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pdfOMB No. 3117‐0016/USITC No. 17‐4‐3672; Expiration Date: 6/30/2017
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FOREIGN PRODUCERS’/EXPORTERS’ QUESTIONNAIRE
CERTAIN EMULSION STYRENE‐BUTADIENE RUBBER
This questionnaire must be received by the Commission by May 4, 2017
See last page for filing instructions.
The information called for in this questionnaire is for use by the United States International Trade Commission in
connection with its antidumping investigations concerning certain Emulsion Styrene‐Butadiene Rubber from
Brazil, Korea, Mexico, and Poland (Inv. Nos. 731‐TA‐1334‐1337 (Final)). The information requested in the
questionnaire is requested under the authority of the Tariff Act of 1930, title VII.
Name of firm
Address
Website
Has your firm produced or exported ESBR (as defined on next page) at any time since January 1, 2014?
NO
(Sign the certification below and promptly return only this page of the questionnaire to the Commission)
YES
(Complete all parts of the questionnaire, and return the entire questionnaire to the Commission)
Data reported in this questionnaire relate to (Check one):
BRAZIL
KOREA
MEXICO
POLAND
Return questionnaire via the Commission Drop Box by clicking on the following link:
https://dropbox.usitc.gov/oinv/. (PIN: ESBR)
CERTIFICATION
I certify that the information herein supplied in response to this questionnaire is complete and correct to the best of my
knowledge and belief and understand that the information submitted is subject to audit and verification by the Commission. By
means of this certification I also grant consent for the Commission, and its employees and contract personnel, to use the
information provided in this questionnaire and throughout this proceeding in any other import‐injury proceedings conducted by
the Commission on the same or similar merchandise.
I, the undersigned, acknowledge that information submitted in response to this request for information and throughout this
proceeding or other proceeding may be disclosed to and used: (i) by the Commission, its employees and Offices, and contract
personnel (a) for developing or maintaining the records of this or a related proceeding, or (b) in internal investigations, audits,
reviews, and evaluations relating to the programs, personnel, and operations of the Commission including under 5 U.S.C.
Appendix 3; or (ii) by U.S. government employees and contract personnel, solely for cybersecurity purposes. I understand that all
contract personnel will sign appropriate nondisclosure agreements
Name of Authorized Official Title of Authorized Official
Date
Phone:
Signature
Fax:
Email address
Business Proprietary
Foreign Producers’ Questionnaire – ESBR (Final)
Page 2
PART I.—GENERAL INFORMATION
Background.‐‐This proceeding was instituted in response to petitions filed on July 21, 2016, by Lion
Elastomers LLC (Port Neches, TX) and East West Copolymer, LLC (Baton Rouge, LA). Antidumping duties
may be assessed on the subject imports as a result of these proceedings if the Commission makes an
affirmative determination of injury, threat, or material retardation, and if the U.S. Department of
Commerce makes an affirmative determination of dumping. Questionnaires and other information
pertinent to this proceeding are available at
https://www.usitc.gov/investigations/701731/2017/emulsion_styrene_butadiene_rubber_brazil_korea/final.
htm
Certain emulsion styrene‐butadiene rubber (“ESBR”). The product covered by these investigations is
cold‐polymerized emulsion styrene‐butadiene rubber. The scope of the investigation includes, but is not
limited to, ESBR in primary forms, bales, granules, crumbs, pellets, powders, plates, sheets, strip, etc.
ESBR consists of non‐pigmented rubbers and oil‐extended non‐pigmented rubbers, both of which
contain at least one percent of organic acids from the emulsion polymerization process.
ESBR is produced and sold in accordance with a generally accepted set of product specifications issued
by the International Institute of Synthetic Rubber Producers (“IISRP”). The scope of the investigation
covers grades of ESB rubber included in the IISRP 1500 and 1700 series of synthetic rubbers. The 1500
grades are light in color and are often described as ‘‘Clear’’ or ‘‘White Rubber.’’ The 1700 grades are oil‐
extended and thus darker in color, and are often called ‘‘Brown Rubber.’’
Specifically excluded from the scope of this investigation are products which are manufactured by
blending ESBR with other polymers, high styrene resin master batch, carbon black master batch (i.e.,
IISRP 1600 series and 1800 series) and latex (an intermediate product).
The products subject to these investigations are currently imported under the following Harmonized
Tariff Schedule of the United States (“HTSUS”) provisions: 4002.19.0015 and 4002.19.0019. ESBR is
described by Chemical Abstract Services (“CAS”) Registry No. 9003‐55‐8. This CAS number also refers to
other types of styrene butadiene rubber. Although the HTSUS subheadings and CAS registry number are
provided for convenience and customs purposes, the written description of the scope of these
investigations is dispositive.
Importer.‐‐Any person or firm engaged, either directly or through a parent company or subsidiary,
in importing ESBR (as defined above) into the United States from a foreign manufacturer or
through its selling agent.
Reporting of information.‐‐ If information is not readily available from your records, provide carefully
prepared estimates. If your firm is completing more than one questionnaire (i.e., a producer, importer,
purchaser and/or foreign producer questionnaire), you need not respond to duplicated questions.
Business Proprietary
Foreign Producers’ Questionnaire – ESBR (Final)
Page 3
Confidentiality.‐‐The commercial and financial data furnished in response to this questionnaire that
reveal the individual operations of your firm will be treated as confidential by the Commission to the
extent that such data are not otherwise available to the public and will not be disclosed except as may
be required by law (see 19 U.S.C. §1677f). Such confidential information will not be published in a
manner that will reveal the individual operations of your firm; however, general characterizations of
numerical business proprietary information (such as discussion of trends) will be treated as confidential
business information only at the request of the submitter for good cause shown.
Verification.‐‐The information submitted in this questionnaire is subject to audit and verification by the
Commission. To facilitate possible verification of data, please keep all files, worksheets, and supporting
documents used in the preparation of the questionnaire response. Please also retain a copy of the final
document that you submit.
Release of information.‐‐The information provided by your firm in response to this questionnaire, as
well as any other business proprietary information submitted by your firm to the Commission in
connection with this proceeding, may become subject to, and released under, the administrative
protective order provisions of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. § 1677f) and section 207.7 of the
Commission’s Rules of Practice and Procedure (19 CFR § 207.7). This means that certain lawyers and
other authorized individuals may temporarily be given access to the information for use in connection
with this proceeding or other import‐injury proceedings conducted by the Commission on the same or
similar merchandise; those individuals would be subject to severe penalties if the information were
divulged to unauthorized individuals.
Business Proprietary
Foreign Producers’ Questionnaire – ESBR (Final)
I‐1.
Page 4
OMB statistics.‐‐Please report below the actual number of hours required and the cost to your
firm of completing this questionnaire.
I‐2.
Hours
Dollars
The questions in this questionnaire have been reviewed with market participants to ensure that
issues of concern are adequately addressed and that data requests are sufficient, meaningful,
and as limited as possible. Public reporting burden for this questionnaire is estimated to average
20 hours per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, gathering data, and
completing and reviewing the questionnaire.
We welcome comments regarding the accuracy of this burden estimate, suggestions for
reducing the burden, and any suggestions for improving this questionnaire. Please attach such
comments to your response or send to the Office of Investigations, USITC, 500 E St. SW,
Washington, DC 20436.
Establishments covered.‐‐Provide the name and address of establishment(s) covered by this
questionnaire. If your firm is publicly traded, please specify the stock exchange and trading
symbol.
“Establishment”‐‐ Each facility of a firm in Brazil, Korea, Mexico, and Poland involved in the
production or export of ESBR, including auxiliary facilities operated in conjunction with (whether
or not physically separate from) such facilities. Firms operating more than one establishment in
Brazil, Korea, Mexico, and Poland should combine the data for all establishments into a single
report.
I‐3.
Related producers.‐‐Does your firm or any related firm produce, have the capability to produce,
or have any plans to produce ESBR in the United States or other countries?
No
Yes‐‐Please name the firm(s) and country(ies) below and, if U.S. producer(s),
ensure that they complete the Commission’s producer questionnaire.
Business Proprietary
Foreign Producers’ Questionnaire – ESBR (Final)
I‐4.
Page 5
Related U.S. importers.‐‐Does your firm or any related firm import or have any plans to import
ESBR into the United States?
No
Yes‐‐Please name the firm(s) below and ensure that they complete the
Commission’s importer questionnaire.
I‐5.
U.S. importers.‐‐Please provide the names, street addresses (not P.O. boxes), contacts,
telephone numbers, and e‐mail addresses of the FIVE largest U.S. importers of your firm’s ESBR
in 2016.
Importer’s name
Contact
person
Email
Telephone
1
2
3
4
5
Share of
your
Street address (not
firm’s
P.O. box), city, state,
2016 U.S.
and zip code
exports
(%)
Street Address
,
City State Zip Code
Street Address
,
City State Zip Code
Street Address
,
City State Zip Code
Street Address
,
City State Zip Code
Street Address
,
City State Zip Code
Business Proprietary
Foreign Producers’ Questionnaire – ESBR (Final)
Page 6
PART II.‐‐TRADE AND RELATED INFORMATION
Further information on this part of the questionnaire can be obtained from Nathanael Comly
(nathanael.comly@usitc.gov, 202‐205‐3174). Supply all data requested on a calendar‐year basis.
II‐1. Contact information.‐‐Please identify the responsible individual and the manner by which
Commission staff may contact that individual regarding the confidential information submitted
in part II.
Name
Title
Email
Telephone
Fax
II‐2. Changes in operations.‐‐Please indicate whether your firm has experienced any of the following
changes in relation to the production of ESBR since January 1, 2014.
(check as many as appropriate)
(If checked, please describe the changes, including their
impact on production, capacity, and/or employment; leave
blank if not applicable)
plant openings
plant closings
relocations
expansions
acquisitions
consolidations
prolonged shutdowns or
production curtailments
revised labor agreements
other (e.g., technology)
Business Proprietary
Foreign Producers’ Questionnaire – ESBR (Final)
II‐3.
Page 7
Anticipated changes in operations.‐‐Does your firm anticipate any changes in the character of
its operations or organization (as noted above) relating to the production of ESBR in the future?
No
Yes–Supply details as to the time, nature, and significance of such changes
and provide underlying assumptions, along with relevant portions of
business plans or other supporting documentation that address this
issue. Include in the response a specific projection of your firm’s
capacity to produce ESBR (in 1,000 pounds) for 2016 and 2017.
II‐4a. Production using same machinery.‐‐ Please report your firm’s production of products made on
the same equipment and machinery used to produce ESBR, and the combined production
capacity on this shared equipment and machinery.
“Overall production capacity” or “capacity” –The level of production that your
establishment(s) could reasonably have expected to attain during the specified periods for all
products manufactured in that establishment using the same manufacturing equipment.
Assume normal operating conditions (i.e., using equipment and machinery in place and ready to
operate; normal operating levels (hours per week/weeks per year) and time for downtime,
maintenance, repair, and cleanup).
“Production” ‐‐All production in your establishment(s) in Brazil, Korea, Mexico, or Poland,
including production consumed internally within your firm.
Quantity (in 1,000 pounds)
Calendar years
Item
Overall production capacity
2014
2015
January‐March
2016
2016
2017
0
0
0
0
0
Carbon black master batch
(CBMB)
Solution styrene‐butadiene
rubber (SSBR)
Hot polymerized ESBR
0
0
0
0
0
Production of:
ESBR 1
2
Other products
Total
1
2
Data entered for production of ESBR will populate here once reported in question II‐10.
Please identify these products: .
Business Proprietary
Foreign Producers’ Questionnaire – ESBR (Final)
Page 8
II‐4b. Operating parameters.‐‐The production capacity reported in II‐4a is based on operating hours
per week, weeks per year.
II‐4c. Capacity calculation.‐‐Please describe the methodology used to calculate overall production
capacity reported in II‐4a, and explain any changes in reported capacity.
II‐4d. Production constraints.‐‐Please describe the constraint(s) that set the limit(s) on your firm’s
production capacity.
II‐4e. Product shifting.—
(i).
Is your firm able to switch production (capacity) between ESBR and other products using the
same equipment and/or labor?
No
Yes‐‐ (i.e., have produced other products or are able to produce other
products). Please identify other actual or potential products: .
(ii).
Please describe the factors that affect your firm’s ability to shift production capacity
between products (e.g., time, cost, relative price change, etc.), and the degree to which
these factors enhance or constrain such shifts.
II‐5.
Share of sales.‐‐What percentage of your firm’s total sales in its most recent fiscal year was
represented by sales of ESBR? percent.
II‐6.
II‐7.
Firm's estimated share of production in Brazil, Korea, Mexico, or Poland.‐‐Please estimate the
percentage of total production of ESBR in the country specified on the certification page accounted
for by your firm’s production in 2016. percent.
Firm's estimated share of country's exports.‐‐Please estimate the percentage of total exports to
the United States of ESBR from the country specified on the certification page accounted for by
your firm’s exports in 2016. percent.
Business Proprietary
Foreign Producers’ Questionnaire – ESBR (Final)
II‐8.
Page 9
Inventories in the United States.‐‐Has your firm, since 2014, maintained any inventories of ESBR
in the United States (not including inventories held by firms identified in question I‐3)?
“Inventories”‐‐Finished goods inventory, not raw materials or work in progress.
No
Yes‐‐Report the quantity of such end‐of‐period inventories below.
Quantity (in 1,000 pounds)
Calendar year
Item
Inventory
II‐9.
2015
2016
Third country trade actions.‐‐Is the ESBR exported by your firm subject to
antidumping/countervailing duty/safeguard findings, remedies, or proceedings?
No
Yes‐‐List the products(s), countries affected, and the date of such
findings/remedies/proceedings.
2014
Business Proprietary
Foreign Producers’ Questionnaire – ESBR (Final)
Page 10
II‐10. Trade data.‐‐Report your firm’s production capacity, production, shipments, and inventories
related to the production of ESBR in your establishment(s) in Brazil, Korea, Mexico, or Poland
during the specified periods. Do not include resale of ESBR that your firm did not produce;
those data to the degree they are exported to the United States should only be reported in
question II‐11
Do not submit data by manufacturing facility if they are in the same country. If your firm has
multiple manufacturing establishments within one country, you are required to combine data
for those establishments within one foreign producer questionnaire response.
Do not submit data on multiple countries combined. The establishments reported here should
all be located in the country of the firm’s address reported on the certification page.
Multinational companies with production in multiple subject countries should submit separate
foreign producer questionnaire responses for each subject country.
“Average production capacity” or “capacity” –The level of production that your
establishment(s) could reasonably have expected to attain during the specified periods for all
products manufactured in that establishment using the same manufacturing equipment.
Assume normal operating conditions (i.e., using equipment and machinery in place and ready to
operate; normal operating levels (hours per week/weeks per year) and time for downtime,
maintenance, repair, and cleanup; and a typical or representative product mix).
“Production” ‐‐All production in your establishment(s) in Brazil, Korea, Mexico, or Poland,
including production consumed internally within your firm.
“Shipments”‐‐Shipments of products produced in your establishment(s) in Brazil, Korea, Mexico,
or Poland. Quantities reported should be net of returns.
“Home market commercial shipments”‐‐Shipments, other than internal consumption and
transfers to related firms, within Brazil, Korea, Mexico, or Poland.
“Home market internal consumption/transfers to related firms”‐‐Shipments made to
related firms in Brazil, Korea, Mexico, or Poland, including product consumed internally by your
firm.
“Export shipments”‐‐Shipments to destinations outstide of the country indicacted on page 1
(Brazil, Korea, Mexico, or Poland), including shipments to related firms.
“Inventories”‐‐Finished goods inventory, not raw materials or work‐in‐progress.
Note: As requested in Part I of this questionnaire, please keep all supporting documents/records
used in the preparation of the trade data, as Commission staff may contact your firm regarding
questions on the trade data. The Commission may also request that your company submit copies
of the supporting documents/records (such as production and sales schedules, inventory records,
etc.) used to compile these data.
Business Proprietary
Foreign Producers’ Questionnaire – ESBR (Final)
Page 11
II‐10. Trade data.‐‐Continued.
Quantity (in 1,000 pounds)
Projections1
Actual experience
Calendar year
Item
2014
2015
January‐March
2016
2016
Calendar year
2017
2017
2018
Average production
capacity2 (A)
Beginning‐of‐period
inventories (B)
Production (C)
Home market
shipments:
Internal
consumption/
transfers (D)
Commercial
shipments (E)
Exports to the United
States (F)
Exports to all other
markets3 (G)
Total exports (H)
(should equal F+G)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total shipments (I)
(should equal
D+E+F+G)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
End‐of‐period
inventories (J)
1
Please explain the basis for your firm’s projections.
.
The production capacity reported is based on operating hours per week, weeks per year. Please describe
the methodology used to calculate production capacity, and explain any changes in reported capacity. .
3
Identify principal other export markets. .
2
Business Proprietary
Foreign Producers’ Questionnaire – ESBR (Final)
Page 12
II‐10. Trade data.—Continued.
RECONCILIATION OF SHIPMENTS, PRODUCTION, AND INVENTORY.‐‐Generally, the data reported
for the end‐of‐period inventories (i.e., line J) should be equal to the beginning‐of‐period
inventories (i.e., line B), plus production (i.e., line C), less total shipments (i.e., lines D, E, F, and
G). Please ensure that any differences are not due to data entry errors in completing this form,
but rather actually reflect your firm’s records; and also provide any likely explanations for any
differences (e.g., theft, loss, damage, record systems issues, etc.) if they exist.
Actual experience
Projections
Calendar year
Item
2014
2015
January‐March
2016
2016
2017
Calendar year
2017
2018
B + C – D – E – F –G – J =
should equal zero ("0") or
provide an explanation.1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
Explanation if the calculated fields above are returning values other than zero (i.e., “0”) but are nonetheless
accurate.
II‐11. Exports to the United States not produced by your firm.‐‐Report your firm’s exports to the
United States of ESBR that was produced in Brazil, Korea, Mexico, and/or Poland but not by your
firm during the specified periods.
Quantity (in 1,000 pounds)
Projections1
Actual experience
Calendar year
Item
Exports to the United States
not produced by your firm1
1
2014
2015
January‐June
2016
2016
2017
Calendar year
2017
2018
List the producer(s).
II‐12. Other explanations.‐‐If your firm would like to further explain a response to a question in Part II
that did not provide a narrative box, please note the question number and the explanation in
the space provided below. Please also use this space to highlight any issues your firm had in
providing the data in this section, including but not limited to technical issues with the MS Word
questionnaire.
.
Business Proprietary
Foreign Producers’ Questionnaire – ESBR (Final)
Page 13
Correcting Valid number error messages.‐‐If you are completing a Commission
questionnaire in a country that uses periods (“.”) to delineate multiples of 1000 (e.g., one million would
appear as $1.000.000 instead of as $1,000,000), you may be unable to enter in numbers greater than
999 in numeric form fields. This issues stem from your computer number formatting setting (e.g., not
the MS Word document itself, but the computer from which you are opening up the document). In the
United States commas (,) delineate multiples of 1000 and periods (.) delineate fractions less than one.
Many EU countries use the reverse where multiples of 1000 are delineated with periods (.) and
fractions less than one are delineated with commas (,). The US International Trade Commission’s
questionnaires are set‐up in the United States with the U.S. number formatting. When this formatting
interacts with a computer set to EU number formatting, we believe this may cause this issue.
The solution to this data entry issue is to temporarily change your operating system’s number
formatting to be consistent with the U.S. number formatting system while you complete the
questionnaire.
To temporarily change your computer’s number settings to U.S. settings, please do the following (for
Microsoft Windows Operating system):
START
Control Panel
Region and Language (under Clock, Language, and Region category)
Format tab
Change the Format from your existing one (e.g. “Italian (Italy)”) to “English (United States)” (see
screen shots below)
When you do this the number “twelve million dollars and thirty five cents” would change from
$12.000.000,35 (Italy format) to $12,000,000.35 (U.S. format), and then there will be no conflict with
the USITC foreign producer questionnaire form. When you finish reporting the data then you can close
the questionnaire and switch back to Italy settings.
Business Proprietary
Foreign Producers’ Questionnaire – ESBR (Final)
Page 14
HOW TO FILE YOUR QUESTIONNAIRE RESPONSE
This questionnaire is available as a “fillable” form in MS Word format on the
Commission’s website at:
https://www.usitc.gov/investigations/701731/2017/emulsion_styrene_butadiene_rubber_brazil_korea/final.
htm
Please do not attempt to modify the format or permissions of the questionnaire
document. Please submit the completed questionnaire using one of the methods noted
below. If your firm is unable to complete the MS Word questionnaire or cannot use one
of the electronic methods of submission, please contact the Commission for further
instructions.
• Upload via Secure Drop Box.—Upload the MS Word questionnaire along with a scanned copy of the
signed certification page (page 1) through the Commission’s secure upload facility:
Web address: https://dropbox.usitc.gov/oinv/
Pin: ESBR
• E‐mail.—E‐mail your questionnaire to nathanael.comly@usitc.gov; include a scanned copy of the
signed certification page (page 1). Submitters are strongly encouraged to encrypt nonpublic documents
that are electronically transmitted to the Commission to protect your sensitive information from
unauthorized disclosure. The USITC secure drop‐box system and the Electronic Document Information
System (EDIS) use Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) 140‐2 cryptographic algorithms to
encrypt data in transit. Submitting your nonpublic documents by a means that does not use these
encryption algorithms (such as by email) may subject your firm’s nonpublic information to unauthorized
disclosure during transmission. If you choose a non‐encrypted method of electronic transmission, the
Commission warns you that the risk of such possible unauthorized disclosure is assumed by you and not
by the Commission.
If your firm did not produce or export this product, please fill out page 1, print, sign, and submit a
scanned copy to the Commission.
Parties to this proceeding.—If your firm is a party to this proceeding, you are required to serve a copy of
the completed questionnaire on parties to the proceeding that are subject to administrative protective
order (see 19 CFR § 207.7). A list of such parties may be obtained from the Commission’s Secretary (202‐
205‐1803). A certificate of service must accompany the completed questionnaire you submit (see 19 CFR
§ 207.7). Service of the questionnaire must be made in paper form.
File Type | application/pdf |
File Title | Microsoft Word - ESBR (F)--Foreign producer |
Author | russell.duncan |
File Modified | 2017-04-05 |
File Created | 2017-04-05 |