[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 66 (Wednesday, April 6, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 19049-19052]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-8217]


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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

International Trade Administration

[A-570-894]


Certain Tissue Paper Products From the People's Republic of 
China: Notice of Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative 
Review

AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration, 
Department of Commerce.

SUMMARY: The Department is conducting an administrative review of the 
antidumping duty (AD) order on certain tissue paper products (tissue 
paper) from the People's Republic of China (PRC) for the period of 
review (POR) of March 1, 2009, to February 28, 2010, with respect to 
Max Fortune (Vietnam) Paper Products Company Limited (MFVN). MFVN 
claimed in this administrative review that it made no sales/shipments 
during the POR of tissue paper products produced from Chinese-origin 
jumbo rolls/sheets. Contrary to MFVN's claim and based on our 
verification findings, we preliminarily determine, as adverse facts 
available (AFA), that during the POR MFVN made sales/shipments to the 
United States of tissue paper products produced using Chinese-origin 
jumbo rolls/sheets. Further, based on AFA, we find that no substantial 
transformation is occurring as a result of further processing in 
Vietnam, and thus the country of origin for AD purposes of the tissue 
paper products produced by MFVN from Chinese-origin jumbo rolls/sheets 
is China.
    If these preliminary results are adopted in our final results of 
this review, we will instruct U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) 
to collect cash deposits on all future entries of tissue paper produced 
and/or exported by MFVN.
    Interested parties are invited to comment on these preliminary 
results. We will issue the final results no later than 120 days from 
the date of publication of this notice.

DATES: Effective Date: April 6, 2011.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brian Smith or Gemal Brangman, AD/CVD 
Operations, Office 2, Import Administration, International Trade 
Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th Street and 
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20230; telephone (202) 482-
1766 or (202) 482-3773, respectively.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Background

    On March 30, 2005, the Department published in the Federal Register 
the antidumping duty order on certain tissue paper products from the 
PRC. See Notice of Amended Final Determination of Sales at Less than 
Fair Value and Antidumping Duty Order: Certain Tissue Paper Products 
From the People's Republic of China, 70 FR 16223 (March 30, 2005) 
(Tissue Paper Order). On March 1, 2010, the Department published a 
notice of opportunity to request an administrative review of the 
antidumping duty order on certain tissue paper products from the PRC. 
See Antidumping or Countervailing Duty Order, Finding, or Suspended 
Investigation; Opportunity To Request Administrative Review, 75 FR 9162 
(March 1, 2010).
    In response, the petitioner \1\ timely requested an administrative 
review of the antidumping duty order on certain tissue paper products 
from the PRC with respect to entries of the subject merchandise during 
the POR from MFVN. Therefore, on April 21, 2010, the Department 
initiated an administrative review of MFVN.\2\ See Initiation of 
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty Administrative Reviews and Request 
for Revocation in Part, 75 FR 22107 (April 27, 2010). MFVN is a company 
located in Vietnam which exports tissue paper to the U.S. market 
through its parent company based in Hong Kong--Max Fortune Industrial 
Limited (Max Fortune HK). MFVN is also a respondent in an on-going 
anti-circumvention inquiry involving the subject merchandise from the 
PRC.\3\
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    \1\ The petitioner is Seaman Paper Company of Massachusetts, 
Inc.
    \2\ Also on this date, the Department initiated a review of Max 
Fortune Industrial Limited, Max Fortune (FZ) Paper Products Co., 
Ltd. (formerly known as Max Fortune (FETDE) Paper Products Co., 
Ltd.), Max Fortune HK, and Fujian Provincial Shaowu City Huaguang 
Special Craft Co., Ltd. based on the petitioner's timely request for 
review of these companies, but subsequently rescinded the review 
with respect to these companies pursuant to the petitioner's timely 
withdrawal of its request for review. See Certain Tissue Paper 
Products From the People's Republic of China: Notice of Partial 
Rescission and Extension of Time Limit for Preliminary Results of 
2009-2010 Administrative Review, 75 FR 73040 (November 29, 2010) 
(PRC Tissue Paper from China Partial Rescission Notice).
    \3\ On March 29, 2010, the Department initiated an anti-
circumvention inquiry on certain imports of tissue paper from 
Vietnam produced and/or exported by MFVN. See Certain Tissue Paper 
Products From the People's Republic of China: Initiation of Anti-
circumvention Inquiry, 75 FR 17127 (April 5, 2010).
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    In its June 28, 2010, response to the Department's April 23, 2010, 
questionnaire in the anti-circumvention inquiry (June 28 Response), 
MFVN claimed that it had not exported tissue paper to the United States 
produced from jumbo rolls or cut sheets imported from the PRC since 
January 2008. MFVN also filed this questionnaire response on the record 
of this administrative review. Similarly, in its August 17, 2010, 
response to the Department's May 7, 2010, questionnaire in this review, 
MFVN claimed that it did not export subject merchandise from the PRC or 
Vietnam during the POR.
    The Department postponed the preliminary results in this review 
until March 31, 2011, in order to have sufficient time to conduct 
verification of MFVN's ``no-shipment'' claim. See PRC.

Tissue Paper Partial Rescission Notice.

    Pursuant to 19 CFR 351.221(b)(3) and 351.225(f)(iii)(2), the 
Department conducted a verification of the ``no-shipment'' claim MFVN 
made in this administrative review and in the anti-circumvention 
inquiry, and met with Vietnamese Customs on this matter in December 
2010. Both the verification report and meeting memorandum are on the 
record of this segment,\4\ and are available in the Central Records 
Unit (CRU) of the Department's main building.
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    \4\ See Memorandum to The File entitled ``Verification of the 
Questionnaire Response of Max Fortune (VN) Paper Products Co., Ltd. 
(MFVN) and Its Affiliates in the Anti-circumvention Inquiry and 
2009-2010 Administrative Review of Certain Tissue Paper Products 
from the People's Republic of China (PRC),'' dated March 31, 2011 
(MFVN Verification Report); and Memorandum to The File entitled 
``Meeting with Vietnamese Customs,'' dated March 31, 2011.
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Period of Review

    The period of review (POR) is March 1, 2009, through February 28, 
2010.

Scope of the Order

    The tissue paper products covered by this order are cut-to-length 
sheets of tissue paper having a basis weight not exceeding 29 grams per 
square meter. Tissue paper products subject to this order may or may 
not be bleached, dye-colored, surface-colored, glazed, surface 
decorated or printed, sequined, crinkled, embossed, and/or die cut. The 
tissue paper subject to this order is in the form of cut-to-length 
sheets of tissue paper with a width equal to or greater than one-half 
(0.5) inch. Subject tissue paper may be flat or folded, and may be 
packaged by banding or wrapping with paper or film, by placing in 
plastic or film bags, and/or by placing in boxes for distribution and 
use by the ultimate

[[Page 19050]]

consumer. Packages of tissue paper subject to this order may consist 
solely of tissue paper of one color and/or style, or may contain 
multiple colors and/or styles.
    The merchandise subject to this order does not have specific 
classification numbers assigned to them under the Harmonized Tariff 
Schedule of the United States (HTSUS). Subject merchandise may be under 
one or more of several different subheadings, including: 4802.30, 
4802.54, 4802.61, 4802.62, 4802.69, 4804.31.1000, 4804.31.2000, 
4804.31.4020, 4804.31.4040, 4804.31.6000, 4804.39, 4805.91.1090, 
4805.91.5000, 4805.91.7000, 4806.40, 4808.30, 4808.90, 4811.90, 
4823.90, 4802.50.00, 4802.90.00, 4805.91.90, 9505.90.40. The tariff 
classifications are provided for convenience and customs purposes; 
however, the written description of the scope of this order is 
dispositive.\5\
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    \5\ On January 30, 2007, at the direction of CBP, the Department 
added the following HTSUS classifications to the AD/CVD module for 
tissue paper: 4802.54.3100, 4802.54.6100, and 4823.90.6700. However, 
we note that the six-digit classifications for these numbers were 
already listed in the scope.
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    Excluded from the scope of this order are the following tissue 
paper products: (1) Tissue paper products that are coated in wax, 
paraffin, or polymers, of a kind used in floral and food service 
applications; (2) tissue paper products that have been perforated, 
embossed, or die-cut to the shape of a toilet seat, i.e., disposable 
sanitary covers for toilet seats; (3) toilet or facial tissue stock, 
towel or napkin stock, paper of a kind used for household or sanitary 
purposes, cellulose wadding, and webs of cellulose fibers (HTSUS 
4803.00.20.00 and 4803.00.40.00).

Separate Rates

    In every case conducted by the Department involving the PRC, the 
PRC has been treated as a non-market economy (NME) country. In 
accordance with section 771(18)(C)(i) of the Act, any determination 
that a foreign country is an NME country shall remain in effect until 
revoked by the administering authority. See, e.g., Brake Rotors From 
the People's Republic of China: Final Results and Partial Rescission of 
the 2004/2005 Administrative Review and Notice of Rescission of 2004/
2005 New Shipper Review, 71 FR 66304 (November 14, 2006). None of the 
parties to this proceeding have contested such treatment.
    In proceedings involving NME countries, the Department begins with 
a rebuttable presumption that all companies within the country are 
subject to government control, and thus, should be assigned a single 
antidumping duty deposit rate unless an exporter can affirmatively 
demonstrate an absence of government control, both in law (de jure) and 
in fact (de facto), with respect to its export activities. See Final 
Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Sparklers from the 
People's Republic of China, 56 FR 20588, 20589 (May 6, 1991). MFVN is a 
company located in Vietnam and is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Max 
Fortune HK. Max Fortune HK is a wholly foreign-owned company registered 
and located in Hong Kong. See MFVN Verification Report at pages 1 and 
7, and Verification Exhibit 1A. Consequently, no additional separate-
rate analysis is necessary for MFVN. See Notice of Final Determination 
of Sales at Less than Fair Value: Bicycles From the People's Republic 
of China, 61 FR 19026 (April 30, 1996). Accordingly, we are treating 
MFVN as separate from the NME entity.

Adverse Facts Available

    Section 776(a) of the Act, provides that, if (1) necessary 
information is not available on the record or (2) an interested party: 
(A) Withholds information that has been requested by the Department; 
(B) fails to provide such information in a timely manner or in the form 
or manner requested subject to sections 782(c)(1) and (e) of the Act; 
(C) significantly impedes a proceeding under the antidumping statute; 
or (D) provides such information but the information cannot be 
verified, the Department shall, subject to subsection 782(d) of the 
Act, use facts otherwise available in reaching the applicable 
determination.
    Furthermore, section 776(b) of the Act states that if the 
Department ``finds that an interested party has failed to cooperate by 
not acting to the best of its ability to comply with a request for 
information from the administering authority * * *, the administering 
authority * * *, in reaching the applicable determination under this 
title, may use an inference that is adverse to the interests of that 
party in selecting from among the facts otherwise available.'' See also 
Statement of Administrative Action accompanying the Uruguay Round 
Agreements Act, H. Rep. No. 103-316 at 870 (1994) (SAA). It is the 
Department's practice to make an adverse inference ``to ensure that the 
party does not obtain a more favorable result by failing to cooperate 
than if it had cooperated fully.'' Id. An adverse inference may include 
reliance on information derived from the petition, the final 
determination in the investigation, any previous review, or any other 
information placed on the record. See section 776(b) of the Act.
    As mentioned above, MFVN claimed in response to the Department's 
questionnaire in this administrative review that during the POR it did 
not export to the United States tissue paper products produced using 
Chinese-origin jumbo rolls/sheets. In its June 28 Response, MFVN also 
stated that although it was possible that it sold tissue paper produced 
from Chinese-origin jumbo rolls and/or cut sheets before and during 
2007, it could conclusively demonstrate that as of January 1, 2008, it 
did not do so. See MFVN's June 28 Response at pages 3 and 12. In 
addition, MFVN stated that it could not provide any information with 
respect to the production of the merchandise exported from Vietnam 
during the period January 1, 2005, to December 31, 2007, but it could 
do so for the period beginning January 1, 2008, through the POR. See 
June 28 Response at pages 3 and 12. However, as explained further 
below, MFVN was unable to demonstrate through its accounting records at 
verification that all of the tissue paper it sold to the United States 
during the POR was produced using non-Chinese-origin jumbo rolls or cut 
sheets. See MFVN Verification Report at pages 35-38.
    According to MFVN's accounting records, as of the beginning of the 
POR, MFVN had significant amounts of tissue paper in finished goods and 
work-in-progress (WIP) inventory and this entire inventory was produced 
and/or purchased during 2008 or earlier. See MFVN Verification Report 
at pages 36-38. MFVN was unable to provide accounting records for its 
production of tissue paper prior to January 1, 2009, and therefore was 
unable to show the source of the material it used in the production of 
tissue paper in inventory as of January 1, 2009. As the verification 
report shows, MFVN withdrew some of that inventory for sale during the 
POR. See MFVN Verification Report at pages 35-36.
    As a result, for tissue paper exported by MFVN to the United States 
on or after January 1, 2009, which was withdrawn from, or produced from 
merchandise in, finished goods or WIP inventory as of January 1, 2009, 
the Department preliminarily finds that MFVN failed to demonstrate that 
it did not use Chinese-origin jumbo rolls and/or cut sheets in the 
production of such merchandise. As discussed further below, based on 
AFA, the Department preliminarily finds that such tissue paper exported 
to the United States was

[[Page 19051]]

produced from Chinese-origin jumbo rolls and/or cut sheets.
    Normally, in administrative reviews involving situations where 
subject merchandise is further processed in a third country prior to 
importation into the United States, the Department conducts a 
substantial transformation analysis to determine the proper country of 
origin for antidumping/countervailing-duty (AD/CVD) purposes, either in 
the context of a scope proceeding or an administrative review. See 
Stainless Steel Plate in Coils from Belgium: Final Results of 
Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 69 FR 74495 (December 14, 
2004). However, because MFVN consistently claimed that no Chinese-
origin jumbo rolls/sheets were used in the production of the tissue 
paper products it exported to the United States during the POR, in this 
instance, the Department was precluded from collecting and analyzing 
the information necessary to conduct a substantial transformation 
analysis to determine the proper country of origin for AD/CVD purposes. 
Therefore, because MFVN did not provide the Department with necessary 
information with respect to the production of its tissue paper in 
inventory as of January 1, 2009, the Department's ability to conduct 
the administrative review of MFVN was impeded, and the application of 
facts available pursuant to sections 776(a)(1) and 776(a)(2) of the Act 
is warranted with respect to exports of tissue paper from MFVN to the 
United States during the POR.
    Because MFVN did not provide verifiable information demonstrating 
that all of its tissue paper sales to the United States during the POR 
were made from non-Chinese-origin jumbo rolls and/or cut sheets, as 
claimed, the Department also concludes that MFVN did not act to the 
best of its ability in this review. MFVN's inability to provide its 
production accounting records for the Department's review at 
verification is unreasonable, as a company is expected to maintain such 
records in the normal course of business. For companies doing business 
in Vietnam, the Vietnamese Government has issued regulations which 
require companies like MFVN to retain such records for up to ten 
years.\6\ For example, Article 31 of a regulation issued by the 
Vietnamese government on May 31, 2004, states that companies doing 
business in Vietnam must retain their accounting records for at least 
ten years. See Id. This is especially true in this case where MFVN 
demonstrated at verification that it maintained such records for both 
2009 and 2010. See MFVN Verification Report at pages 21, 27-28, and 36-
37. MFVN claimed it made no shipments of Chinese-origin tissue paper 
during the POR, but then failed to provide the necessary documentation 
at verification, as requested, to substantiate this claim. Therefore, 
pursuant to section 776(b) of the Act, an adverse inference is 
warranted because MFVN failed to provide information the Department 
needed to make its determination. Accordingly, as AFA, the Department 
determines that during the POR MFVN exported to the United States 
tissue paper products produced from Chinese-origin jumbo rolls/sheets. 
Further, as AFA, the Department determines that tissue paper products 
produced in Vietnam by MFVN from Chinese-origin jumbo rolls/sheets are 
not substantially transformed as a result of further processing in 
Vietnam, and thus, the proper country of origin of such goods for AD 
purposes is China.
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    \6\ See Memorandum to the File dated March 31, 2011 which 
contains the following document, ``Decree No. 129/2004/ND-CP of May 
31, 2004 Detailing and Guiding the Implementation of a Number of 
Articles of the Accounting Law, Applicable to Business Activities,'' 
issued by the Government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam on May 
31, 2004.
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    Because the Department preliminarily finds that tissue paper 
products produced by MFVN from Chinese-origin jumbo rolls/sheets are 
not substantially transformed as a result of further processing in 
Vietnam and thus constitute subject merchandise, we must assign a rate 
to MFVN for cash deposit purposes with respect to future entries. As 
discussed, below, the Department is preliminarily assigning a rate of 
112.64 percent to MFVN.

Selection of Adverse Facts Available Rate

    Section 776(b) of the Act authorizes the Department to use as AFA, 
information derived from the petition, the final determination in the 
less-than-fair-value (LTFV) investigation, any previous administrative 
review, or any information placed on the record. In selecting an AFA 
rate in reviews, the Department's practice has been to assign the 
highest margin on the record of any segment of the proceeding. See, 
e.g., Freshwater Crawfish Tail Meat from the People's Republic of 
China: Notice of Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative 
Review, 68 FR 19504 (April 21, 2003). The Court of International Trade 
(CIT) and the Federal Circuit have consistently upheld the Department's 
practice in this regard. See Rhone Poulenc, Inc. v. United States, 899 
F.2d 1185, 1190 (Fed. Cir. 1990) (Rhone Poulenc); NSK Ltd. v. United 
States, 346 F. Supp. 2d 1312, 1335 (CIT 2004) (upholding a 73.55 
percent total AFA rate, the highest available dumping margin from a 
different respondent in a LTFV investigation); see also Kompass Food 
Trading Int'l v. United States, 24 CIT 678, 689 (July 31, 2000) 
(upholding a 51.16 percent total AFA rate, the highest available 
dumping margin from a different, fully cooperative respondent); and 
Shanghai Taoen International Trading Co., Ltd. v. United States, 360 F. 
Supp 2d 1339, 1348 (CIT 2005) (upholding a 223.01 percent total AFA 
rate, the highest available dumping margin from a different respondent 
in a previous administrative review).
    The Department's practice when selecting an adverse rate from among 
the possible sources of information is to ensure that the margin is 
sufficiently adverse ``as to effectuate the purpose of the facts 
available rule to induce respondents to provide the Department with 
complete and accurate information in a timely manner.'' See Static 
Random Access Memory Semiconductors from Taiwan; Final Determination of 
Sales at Less than Fair Value, 63 FR 8909, 8932 (February 23, 1998). As 
discussed above, the Department's practice also ensures ``that the 
party does not obtain a more favorable result by failing to cooperate 
than if it had cooperated fully.'' See SAA at 870; see also Final 
Determination of Sales at Less than Fair Value: Certain Frozen and 
Canned Warmwater Shrimp from Brazil, 69 FR 76910 (December 23, 2004), 
and accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum at Comment 22.
    Consistent with the statute, court precedent, and numerous other 
cases,\7\ as AFA, we are assigning to exports of tissue paper from 
MFVN, as described in the ``Cash Deposit Requirements'' section below, 
the highest rate on the record of any segment of this proceeding, i.e., 
112.64 percent. As discussed further below, this rate has been 
corroborated.
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    \7\ See, e.g., Fresh Garlic from the People's Republic of China: 
Preliminary Results and Partial Rescission of Antidumping Duty 
Administrative Review and Preliminary Results of New Shipper 
Reviews, 70 FR 69942, 69946 (November 18, 2005); and Fresh Garlic 
from the People's Republic of China: Final Results and Partial 
Rescission of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review and Final 
Results of New Shipper Reviews, 71 FR 26329, 26330 (May 4, 2006).
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Corroboration of Adverse Fact Available Rate

    Section 776(c) of the Act provides that when the Department selects 
from among the facts otherwise available and relies on ``secondary 
information,'' the Department shall, to the extent

[[Page 19052]]

practicable, corroborate that information from independent sources 
reasonably at the Department's disposal. The SAA states that 
``corroborate'' means to determine that the information used has 
probative value. See SAA at 870. The Department has determined that to 
have probative value, information must be reliable and relevant. See 
Certain Tissue Paper Products from the People's Republic of China: 
Final Results and Final Rescission, In Part, of Antidumping Duty 
Administrative Review, 72 FR 58642 (October 16, 2007), and accompanying 
Issues and Decision Memorandum at Comment 6.
    To be considered corroborated, information must be found to be both 
reliable and relevant. The AFA rate of 112.64 percent that we are 
applying in the current review represents the highest rate from the 
petition in the LTFV investigation segment of this proceeding. See 
Tissue Paper Order. The Department corroborated the information used to 
calculate the 112.64 percent rate in the LTFV investigation. See Notice 
of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Certain Tissue 
Paper Products from the People's Republic of China, 70 FR 7475 
(February 14, 2005). Furthermore, this rate was applied in several 
administrative reviews subsequent to the LTFV investigation, and no 
information has been presented in this segment of the proceeding that 
calls into question the reliability of this information. See Certain 
Tissue Paper from the People's Republic of China: Preliminary Results 
and Preliminary Rescission of the 2007-2008 Administrative Review and 
Intent Not to Revoke Order in Part, 74 FR 15449 (April 6, 2009) 
(unchanged in Certain Tissue Paper Products from the People's Republic 
of China: Final Results and Partial Rescission of the 2007-2008 
Antidumping Duty Administrative Review and Determination Not to Revoke 
in Part, 74 FR 52176, 52177 (October 9, 2009); and Certain Tissue Paper 
from the People's Republic of China: Preliminary Results of the 2008-
2009 Administrative Review, 75 FR 18812 (April 13, 2010) (unchanged in 
Certain Tissue Paper Products from the People's Republic of China: 
Final Results of the 2008-2009 Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 
75 FR 63806, 63807 (October 18, 2010). Thus, the Department finds that 
the information is reliable.
    With respect to the relevance aspect of corroboration, the 
Department will consider information reasonably at its disposal to 
determine whether a margin continues to have relevance. Where 
circumstances indicate that the selected margin is not appropriate as 
AFA, the Department will disregard the margin and determine an 
appropriate margin. See Fresh Cut Flowers from Mexico: Final Results of 
Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 61 FR 6812, 6814 (February 22, 
1996) (where the Department disregarded the highest margin in that case 
as adverse best information available (the predecessor to facts 
available) because the margin was based on another company's 
uncharacteristic business expense, resulting in an unusually high 
margin). Similarly, the Department does not apply a margin that has 
been discredited. See D & L Supply Co. v. United States, 113 F.3d 1220, 
1221 (Fed. Cir. 1997) (finding that the Department cannot use a margin 
that has been judicially invalidated in its calculations). The AFA rate 
we are applying for the instant review was calculated based on export 
price information and production data from the petition, as well as the 
most appropriate surrogate value information available to the 
Department during the LTFV investigation. As there is no information on 
the record of this review that demonstrates this rate is not 
appropriate for use as AFA, we determine this rate has relevance.
    Because the AFA rate, 112.64 percent, is both reliable and 
relevant, we determine that it has probative value. As a result, we 
determine that the 112.64 percent rate is corroborated to the extent 
practicable for the purposes of this administrative review, in 
accordance with section 776(c) of the Act, and may reasonably be 
applied as AFA to exports of tissue paper from MFVN for cash deposit 
purposes.

Preliminary Results of Review

    As a result of our review, we preliminarily determine that exports 
of tissue paper from Vietnam produced by MFVN using Chinese-origin 
jumbo rolls and/or cut sheets constitute subject merchandise, and 
therefore the following cash deposit rate applies to MFVN:

               Certain Tissue Paper Products From the PRC
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                              Margin
                    Producer/exporter                        (percent)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Max Fortune (Vietnam) Paper Products Company Limited              112.64
 (MFVN).................................................
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Cash Deposit Requirements

    The following cash deposit requirements will be effective upon 
publication of the notice of final results of the administrative review 
for all shipments of certain tissue paper products from the PRC 
entered, or withdrawn from warehouse, for consumption on or after the 
date of publication, as provided by section 751(a)(2)(C) of the Act: 
(1) A cash deposit rate of 112.64 percent will be required for tissue 
paper produced and/or exported by MFVN; (2) for previously reviewed or 
investigated companies not listed above that have separate rates, the 
cash deposit rate will continue to be the company-specific rate 
published for the most recent period; (3) for all other PRC exporters 
of subject merchandise, which have not been found to be entitled to a 
separate rate, the cash deposit rate will be PRC-wide rate of 112.64 
percent; and (4) for all non-PRC exporters of subject merchandise, the 
cash deposit rate will be the rate applicable to the PRC exporter that 
supplied that non-PRC exporter. These deposit requirements, when 
imposed, shall remain in effect until further notice.
    This administrative review and notice are in accordance with 
sections 751(a)(1) and 777(i) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.221(b)(4).

    Dated: March 31, 2011.
Ronald K. Lorentzen,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
[FR Doc. 2011-8217 Filed 4-5-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P