. 141.
[509] Appellate Body Reports, Canada – Renewable Energy / Canada – Feed-in Tariff
Program, para. 5.215 (quoting Appellate Body Report, EC – Hormones, para. 156).
[510] See Articles 11 and 12.7 of
the DSU. Article 12.7 provides in relevant part: "[T]he report of a panel shall set out the findings of fact,
the applicability of relevant provisions and the basic rationale behind any
findings and recommendations that it makes."
[511] Japan's first written submission
to the Panel, para. 190; European Union's first written submission to
the Panel, paras. 280-282. (emphasis original)
[512] Japan's first written submission
to the Panel, para. 209; European Union's first written submission to
the Panel, para. 299.
[513] See e.g. Japan's first written
submission to the Panel, paras. 198-201. See also European Union's
oral statement at the first Panel meeting, paras. 117-119 and 122-123). In
their second written submissions to the Panel, the complainants referred back
to their first written submissions, reiterating that "MOFCOM's causation
analysis was flawed because it did not logically progress from its volume,
price effects, and impact analyses"; and "China's causation determination
lacks any foundation in its analysis of the volume, price effects, and impact
of HP-SSST imports." (See Japan's second written submission to the Panel,
para. 56; and European Union's second written submission to the
Panel, para. 176)
[514] China's appellant's submission,
para. 207; other appellant's submission, para. 114.
[515] China's appellant's submission,
para. 216; other appellant's submission, para. 123. According to
China, such an obligation may exist in the context of a non‑attribution
analysis, but does not apply in the context of the first step of the causation
analysis, which is the subject of this aspect of China's appeal.
[516] See China's other appellant's
submission, para. 125.
[517] Appellate Body Reports, China – Rare Earths, para. 5.178 (quoting
Appellate Body Report, Brazil –
Retreaded Tyres, para. 185).
[518] Appellate Body Reports, US – COOL, para. 299 (quoting Appellate Body
Report, EC – Hormones, para. 135).
[519] Appellate Body Reports, China – Rare Earths, para. 5.227 (quoting
Appellate Body Report, EC – Poultry,
para. 133).
[520] Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China), para. 442.
[521] Appellate Body Report, EC and certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft,
para. 1318.
[522] Appellate Body Reports, China – Rare Earths, para. 5.179. See also
Appellate Body Report, EC – Fasteners (China),
para. 499.
[523] Appellate Body Report, US – Anti‑Dumping and Countervailing Duties (China),
para. 337 (referring to Appellate Body Reports, US – Steel
Safeguards, para. 498; and Australia – Apples,
para. 406). See also Appellate Body Report, Peru –
Agricultural Products, para. 5.66. In case of similarly
overlapping claims of error in the application of a legal standard to the
relevant facts of a case and under Article 11 of the DSU, there is no
basis to have an additional examination of whether a panel has conducted an
objective assessment of the facts under Article 11 of the DSU.
(Appellate Body Reports, China – Rare Earths,
para. 5.174 (referring to Appellate Body Report, China – GOES,
para. 184))
[524] Panel Reports, para. 7.181.
(fns omitted)
[525] China's appellant's submission,
para. 213; other appellant's submission, para. 120.
[526] China's appellant's submission,
para. 210; other appellant's submission, para. 117 (referring to
MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN‑2‑EN and EU‑30), internal
pp. 65-66).
[527] China's appellant's submission,
para. 211; other appellant's submission, para. 118.
[528] China's appellant's submission,
para. 212; other appellant's submission, para. 119.
[529] Panel Reports, para. 7.181.
(emphasis added)
[530] Panel Reports, para. 7.181.
[531] China's appellant's submission,
para. 212; other appellant's submission, para. 119. (emphasis added)
[532] Panel Reports, para. 7.182.
[533] China's appellant's submission,
para. 228; other appellant's submission, para. 135 (quoting MOFCOM's
Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN‑2‑EN and EU‑30), internal
p. 48).
[534] China's appellant's submission,
para. 228.
[535] China's appellant's submission,
para. 230; other appellant's submission, para. 137.
[536] Japan's appellee's submission,
para. 33; European Union's appellee's submission, para. 251.
[537] Panel Reports, para. 7.184.
[538] Panel Reports, para. 7.184.
[539] Panel Reports, para. 7.185
(referring to MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN‑2‑EN and EU‑30),
internal p. 48).
[540] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, paras. 145 and 154.
[541] China's appellant's submission,
para. 229; other appellant's submission, para. 136.
[542] China's appellant's submission,
para. 229; other appellant's submission, para. 136.
(fns omitted)
[543] China's appellant's submission,
paras. 234-235; other appellant's submission, paras. 140‑141.
[544] MOFCOM's Final Determination
(Panel Exhibits JPN‑2‑EN and EU‑30), internal p. 48.
[545] Panel Reports, para. 7.184.
[546] Panel Reports, para. 7.184.
[547] China's appellant's submission,
para. 232; other appellant's submission, para. 139.
[548] China's appellant's submission,
para. 236; other appellant's submission, para. 142.
[549] China's appellant's submission,
para. 237; other appellant's submission, para. 143.
[550] Japan's appellee's submission,
para. 35; European Union's appellee's submission, para. 253
(quoting Panel Reports, para. 7.184). (emphasis added by Japan and the
European Union)
[551] Japan's appellee's submission,
para. 36; European Union's appellee's submission, para. 255.
[552] Appellate Body Report, EC and certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft,
para. 1119.
[553] Appellate Body Report, EC and certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft,
para. 1119.
[554] Appellate Body Report, EC and certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft,
para. 1120.
[555] Appellate Body Report, EC and certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft,
para. 1120.
[556] Panel Reports, fn 333 to
para. 7.184.
[557] See Japan's oral statement at the
second Panel meeting, para. 35.
[558] Panel Report, para. 7.184.
[559] China's appellant's submission,
paras. 238-239; other appellant's submission, paras. 144‑145.
[560] China's appellant's submission,
para. 238; other appellant's submission, para. 144 (quoting Request
for Considering Public Interest in the Anti‑Dumping Investigation on Certain
High‑Performance Stainless Steel Seamless Tubes by Sumitomo Metal Industries,
Ltd. & Kobe Special Tube Co., Ltd., February 2012 (Panel Exhibit
JPN-25-EN), internal p. 4; as referred to in China's responses to Panel
questions after the second Panel meeting, para. 16). (emphasis added by
China)
[561] SMI's Injury Questionnaire
Response (question 8) (Panel Exhibits CHN-20-CH (BCI) and CHN-20-EN (BCI)).
[562] China's appellant's submission,
para. 239; other appellant's submission, para. 145 (quoting SMI's
Injury Questionnaire Response (Panel Exhibit CHN-20-EN (BCI)), p. 10
(emphasis added by China); and referring to China's second written submission
to the Panel, paras. 149-150; and responses to Panel questions following
the second Panel meeting, para. 18).
[563] China's appellant's submission,
para. 242; other appellant's submission, para. 148 (quoting Panel
Reports, para. 7.185).
[564] China's appellant's submission,
para. 244; other appellant's submission, para. 150 (quoting
Appellate Body Report, US – Hot-Rolled Steel,
para. 226).
[565] Panel Reports, para. 7.185.
[566] Panel Reports, para. 7.186
(referring to China's second written submission to the Panel, para. 155).
[567] Panel Reports, para. 7.186.
[568] Panel Reports, para. 7.186.
[569] Panel Reports, para. 7.186.
[570] China's appellant's submission,
para. 252; other appellant's submission, para. 158.
[571] China's appellant's submission,
para. 249; other appellant's submission, para. 155.
[572] China's appellant's submission,
para. 249; other appellant's submission, para. 155.
[573] China's appellant's submission,
paras. 250-251; other appellant's submission, paras. 156‑157.
[574] Panel Reports, para. 7.186
(referring to China's second written submission to the Panel, para. 155).
[575] Panel Reports, para. 7.187
(referring to MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN‑2‑EN and EU‑30),
internal p. 66).
[576] China's appellant's submission,
para. 257; other appellant's submission, para. 163.
[577] China's appellant's submission,
paras. 254-256; other appellant's submission, paras. 160‑162.
[578] Panel Reports, para. 7.187
(referring to MOFCOM's Final Determination (Panel Exhibits JPN‑2‑EN and EU‑30),
internal p. 66).
[579] China's appellant's submission,
para. 260; other appellant's submission, para. 166.
[580] China's appellant's submission,
para. 261; other appellant's submission, para. 167.
[581] See China's appellant's
submission, paras. 262-263; and other appellant's submission,
paras. 168‑169.
[582] Panel Reports, para. 7.182.
[583] Panel Reports, para. 7.200.
[584] Panel Reports, para. 7.201
(referring to Appellate Body Report, US – Hot-Rolled Steel,
para. 226).
[585] Panel Reports, para. 7.201.
[586] Panel Reports, para. 7.202.
[587] Panel Reports, para. 7.204.
[588] Panel Reports, para. 7.204.
[589] China's appellant's submission,
paras. 268-269; other appellant's submission, paras. 174‑175.
[590] China's appellant's submission,
para. 270; other appellant's submission, para. 176.
[591] Japan's appellee's submission,
para. 44 (quoting China's other appellant's submission, para. 175);
European Union's appellee's submission, para. 263 (quoting China's
appellant's submission, para. 269).
[592] Japan's appellee's submission,
paras. 44-46; European Union's appellee's submission, paras. 263‑265.
[593] Japan's appellee's submission,
para. 46; European Union's appellee's submission, para. 265.
[594] See Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 151. Pursuant to the fourth sentence
of Article 3.5, these other factors include the volume and prices of imports not sold at dumped or
subsidized prices; contraction in demand or changes in the patterns of
consumption; trade‑restrictive practices of, and competition between, the foreign
and domestic producers; developments in technology; and the export performance
and productivity of the domestic industry. (Ibid., fn 241 to para. 151)
[595] Appellate Body Report, China – GOES, para. 151 (referring to
Appellate Body Report, US – Hot‑Rolled Steel,
para. 223).
[596] Appellate Body Report, US – Hot-Rolled Steel, para. 223.
[597] Panel Reports, para. 7.202.
[598] Panel Reports, para. 7.189.
(fns omitted)
[599] Panel Reports, para. 7.191.
[600] Panel Reports, para. 7.192.
[601] Panel Reports, para. 7.192.
[602] Panel Reports, para. 7.192.
[603] Japan's appellant's submission,
paras. 82 and 84; European Union's other appellant's submission,
paras. 165 and 167.
[604] Japan's appellant's submission,
para. 104; European Union's other appellant's submission,
para. 178.
[605] Japan's appellant's submission,
para. 104 (referring to Japan's comments on the Interim Reports,
para. 61).
[606] China's appellee's submission,
para. 318.
[607] Panel Reports, para. 7.192.
[608] See Japan's first written
submission to the Panel, paras. 186-209; and European Union's first
written submission to the Panel, paras. 277-299. See also Japan's second
written submission to the Panel, para. 56; and European Union's
second written submission to the Panel, para. 176.
[609] Japan's comments on the Interim
Reports, para. 61.
[610] Panel Reports, para. 7.182.
[611] Panel Reports, paras. 7.188
and 7.205.
[612] Panel Reports, para. 1.10. No
request for BCI procedures was made in these appellate proceedings.
[613] Panel Reports, para. 1.10.
[614] Panel Reports, para. 7.10.
(emphasis original)
[615] Japan did not challenge separately
the BCI Procedures adopted by the Panel. However, in response to the Panel's
questioning, Japan indicated that it generally agreed with the
European Union's request to modify paragraphs 1 and 2 of the BCI
Procedures. (Panel Reports, para. 7.14; Japan's response to Panel question
No.1)
[616] Panel Reports, para. 7.18.
(emphasis original)
[617] See Panel Reports,
para. 7.12.
[618] European Union's first
written submission to the Panel, paras. 56-57.
[619] Panel Reports, para. 7.13.
[620] Panel Reports, para. 7.13 and
fn 33 thereto.
[621] Panel Reports, para. 7.15
(quoting China's response to Panel question No. 3, para. 13).
[622] Panel Reports, para. 7.18.
(emphasis added by the Panel) The Panel noted that China did not oppose this
amendment. (Ibid., fn 46 to para. 7.18 (referring to China's response to
Panel question No.1, paras. 3‑5))
[623] Panel Reports, para. 7.20.
[624] Article 17.7 of the
Anti-Dumping Agreement provides:
Confidential information provided to the panel shall not be disclosed
without formal authorization from the person, body or authority providing such
information. Where such information is requested from the panel but release of
such information by the panel is not authorized, a non-confidential summary of
the information, authorized by the person, body or authority providing the
information, shall be provided.
[625] Panel Reports, para. 7.21
(referring to Article 1.2 and Appendix 2 to the DSU; and
Appellate Body Report, Guatemala – Cement I,
para. 66).
[626] Panel Reports, para. 7.21.
[627] Panel Reports, para. 7.21.
(fn omitted) The Panel further considered that, since a panel's review is
limited to the investigating authority's record, in practice, the designation
of information under Article 18.2 of the DSU should generally not arise in
a case brought under the Anti‑Dumping Agreement, because this issue is already
addressed by Articles 6.5 and 17.7 of the Anti‑Dumping Agreement.
(Ibid.)
[628] Panel Reports, para. 7.28.
See also para. 7.27 (referring to China's response to Panel question
No. 4, paras. 25-30).
[629] Panel Reports, para. 1.10.
The amended Additional Working Procedures of the Panels Concerning Business
Confidential Information can be found in Annex A-2 of the Addendum to the
Panel Reports.
[630] In particular, the
European Union takes issue with the Panel's statement that "the
phrase 'confidential information' in Article 17.7 refers to the
confidential information previously examined by the investigating authority and
treated as confidential pursuant to Article 6.5 – and which is now
provided to a dispute settlement panel pursuant to Article 17.7."
(European Union's Notice of Other Appeal, fn 2 to para. 1)
[631] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 40. See also para. 35 (referring to
Appellate Body Report, EC and certain member
States – Large Civil Aircraft, Annex III, Procedural Ruling of
10 August 2010, paras. 7-11 and 13).
[632] European Union's other
appellant's submission, paras. 41 and 43.
[633] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 57.
[634] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 55.
[635] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 59. The European Union also submits
that it sought certain specific rulings on designation from the Panel, which
the Panel did not give. (Ibid.)
[636] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 61 (referring to Panel Reports,
paras. 7.21 and 7.26‑7.29, particularly the finding that "the
phrase 'confidential information' in Article 17.7 refers to the
confidential information previously examined by the investigating authority and
treated as confidential pursuant to Article 6.5 – and which is now
provided to a dispute settlement panel pursuant to Article 17.7"; and
the interpretation of the terms "person, body or authority").
[637] European Union's other
appellant's submission, para. 67 (referring to Panel Reports, fn 50
to para. 7.21).
[638] China's appellee's submission,
para. 367.
[639] China's appellee's submission,
para. 369.
[640] China's appellee's submission,
para. 371.
[641] China's appellee's submission,
para. 374 (referring to European Union's other appellant's
submission, para. 42).
[642] China's appellee's submission,
para. 374. (emphasis original)
[643] China's appellee's submission,
paras. 361-362.
[644] Panel Reports, para. 7.21.
[645] See Appellate Body Report, EC and certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft,
Annex III, Procedural Ruling of 10 August 2010, paras. 8-9.
[646] See Appellate Body Report, EC and certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft,
Annex III, Procedural Ruling of 10 August 2010, para. 9.
[647] See section 5.3 of these Reports.
[648] Article 18.2 of the DSU.
[649] The Rules of Conduct, as adopted
by the DSB on 3 December 1996 (WT/DSB/RC/1), are directly incorporated
into the Working Procedures for Appellate Review (WT/AB/WP/6), as Annex II
thereto. (See WT/DSB/RC/2, WT/AB/WP/W/2)
[650] Appellate Body Report, EC and certain member States – Large Civil Aircraft,
Annex III, Procedural Ruling of 10 August 2010, para. 8.
[651] We note that Article 17.7 is
a special or additional rule that prevails to the extent that there is a
difference between the rules and procedures in the DSU (such as
Articles 13 and 18 thereof) and Article 17.7 of the Anti-Dumping
Agreement. (See Article 1.2 and Appendix 2 to the DSU)
[652] We note, in particular, the
Panel's finding that "the phrase 'confidential information' in
Article 17.7 refers to the confidential information previously examined by
the investigating authority and treated as confidential pursuant to
Article 6.5." (Panel Reports, para. 7.21) The Panel's conflation of the two
regimes for the protection of confidential information is also reflected in its
statement that "the European Union has not explained how another type
of 'disagreement about designation' under the BCI Procedures could occur when
information was properly treated as confidential
in the underlying anti-dumping proceedings." (Panel Reports, fn
52 to para. 7.22 (emphasis original))