Council Implementing Regulation (EU) No 469/2011
of 13 May 2011
amending Regulation (EC) No 1292/2007 imposing a definitive anti-dumping duty on imports of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) film originating in India
THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,
Having regard to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
Having regard to the proposal submitted by the European Commission (‘the Commission’) after having consulted the Advisory Committee,
Whereas:
As indicated in recital 5, the expiry of the countervailing duty on PET film originating in India, on 9 March 2011, requires an adjustment of the anti-dumping duty rates. Indeed, the anti-dumping duty established by Regulation (EC) No 1292/2007 consists of the dumping margin minus the subsidisation margin relating to export subsidies. As the countervailing duty has now expired, the level of the anti-dumping duty rates has to be redetermined.
Pursuant to Article 9(4) of the basic anti-dumping Regulation, the amount of the anti-dumping duty shall not exceed the margin of dumping established but should be less than that margin if such lesser duty would be adequate to remove the injury to the Union industry. Consequently, the duty level should be established at the lowest level of the dumping margin and injury elimination level.
Company | Dumping margin and AD duty rate | Reference |
|---|---|---|
Ester Industries Limited | 29,3 % | Regulation (EC) No 366/2006 |
Garware Polyester Limited | 0 % | Implementing Regulation (EU) No 38/201112 |
Jindal Poly Films Limited | 0 % | Regulation (EC) No 1676/200115 |
Polyplex Corporation Limited | 3,7 % | Regulation (EC) No 366/2006 |
SRF Limited | 15,5 % | Regulation (EC) No 1424/200613 |
Uflex Limited | 3,2 % | Regulation (EC) No 366/200616 |
Vacmet India Limited | 0 % | Implementing Regulation (EU) No 205/201114 |
All other companies (except MTZ Polyfilms) | 29,3 % | Regulation (EC) No 366/2006 |
All known Indian exporting producers of PET film, the Indian authorities and the Union industry of PET film have received disclosure of the above course of action.
Following this disclosure, several Indian companies argued that, as no expiry review was requested for the countervailing measures, the Union industry was apparently in good shape and, therefore, the anti-dumping measures should be terminated as well. In addition, one exporting producer argued that the average dumping margin of the sample should be recalculated since, following an interim review, Garware Polyester Limited, which was one of the companies in the sample, had recently been made subject to a revised individual dumping margin. It should be noted that both claims go beyond the limited scope of the current Regulation which only aims at adjusting the level of the existing anti-dumping duty rates following the expiry of the concurrent countervailing measures on the same imports. Any request to amend the level of the anti-dumping duty rates following an alleged change in circumstances should be presented pursuant to Article 11(3) of the basic Regulation. Therefore, these claims have to be rejected.
One Indian exporting producer argued that, as the countervailing duties had expired, the Commission should now grant a price adjustment to the Indian exporters using the DEPB scheme, which it had refused during the original investigation and interim review investigation. Without prejudice to whether such claim could be examined in the context of the current amending Regulation, it should be noted that, as summarised in recital 50 of Regulation (EC) No 367/2001 and recital 47 of the amending anti-dumping Regulation, the price adjustment claim for DEPB had not been accepted as the producers concerned had not demonstrated that price comparability between domestic and EU sales prices had been affected by the DEPB benefits. That situation has not changed with the expiry of the countervailing duty and this claim, therefore, has to be rejected.
No further substantive comments were received. Consequently, the duty rates should be revised to the levels of the dumping margin, as indicated in the table under recital 8 above,
HAS ADOPTED THIS REGULATION:
Article 1
Article 2(2) of Regulation (EC) No 1292/2007 is replaced by the following:
‘2.
The rate of the definitive anti-dumping duty applicable to the net, free-at-Union-frontier price, before duty, of the products manufactured by the companies listed below shall be as follows:
Company
Definitive Duty(%)
TARIC Additional Code
Ester Industries Limited
75-76, Amrit Nagar,
Behind South Extension Part-1,
New Delhi — 110 003,
India
29,3
A026
Garware Polyester Limited
Garware House,
50-A, Swami Nityanand Marg,
Vile Parle (East),
Mumbai 400 057,
India
0
A028
Jindal Poly Films Limited
56 Hanuman Road,
New Delhi 110 001,
India
0
A030
Polyplex Corporation Limited
B-37, Sector-1,
Noida 201 301,
Dist. Gautam Budh Nagar,
Uttar Pradesh,
India
3,7
A032
SRF Limited
Block C, Sector 45,
Greenwood City,
Gurgaon 122 003, Haryana,
India
15,5
A753
Uflex Limited
A-1, Sector 60,
Noida 201 301, (U.P.),
India
3,2
A027
Vacmet India Limited
Anant Plaza, IInd Floor, 4/117-2A,
Civil Lines, Church Road,
Agra 282 002, Uttar Pradesh,
India
0
A992
All other companies (except MTZ Polyfilms Limited – TARIC additional code A03117)29,3
A999’
Article 2
This Regulation shall enter into force on the day following its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union.
This Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States.
Done at Brussels, 13 May 2011.
For the Council
The President
Martonyi J.