For Immediate Release: March 17, 2006
FACT SHEET
NAFTA Panel Decision: Fifth Remand Determination
Countervailing Duty Investigation on Softwood Lumber from Canada
On March 17, the NAFTA Panel issued its decision affirming the Department's
Fifth Remand Determination on the countervailing duty (CVD) investigation
on softwood lumber from Canada. The Panel affirmed the de minimis
rate the Department submitted on November 22, 2005. In addition, the Panel
refused Canada's request that it order retroactive revocation of the CVD
order.
Under the NAFTA rules, the Panel should issue its Notice of Final Panel
Action within 11 days. The issuance of that Notice triggers the 30-day
period for filing a request for Extraordinary Challenge Committee. The
current cash deposit rate of 8.70% remains in effect until the litigation
is concluded, i.e., until such time as the ECC, if one is requested, issues
a decision.
The key subsidy programs under review in this case involve the provision
of stumpage softwood timber by Canadian provincial governments
to softwood lumber producers for less than market rates. In the investigation,
the Department measured whether there was a benefit from these programs
by comparing the government stumpage rates in Canada with market rates
charged in the United States, because the available in-country prices
(private prices in the provinces) were determined to be inappropriate
benchmarks. The use of these cross-border comparisons was challenged by
Canada, and a NAFTA panel limited the use of cross-border benchmarks.
In response to the NAFTA panel's original remand, because the administrative
record still lacked any usable private prices for timber in Canada, the
Department used domestic Canadian log prices including internal log prices
and import log prices as benchmarks and determined a subsidy rate of 13.23%.
The NAFTA panel accepted the use of these Canadian log prices as benchmarks,
but remanded the determination to the Department four additional times
for consideration of certain benchmark and calculation issues. As a consequence
of the Panel's decisions, the subsidy rate calculated by the Department
declined with each successive remand determination, i.e., 7.82% -1.88%
- 1.21%, until the de minimis result in the Fifth Remand Determination.
It is that result that today's Panel decision affirms.