                             Slip Op. 20– 

              UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
__________________________________________
                                           :
WILMAR TRADING PTE LTD.,                   :
PT WILMAR BIOENERGI INDONESIA, and         :
WILMAR OLEO NORTH AMERICA LLC,             :
                                           :
                  Plaintiffs,              :
                                           :
      and                                  :
                                           :
GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF              : Before: Richard K. Eaton, Judge
INDONESIA and P.T. MUSIM MAS,              :
                                           : Consol. Court No. 18-00006
                  Consolidated Plaintiffs, :
                                           :
      v.                                   :
                                           :
UNITED STATES,                             :
                                           :
                  Defendant,               :
                                           :
      and                                  :
                                           :
NATIONAL BIODIESEL BOARD FAIR              :
TRADE COALITION,                           :
                                           :
                  Defendant-Intervenor.    :
__________________________________________:

                                   OPINION and ORDER

[U.S. Department of Commerce’s final determination is remanded.]

                                                          Dated: $XJXVW

        Devin S. Sikes, Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP, of Washington, DC, argued for
Plaintiffs. With him on the brief was Bernd G. Janzen.

       Lynn G. Kamarck, Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP, of Washington, DC, argued for
Consolidated Plaintiff Government of the Republic of Indonesia. With her on the brief were
Matthew R. Nicely and Julia K. Eppard.

        Kelly A. Slater, Appleton Luff Pte Ltd, of Washington, DC, argued for Consolidated
Plaintiff P.T. Musim Mas. With her on the brief were Edmund W. Sim, and Jay Y. Nee.
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                 Page 2


       Joshua E. Kurland, Trial Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S.
Department of Justice, of Washington, DC, argued for Defendant. With him on the brief were
Joseph H. Hunt, Assistant Attorney General, Jeanne E. Davidson, Director, and L. Misha Preheim,
Assistant Director. Of counsel on the brief was Catherine D. Miller, Attorney, Office of the Chief
Counsel for Trade Enforcement & Compliance, U.S. Department of Commerce, of Washington,
DC.

      Myles S. Getlan, Cassidy Levy Kent (USA) LLP, of Washington, DC, argued for
Defendant-Intervenor. With him on the brief were Jack A. Levy and Thomas M. Beline.


       Eaton, Judge: This dispute arises from the imposition of countervailing duties on certain

shipments of biodiesel fuel 1 from the Republic of Indonesia following the United States

Department of Commerce’s (“Commerce” or the “Department”) determination that the

Government of the Republic of Indonesia (the “Government of Indonesia”) had provided subsidies

to the plaintiff biodiesel producer-exporters. According to Commerce, these subsidies took the

form of (1) monetary grants from Indonesia’s Biodiesel Subsidy Fund, and (2) goods supplied for

less than adequate remuneration resulting from the imposition of two export taxes on biodiesel’s

main input—crude palm oil. The period of investigation was January 1, 2016, through December

31, 2016. See Biodiesel From the Rep. of Indonesia, 82 Fed. Reg. 53,471 (Dep’t Commerce Nov.

16, 2017) (“Final Determination”) and accompanying Issues and Dec. Mem. (Nov. 6, 2017), P.R.

240 (“Final IDM”).

       Plaintiffs Wilmar Trading Pte Ltd., PT Wilmar Bioenergi Indonesia, and Wilmar Oleo

North America LLC (collectively, “Wilmar”); and Consolidated Plaintiffs the Government of

Indonesia and P.T. Musim Mas (“Musim Mas”) challenge Commerce’s final countervailing duty




       1
               Generally, the subject biodiesel fuel is made primarily from crude palm oil and is
used for the same purposes as petrodiesel made from crude oil. See, e.g., Biodiesel From Argentina
and Indonesia, 82 Fed. Reg. 18,423, app. I (Dep’t Commerce Apr. 19, 2017) (notice of initiation
of countervailing duty investigations). For example, both products can be used as fuel for diesel
engines.
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                    Page 3


determination. Defendant the United States on behalf of Commerce (“Defendant”), and Defendant-

Intervenor the National Biodiesel Board Fair Trade Coalition (“Petitioner” or “Defendant-

Intervenor”), ask the court to uphold Commerce’s Final Determination.

          Jurisdiction is found under 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(i) (2012) and 28 U.S.C. § 1581(c)

(2012).

          For the reasons set forth below, the court holds that two of Commerce’s three

countervailability findings are supported by substantial evidence and otherwise in accordance with

law. First, Commerce did not err in finding that the Government of Indonesia provided

countervailable financial contributions in the form of monetary grants to Wilmar and Musim Mas

through the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund. Second, Commerce did not err in finding that the Government

of Indonesia’s 2015 export levy 2 on crude palm oil (the “2015 Export Levy”) provided

countervailable financial contributions in the form of the provision of goods for less than adequate

remuneration.

          The court further finds, however, that Commerce’s determination that Indonesia’s 1994

differential export tariff 3 (the “1994 Export Tariff”) on crude palm oil resulted in a financial

contribution in the form of goods provided for less than adequate remuneration, is neither

supported by substantial evidence nor in accordance with law.




          2
               For purposes of this case, a levy is a flat tax applied to all export sales of crude
palm oil. See Government of Indonesia Initial Questionnaire Resp. (June 29, 2017), P.R. 120
(“GOI Initial Quest. Resp.”) at 67; GOI Initial Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt. 12 (June 29, 2017), P.R. 132,
at Ex. GOI-CPO-5 (Minister of Finance Regulation No. 133/PMK.05/2015).
          3
               For purposes of this case, a tariff is a changeable rate tax applied to certain export
sales of crude palm oil. See GOI Initial Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt. 13 (June 29, 2017), P.R. 133, at Ex.
GOI-CPO-15.
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                   Page 4


                                        BACKGROUND

       Over more than two decades, the Government of Indonesia has taken both direct and

indirect measures to advance domestic biofuel production. At issue in this case are (1) direct

payments from the Government of Indonesia to Plaintiffs, and (2) two separate export taxes that,

for Commerce, restrained the export of crude palm oil, thus increasing the domestic supply of this

input and driving down its price so that it was more cheaply available to Plaintiffs.

       Biodiesel costs more than petrodiesel in an open market. In order to market biodiesel at a

price competitive with petrodiesel, Indonesia set up a program to pay biodiesel producers an

amount roughly equal to the difference in price between the cheap petrodiesel and the expensive

biodiesel. Thus, Indonesia subsidized biodiesel so that it could be sold at a price competitive with

the price of petrodiesel. Plaintiffs took advantage of this program.

       In addition, Indonesia, over the years, enacted export taxes that, according to Commerce,

had the effect of keeping crude palm oil in the country, thus increasing its supply and lowering its

domestic price. Commerce determined that the export taxes lowered the domestic price of crude

palm oil and consequently provided Plaintiffs with crude palm oil “for less than adequate

remuneration.” See 19 U.S.C. § 1677(5)(D), (E)(iv).



I.     Direct Payments Through the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund

       In 2015, the Government of Indonesia implemented a regulatory scheme intended to

support its biodiesel industry. One regulation created the “Biodiesel Subsidy Fund.” See

Government of Indonesia Initial Questionnaire Resp. (June 29, 2017), P.R. 120 (“GOI Initial

Quest. Resp.”) at 13; GOI Initial Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt. 8 (June 29, 2017), P.R. 128, at Ex. GOI-

BSF-1) (Presidential Regulation No. 61/2015). The Biodiesel Subsidy Fund (or the “Fund”)
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                      Page 5


directly paid biodiesel producers amounts in addition to the sales price they received from their

customers. See GOI Initial Quest. Resp. at 15. The monies for these Fund payments were wholly

provided for by the proceeds of the Government of Indonesia’s 2015 Export Levy on crude palm

oil. See Government of Indonesia Suppl. Questionnaire Resp. (Aug. 7, 2017), P.R. 184 (“GOI

Suppl. Quest. Resp.”) at 1.



II.     Export Restraints on Crude Palm Oil

       A.      2015 Export Levy

       At the same time the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund was created, the Government of Indonesia

enacted the 2015 Export Levy, at $50 per metric ton on all exports of crude palm oil. See GOI

Initial Quest. Resp. at 67; GOI Initial Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt. 12 (June 29, 2017), P.R. 132, at Ex.

GOI-CPO-5 (Minister of Finance Regulation No. 133/PMK.05/2015). This levy is collected from

producers on their export sales of crude palm oil. The levies paid are then deposited into the Fund.

Crude palm oil is a major input for biodiesel. See Preliminary Decision Mem. (Aug. 21, 2017),

P.R. 199 (“Prelim. Dec. Mem.”) at 10 (“[Crude palm oil] is the key feedstock from which biodiesel

is manufactured in the Indonesian biodiesel industry.”); GOI Initial Quest. Resp. at 65-66 (“[Crude

palm oil] can be used for . . . non-food industries (fatty acids, fatty alcohol, glycerin, biofuels).”).

The Government of Indonesia represented that “[p]roceeds from this export levy are specifically

earmarked for the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund . . . [and are] the Fund’s exclusive source of funding.”

GOI Initial Quest. Resp. at 67.

       B.      1994 Differential Export Tariff

       Prior to the 2015 Export Levy, the Government of Indonesia had implemented another tax

on crude palm oil: the 1994 Differential Export Tariff. See, e.g., GOI Initial Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt.
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                    Page 6


11 (June 29, 2017), P.R. 131, at Ex. GOI-CPO-3 (Minister of Finance Regulation No.

136/PMK.010/2015); GOI Initial Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt. 14 (June 29, 2017), P.R. 134, at Ex. GOI-

CPO-23 (Minister of Finance Regulation No. 140/PMK.010/2016 app. I). Under the 1994 Export

Tariff’s schedules, a tariff is imposed on exports of crude palm oil when the export price of crude

palm oil exceeds $750 per metric ton. See GOI Initial Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt. 13 (June 29, 2017),

P.R. 133, at Ex. GOI-CPO-15. No tariff is collected unless the threshold of $750 per metric ton is

reached. See GOI Initial Quest. Resp. at 66; GOI Initial Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt. 13, at Ex. GOI-CPO-

15. The export price of crude palm oil changes from year to year, or even month to month.



III.    Commerce’s Investigation

       On March 23, 2017, Petitioner and Defendant-Intervenor National Biodiesel Board Fair

Trade Coalition, a U.S. trade association comprised of domestic producers of biodiesel, 4 filed a

countervailing duty petition with the Department and the United States International Trade

Commission (“ITC”), covering imports of biodiesel from Indonesia. See Prelim. Dec. Mem. at 1;

Biodiesel From Argentina and Indonesia, 82 Fed. Reg. 22,155 (Int’l Trade Comm’n May 12, 2017)

(“ITC Prelim. Determination”); Biodiesel from Argentina and Indonesia, Inv. Nos. 701-TA-571-

572, 731-TA-1347-1348, USITC Pub. 4690 (May 2017) (Preliminary). According to Petitioner,

some of the cheap, subsidized biodiesel entered the U.S. market, and injured the domestic U.S.

renewable fuel industry. See ITC Prelim. Determination, 82 Fed. Reg. at 22,155 (“[Before the ITC,

Petitioner alleged] that an industry in the United States [was] materially injured or threatened with


       4
                The majority of American biodiesel is ethanol (corn-based). See, e.g., U.S.
Bionergy      Statistics,   U.S.     DEP’T     AGRIC.     (last    updated     Jul.    21, 2020),
https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/us-bioenergy-statistics/ (“Ethanol, made mostly from
corn starch from kernels, is by far the most significant biofuel in the United States.”).
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                   Page 7


material injury by reason of [less than fair value] and subsidized imports of biodiesel from . . .

Indonesia.”).

       On March 29, 2017, the ITC commenced its material injury investigation. See Biodiesel

From Argentina and Indonesia, 82 Fed. Reg. 15,541 (Int’l Trade Comm’n Mar. 29, 2017). 5

           On April 19, 2017, Commerce published the notice of initiation of its countervailing duty

investigation. See Biodiesel From Argentina and Indonesia: Initiation of Countervailing Duty

Investigations, 82 Fed. Reg. 18,423 (Dep’t Commerce Apr. 19, 2017).

       Wilmar and Musim Mas were selected as mandatory respondents 6 because they were the

“two largest publicly identifiable producers/exporters, by volume, of subject merchandise [i.e.,

biodiesel] exported to the United States from Indonesia during the [period of investigation].”

Prelim. Dec. Mem. at 2; see also 19 U.S.C. § 1677f-1(e)(2)(A)(ii).



       5
               On May 8, 2017, the ITC made its preliminary affirmative material injury
determination. See ITC Prelim. Determination, 82 Fed. Reg. at 22,155; see also Biodiesel from
Argentina and Indonesia, Inv. No. 701-TA-571-572, 731-TA-1347-1348, USITC Pub. 4690 (May
2017) (Preliminary) at 31 (footnotes omitted) (“Because the domestic industry, despite having the
ability to increase its production and shipments, was unable to increase its shipments
commensurately with growing demand, it lost revenues that it otherwise would have obtained.
These lost revenues were reflected in its poor and declining gross and operating income. We
accordingly find that the significant volume of cumulated subject imports, which gained market
share at the expense of the domestic industry through significant underselling, had a significant
impact on the domestic industry.”).

       The ITC issued its final affirmative determination of material injury after Commerce’s
Final Determination in this case. See Biodiesel From Argentina And Indonesia, Inv. No. 701-TA-
571-572, USITC Pub. 4748 (Dec. 2017) (Final).
       6
               In general, Commerce determines “an individual countervailable subsidy rate for
each known exporter or producer of the subject merchandise.” 19 U.S.C. § 1677f-1(e)(1). Where,
however, the “large number of exporters or producers involved in the investigation” makes it
impracticable for Commerce to calculate an individual rate for each one, Commerce may limit
individual examination to mandatory respondents, e.g., “exporters and producers accounting for
the largest volume of the subject merchandise from the exporting country.” Id.
§ 1677f-1(e)(2)(A)(ii).
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                  Page 8


       On November 6, 2017, Commerce issued its Final Determination. There, Commerce found

that the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund payments provided Plaintiffs with countervailable subsidies

because they were financial contributions, by a government, that benefitted Wilmar and Musim

Mas in the amount of each Fund payment. See Final IDM at 7 (citation omitted). The Department

also found the payments to be specific to the biodiesel industry. 7 See Prelim. Dec. Mem. at 10.

Although the payments were only available in connection with domestic sales, the Department

also found that the subsidies stemming from the Fund payments were attributable to all of

Wilmar’s and Musim Mas’ biodiesel sales, including their exports. See Final IDM at 11.

       Commerce further found that both the 2015 Export Levy and the 1994 Export Tariff

resulted in the provision of countervailable subsidies in the form of goods provided for less than

adequate remuneration, because they caused Indonesian crude palm oil (the primary biodiesel

input) to remain within the country, available at below-international market prices to Wilmar and

Musim Mas. See Final IDM at 16.

       The Department calculated individual subsidy rates for Wilmar and Musim Mas of 34.45

percent and 64.73 percent, respectively. The All-Others rate was 38.95 percent. 8 See Final

Determination, 82 Fed. Reg. at 53,472. Of the individual rates, for Musim Mas, 51.97 percent ad

valorem was attributed to the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund; 12.74 percent ad valorem was attributed to

the “Provision of Palm Oil Feedstock for Less Than Adequate Remuneration,” which included

both the 2015 Export Levy and the 1994 Export Tariff; and 0.02 percent ad valorem was attributed


       7
             Plaintiffs do not challenge Commerce’s subsidy determination with respect to the
Fund payments on the issue of specificity.
       8
              When only mandatory respondents are examined, Commerce uses their rates to
determine an “all-others rate for all exporters and producers not individually investigated and for
new exporters and producers.” See 19 U.S.C. § 1671d(c)(1)(B)(i)(I).
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                       Page 9


to another, uncontested subsidy. See Final IDM at 4-5. For Wilmar, the percentages were,

respectively: 24.92; 9.47; and 0.06. See Final IDM at 4-5.



                                    STANDARD OF REVIEW

        The court will sustain a determination by Commerce unless it is “unsupported by

substantial evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 19

U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i).



                                      LEGAL FRAMEWORK

        “The Tariff Act provides that before Commerce imposes a countervailing duty on

merchandise imported into the United States, it must determine that a government is providing,

directly or indirectly, a countervailable subsidy with respect to the manufacture, production, or

export of that merchandise.” Delverde, SrL v. United States, 202 F.3d 1360, 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2000)

(citing 19 U.S.C. § 1671(a)(1) (1994)).

        A countervailable subsidy exists where “an authority [a government or governmental

actor] . . . provides a financial contribution . . . to a person and a benefit is thereby conferred.” 19

U.S.C. § 1677(5)(B). A financial contribution may consist of a “direct transfer of funds,” such as

a grant. Id. § 1677(5)(D)(i). It may also consist of goods and services, when they “are provided

for less than adequate remuneration.” Id. § 1677(5)(D), (E)(iv). Although normally the

government provides such a contribution directly, a contribution may exist where a government

authority “entrusts or directs a private entity to make [it],” so long as “providing the contribution

would normally be vested in the government and the practice does not differ in substance from

practices normally followed by governments.” Id. § 1677(5)(B)(iii).
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                    Page 10


       Commerce measures the benefit according to the type of financial contribution provided.

See id. § 1677(5)(E). When the subsidy takes the form of a grant, the benefit is measured “in the

amount of the grant.” See 19 C.F.R. § 351.504(a) (2019). When goods are provided for less than

adequate remuneration, Commerce measures the benefit using the three-tiered hierarchy of

“benchmark” prices against which to test the actual remuneration provided in exchange for the

goods. See 19 C.F.R. § 351.511(a)(2)(i)-(iii) (setting the benchmark preference for (i) “a market-

determined price for the good or service resulting from actual transactions in the country in

question,” then, if (i) is not available, (ii) “a world market price where it is reasonable to conclude

that such price would be available to purchasers in the country in question,” and finally (iii)

“measur[ing] the adequacy of remuneration by assessing whether the government price is

consistent with market principles.”).

       Further, a countervailable subsidy—either direct or indirect—must meet the requirement

of specificity under the subpart of § 1677(5A) that corresponds with the subsidy’s type. See 19

U.S.C. § 1677(5)(A), (5A). Domestic subsidies are de jure specific “[w]here the authority

providing the subsidy, or the legislation pursuant to which the authority operates, expressly limits

access to the subsidy to an enterprise or industry.” Id. § 1677(5A)(D)(i) (emphasis added). Certain

domestic subsidies may be de facto specific if “[t]he actual recipients of the subsidy, whether

considered on an enterprise or industry basis, are limited in number.” Id. § 1677(5A)(D)(iii)(I)

(emphasis added).

       Once Commerce determines that a countervailable subsidy exists, it imposes a

countervailing duty on the subject merchandise, “equal to the amount of the net countervailable

subsidy.” Id. § 1671(a). Pursuant to its regulations, Commerce calculates “an ad valorem subsidy

rate by dividing the amount of the benefit allocated to the period of investigation or review by the
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                      Page 11


sales value during the same period of the product or products to which the [Department] attributes

the subsidy.” 19 C.F.R. § 351.525(a). The resulting rate (or percentage) is added with any other

ad valorem rate to constitute a respondent’s total individual subsidy rate. See 19 U.S.C. § 1671(a).

        Finally, by finding attribution, Commerce determines which sales were affected by the

otherwise countervailable subsidies, and thus which sales will serve as the basis for the ad valorem

subsidy rate. Attribution means that, if the Department finds that a subsidy is “tied to a particular

market,” it will “attribute the subsidy only to products sold by the [respondent] to that market.”

19 C.F.R. § 351.525(b)(4) (emphasis added). On the other hand, if a subsidy is “tied to a particular

product,” it will be attributable to all sales of that product. See id. § 351.525(b)(5)(i) (“If a subsidy

is tied to the production or sale of a particular product, [Commerce] will attribute the subsidy only

to that product.”).



                                            DISCUSSION

I.      Commerce Reasonably Determined that the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund Payments to
        Wilmar and Musim Mas Were Countervailable

        By creating the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund, Indonesia hoped to encourage the development of

its biodiesel industry by establishing a program through which designated buyers (both state-

owned and privately owned) would purchase Plaintiffs’ biodiesel at the lower, petrodiesel price.

Eligibility for payments from the Fund resulted from the sale of biodiesel to designated domestic

purchasers such as Pertamina (Indonesia’s state-owned oil and gas company) and Corporindo (a

private Indonesian fuel blender). See GOI Initial Quest. Resp. at 13; Prelim. Dec. Mem. at 9.

Plaintiffs would first make a sale of biodiesel to Pertamina or Corporindo at the lower, petrodiesel

price. Then, Plaintiffs would apply for and receive a payment from the Fund, equal to the

difference between the international petrodiesel price and the higher, domestic biodiesel price
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                 Page 12


(both as adjusted by the Government of Indonesia). 9 Plaintiffs would thus receive, in total, an

amount roughly equal to the domestic “market price” for biodiesel. See GOI Initial Quest. Resp.

at 13-15.

       The stated purpose of the Fund is “to cover [that] difference” between the price of biodiesel

and petrodiesel in support of “provision and utilization of biodiesel.” See GOI Initial Quest. Resp.

at 15. Thus, Indonesia hoped to foster increased biodiesel production by allowing Wilmar and

Musim Mas to receive a competitive price for their biodiesel, even though their purchasers paid

the reduced petrodiesel price.

       Whatever the Government of Indonesia’s claimed purpose, Commerce found the payments

from the Fund to be countervailable subsidies. Plaintiffs object to Commerce’s analysis of the

Biodiesel Subsidy Fund in three respects: first, they maintain that Commerce erred by finding that

the Fund payments were financial contributions in the form of grants to Wilmar and Musim Mas;

second, they argue that, even if Commerce’s grant determination is correct, the Department erred

in its benefit determination, both in measuring the benefit, and by refusing to allow an offset to


       9
              In its initial questionnaire response, the Government of Indonesia explained how
“market” prices for biodiesel and petrodiesel were calculated:

       [Pursuant to regulation,] the Directorate General for Oil and Gas determines the market
       price index for [petro]diesel oil, usually every three months. The Directorate General of
       New Renewable Energy and Energy Conversion . . . determines the market price index for
       biodiesel on a monthly basis. The reference price for [petro]diesel is determined by
       referring to the price reported in the Means of Platts Singapore (MOPS) and the production
       cost of [petro]diesel in Indonesia[,] while the reference price for biodiesel is determined
       based on the price for [crude palm oil] plus the operation cost of biodiesel. MOPS is the
       average of Singapore-based oil prices published by Platts, which is a global energy,
       petrochemicals, metals, and agriculture information provider. Operation costs consist of
       methanol, power, and labor, for example.

GOI Initial Quest. Resp. at 13-14. In other words, the Government of Indonesia’s energy agencies
calculate a “market price index” on a monthly or tri-monthly basis to determine the “market price”
for petrodiesel and biodiesel.
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                     Page 13


any payment from the Fund equal to the amount they paid in. Finally, Plaintiffs contest

Commerce’s decision to attribute the Fund payments to all of Wilmar’s and Musim Mas’ biodiesel

sales during the period of investigation.

       The first two issues concern distinct elements of Commerce’s countervailability analysis:

the existence of financial contributions from the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund to Plaintiffs, and the

amount of potential benefit conferred by payments from the Fund upon Wilmar and Musim Mas.

The attribution issue concerns Commerce’s calculation of countervailing subsidy rates for Wilmar

and Musim Mas.

       A.      Commerce Correctly Classified the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund Payments as
               Financial Contributions in the Form of “Grants”

       The statute provides that a financial contribution includes the making of grants. See 19

U.S.C. § 1677(5)(D)(i) (“The term ‘financial contribution’ means . . . the direct transfer of funds,

such as grants . . . .”). This Court has interpreted “grant” in accordance with the ordinary meaning

of the word: that is, a grant is a “gift-like transfer.” See Gov’t of Sri Lanka v. United States, 42 CIT

__, __, 308 F. Supp. 3d 1373, 1383 (2018). The payments to biodiesel producers Wilmar and

Musim Mas were made by the Government of Indonesia, through a program that required the

producers to submit applications for approval and payment following the sales of their biodiesel

at the petrodiesel price. See Final IDM at 7. As noted, these Fund payments were designed to bring

the total amount received by Plaintiffs up to the domestic market price for biodiesel. The payment

application would inform the Government of Indonesia of the sales price for their biodiesel. See

GOI Initial Quest. Resp. at 24. The Government, through the Fund, would then pay to Wilmar and

Musim Mas roughly the difference between the payment they had received and the domestic

market price for biodiesel. The Government of Indonesia received nothing in exchange for the
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                 Page 14


payments from the Fund. See Final IDM at 7. Based on these facts, Commerce determined that the

payments from the Fund were grants.

       During the investigation and before the court, Plaintiffs have argued that the Biodiesel

Subsidy Fund payments were not grants, but were instead part of the sales price for their biodiesel,

because the amount they received was the difference between the market price for biodiesel and

that for petrodiesel. See Pls.’ & Consol. Pls.’ Mot. J. Agency R., ECF No. 38 (“Pls.’ Br.”) 17-18

(“The record unequivocally shows that [Fund] payments constitute part of the full payment for

purchases of biodiesel. . . . [T]he [Government of Indonesia] makes the payments in return for

biodiesel sold [to Pertamina and Corporindo]. . . . Commerce explicitly found that Wilmar and

Musim Mas treat the payments as ‘revenue’ for their respective sales of biodiesel [to those two

companies] . . . , a finding that squarely contradicts Commerce’s assertion that the [Government

of Indonesia] received nothing in return for the payments.”).

       This argument cannot be credited. While the amount of the grant may have been calculated

to bring the amount received up to the constructed market value of Plaintiffs’ product, the

Government of Indonesia bought nothing and received nothing for the Fund’s money other than

the possibility of achieving the governmental goal of fostering a domestic biodiesel industry in

Indonesia. 10 Wilmar’s and Musim Mas’ classification of Fund payments as revenue is not


       10
               Plaintiffs argued before the agency that, because one of the energy companies
(Pertamina) that purchased biodiesel is state-owned, the Government of Indonesia effectually
purchased biodiesel from Wilmar and Musim Mas. See Final IDM at 9. While it is true that
Pertamina is state-owned, Corporindo is not. Thus, the Department found that “[t]he [Fund]
payments are made regardless of the [Government of Indonesia’s] receipt of the goods in question,
and could – in theory – be made without any participation of Pertamina.” Final IDM at 9. In other
words, although Pertamina was a state-owned company, it was not the sole purchaser of the
biodiesel for which Wilmar and Musim Mas received Fund payments. See Final IDM at 9 (“[The
argument] that, because Pertamina is a state-owned company, it ‘might be . . . purchasing biodiesel
on the [Government of Indonesia’s] behalf’ . . . cannot be made with regard to Corporindo[, the
private company that also receive[d] Fund payments].”). Therefore, even if the court were to find
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                    Page 15


dispositive, because, to obtain funding from the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund, they did not contract with

the Government of Indonesia to sell biodiesel or anything else. Therefore, Commerce was

reasonable in its finding that these Fund transfers, clearly distinct from the price paid by the actual

purchasers, were financial contributions in the form of grants.

       In other words, the Fund’s payment system provided contributions to Wilmar and Musim

Mas. The Fund was created to provide a subsidy to biodiesel producers as a way of supporting the

biodiesel industry. The Government of Indonesia made payments from the Fund, but received

nothing in return. Therefore, Commerce’s finding that the Fund payments were countervailable

financial contributions to Wilmar and Musim Mas is supported by substantial evidence.

       B.      Commerce Reasonably Measured the Benefit of the Grants

               1.      Commerce Relied on the Appropriate Regulatory Standard for
                       Measuring Benefit

       After finding that the Government of Indonesia had made financial contributions in the

form of grants to Wilmar and Musim Mas, Commerce measured the amount of benefit Wilmar

and Musim Mas received from those grants. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677(5)(E) (outlining the rules for

measuring benefit). Commerce’s regulations provide that, where the countervailable subsidy takes

the form of a grant, “a benefit exists in the amount of the grant.” 19 C.F.R. § 351.504(a).

       Plaintiffs urge the court to find that Commerce should have measured the benefit, if any,

under “either the adequacy of remuneration standard in 19 C.F.R. § 351.511,[11] or the ‘receives



that Pertamina’s purchases counted as purchases by the Government of Indonesia, the Biodiesel
Subsidy Fund payments would still constitute grants because Pertamina’s involvement was not
required.
       11
              When a subsidy takes the form of the provision of goods, the benefit is generally
found to exist “to the extent that such goods or services are provided for less than adequate
remuneration.” 19 C.F.R. § 351.511(a)(1).
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                   Page 16


more revenues than it otherwise would earn’ standard in 19 C.F.R. § 351.503.[12]” Pls.’ Br. 22, 24.

Once again, Plaintiffs try to make their case by claiming that the payments were part of the price

paid to Wilmar and Musim Mas in exchange for their biodiesel, and, therefore, a benefit analysis

should analyze the payments from the Fund as part of the total biodiesel price. 13 The gist of

Plaintiffs’ argument is that Commerce should have treated the Fund payments as part of the

payment for biodiesel sales, and then determined whether the total amount received from the

purchasers, and the Fund, was more or less than an “adequate” price to pay for biodiesel.

       Despite Plaintiffs’ arguments, since the court has sustained Commerce’s finding that the

financial contributions here were in the form of grants, the standard for measuring the benefit from

those financial contributions is the standard in § 351.504(a). See 19 C.F.R. § 351.504(a) (“In the

case of a grant, a benefit exists in the amount of the grant.”). Commerce, therefore, reasonably

determined that the grants benefitted Wilmar and Musim Mas in an amount equal to the amount

of the grants, which is to say, in the amount of the Fund transfers.




       12
                For otherwise uncategorized subsidies, Commerce “normally will consider a
benefit to be conferred where a firm pays less for its inputs (e.g., money, a good, or a service) than
it otherwise would pay in the absence of the government program, or receives more revenues than
it otherwise would earn.” 19 C.F.R. § 351.503(b)(1).
       13
                As support for their position, Plaintiffs cite Government of Sri Lanka. Pls.’ Br. 19
(citing Gov’t of Sri Lanka, 42 CIT at __, 308 F. Supp. 3d at 1383) (“The Court’s recent decision
in Government of Sri Lanka confirms that the [Fund] payments do not meet the [gift-like transfer]
definition of a ‘grant,’ whether in the financial contribution statute or in Commerce’s
regulations.”). The Government of Sri Lanka Court, however, found that the alleged financial
contributions in that case were “interest-free repayment” of debts owed by the Sri Lankan
government to the respondents, that were “unlike a grant, loan, or equity infusion.” See Gov’t of
Sri Lanka, 42 CIT at __, 308 F. Supp. 3d at 1381. Here, the payments from the Government of
Indonesia were not loans or repayments of loans, because the amounts paid into the Fund and the
amounts paid out to Wilmar and Musim Mas bore no relation to each other.
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                  Page 17


               2.      Plaintiffs Were Not Entitled to an Offset Based on Their Levy
                       Payments

       Both Wilmar and Musim Mas exported crude palm oil, and consequently paid levies under

the 2015 Export Levy. These levies were then deposited into the Fund. See Final IDM at 13. Based

on these payments, Plaintiffs insist that they are entitled to an offset to the amount of the benefit

they received equal to their contributions to the Fund. In their view, Commerce should have

deducted their Fund contributions when measuring the benefit received by Wilmar and Musim

Mas. Thus, Plaintiffs would have the benefit reduced by an amount equal to the total amount each

contributed to the Fund under the 2015 Export Levy. See Pls.’ Br. 25.

       The Department declined to make this offset because it found that Plaintiffs’ payments into

the Fund, collected under the 2015 Export Levy, were unrelated to the amount of the grants

subsequently paid from the Fund. See Final IDM at 13 (“[A] company does not need to make any

payments into the [Fund] in order to be eligible for [Fund] payments, and a company that makes

payments into the [Fund] through [crude palm oil] export levies is not automatically, by virtue of

such payments, eligible for [Fund] payments.”).

       While both Wilmar and Musim Mas paid into the Fund, there is no necessary relationship

between the source or the amount of the levies collected and eligibility to receive payments from

the Fund or the amount of the payments. That is, a company need not pay into the Fund in order

to draw payments from it. In order to be eligible for payments from the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund,

Plaintiffs need only make domestic sales of biodiesel and complete the application process dictated

by Indonesian regulation. See Final IDM at 13; see also GOI Initial Quest. Resp. at 15 (outlining

application process). So, had Wilmar and Musim Mas made no payments into the Fund, they still

would have been entitled to receive grants from it because they sold their biodiesel at the

petrodiesel price to companies designated by the Government of Indonesia.
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                    Page 18


       Moreover, despite Plaintiffs’ claim to an offset, it is worth noting that there is no indication

in the record that the Government of Indonesia “specifically intended” to offset the levy payments

made by exporters of crude palm oil, by means of the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund or in any other

manner. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677(6)(C) (emphasis added) (“For the purpose of determining the net

countervailable subsidy, [Commerce] may subtract from the gross countervailable subsidy the

amount of . . . export taxes, duties, or other charges levied on the export of merchandise to the

United States specifically intended to offset the countervailable subsidy received.”). Therefore,

because there is no legal or factual connection between the amounts Plaintiffs paid into the Fund

and the amounts they received, Commerce reasonably declined to offset Wilmar’s and Musim

Mas’ payments into the Fund against the amounts received from the Fund.

       C.      Commerce Reasonably Attributed the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund Grants to All
               of Plaintiffs’ Sales of Biodiesel

       Commerce calculates “an ad valorem [per program] subsidy rate by dividing the amount

of the benefit . . . by the sales value . . . of the product or products to which the [Department]

attributes the subsidy.” 19 C.F.R. § 351.525(a). In other words, before calculating an ad valorem

subsidy rate, Commerce must address the issue of attribution by determining which, if any, of

respondents’ U.S. sales were targeted by the subsidies.

       In its Final Determination, Commerce found that the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund provided

grants that were tied (i.e., attributed) to all sales of biodiesel by Wilmar and Musim Mas, not just

those made in the Indonesian market. See Final IDM at 11. Thus, Commerce found that the Fund

grants, though paid only in connection with domestic Indonesian sales of biodiesel, also subsidized

Wilmar’s and Musim Mas’ U.S. sales of biodiesel. See Final IDM at 11 (stating that the Fund “is

intended to promote the production of biodiesel” without any limitation on how its payments are

used). Thus, although the grants resulted from domestic sales, and the amount of the grant was
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                 Page 19


determined by using domestic sales, the grant money served to subsidize all of Plaintiffs’ biodiesel

product. For Commerce, the Government of Indonesia “inten[ded] to ensure the existence of the

biodiesel industry as a whole,” including the U.S. sales segment. Final IDM at 11.

       Plaintiffs’ U.S. sales were under investigation in this case, and, since Commerce found

them to be subsidized by the Fund grants, these sales formed the basis for an ad valorem subsidy

rate for the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund payments. See 19 C.F.R. § 351.525(a). Commerce calculated

Wilmar’s and Musim Mas’ ad valorem subsidy rates for the Fund grants by dividing the total

amount of the Fund payments the companies received by the sales value of all their sales of

biodiesel during the period of investigation. See id.; see also id. § 351.504(a) (“In the case of a

grant, a benefit exists in the amount of the grant.”).

       Plaintiffs object that Commerce unlawfully attributed the grants “to all biodiesel sales,”

including exports to the United States, “rather than attribut[ing] those alleged subsidies only to

Wilmar’s and Musim Mas’s sales of biodiesel in Indonesia.” Pls.’ Br. 10, 13. In Plaintiffs’ view,

the ad valorem subsidy rate for the Fund payments should be zero, because neither Wilmar nor

Musim Mas received any Fund payments for sales of biodiesel in the U.S. market. According to

Plaintiffs, the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund payments were only tied to biodiesel transactions that

occurred in Indonesia. See Pls.’ Br. 11 (“Substantial record evidence demonstrates that the [Fund]

payments were tied only to one market—domestic biodiesel sales in Indonesia [because]

Commerce . . . confirmed that the payments are limited [in availability] to domestic biodiesel sales

in Indonesia.”).

       Commerce’s determination is sustained, however, because it reasonably found that the

purpose of the Fund was to subsidize biodiesel as a product, whether sold domestically or

exported, and that there were no restrictions on how the grant money would be used. See Final
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                    Page 20


IDM at 11 (citing 19 C.F.R. § 351.525(b)(5)) (“The [Government of Indonesia’s] application for

[companies to seek payments] demonstrates only a concern with the commitment, capacity, and

quality of the producers of biodiesel. [It does not favor] producers that target the domestic market

over the export market but, rather, the [Fund] is intended to promote the production of biodiesel.

Therefore, we are continuing to tie [Fund] payments to all biodiesel sales.”). This Court has

recognized that “Commerce, as a matter of practice, determines whether a subsidy is tied by

evaluating the purpose of the subsidy based on information available at the time of bestowal;

Commerce does not trace how the subsidy is actually used by recipients.” Jindal Poly Films Ltd.

of India v. United States, 44 CIT __, __, 439 F. Supp. 3d 1354, 1360 (2020) (citations omitted). In

accordance with its practice, Commerce thus concluded that the Government of Indonesia was

subsidizing the production of biodiesel whether or not it stayed in Indonesia or found its way into

the world market. The subsidy stayed with the product.

       Commerce is right that the Fund subsidies should be attributed to all of Wilmar’s and

Musim Mas’ sales of biodiesel (i.e., in Indonesia and the United States) during the period of

investigation. See 19 C.F.R. § 351.525(b)(5)(i) (“If a subsidy is tied to the production or sale of a

particular product, [Commerce] will attribute the subsidy only to that product.”). Indeed, the

Indonesian regulation that created the Fund described the Fund’s purpose as “ensur[ing] the

sustainable development of oil palm plantation . . . [and] . . . provision and utilization of biodiesel

type of biofuel.” See GOI Initial Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt. 8, at Ex. GOI-BSF-1; see also Final IDM at

11 (“[T]he configuration of the [Fund] suggests part of [its] intent is to ensure the existence of the

biodiesel industry as a whole, not just the domestic sales segment.”). The regulation says nothing

about providing cheap domestic biodiesel. The provision of cheap domestic biodiesel, then, is just

a means to an end—sustaining Indonesia’s biodiesel industry. Thus, Commerce found that even
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                   Page 21


though the Fund payments were made only upon domestic sales of the biodiesel, the purpose of

the payments was to subsidize biodiesel in both the domestic and U.S. markets.

       The court agrees that “the [Fund] is intended to promote the production of biodiesel”

without regard to whether producers such as Wilmar and Musim Mas sold their biodiesel

domestically or internationally, and that it resulted in lowering the price of Indonesian biodiesel in

the U.S. market. See Final IDM at 11. Therefore, Commerce’s decision to attribute the benefit of

the Fund payments to all of Wilmar’s and Musim Mas’ exports of biodiesel is sustained.



II.    Commerce’s Determination That Crude Palm Oil, a Biodiesel Input, Was Being
       Provided to Wilmar and Musim Mas for Less than Adequate Remuneration Was
       Reasonable Only with Respect to the 2015 Export Levy

       In addition to its finding that the payments from the Biodiesel Subsidy Fund constituted

grants, Commerce also found that the Government of Indonesia made countervailable financial

contributions to Plaintiffs by providing them with goods for less than adequate remuneration.

Specifically, the Department found that the Government of Indonesia had used (1) the 2015

Export Levy and (2) the 1994 Export Tariff to artificially lower crude palm oil’s domestic price.

The court finds that, while Commerce’s determination is reasonable as to the 2015 Export Levy,

its finding as to the 1994 Export Tariff is not supported by substantial evidence or in accordance

with law.

       Under the statute, a financial contribution may take the form of goods or services. See 19

U.S.C. § 1677(5)(D). In such cases, the additional requirement of benefit conferred is met “if

such goods or services are provided for less than adequate remuneration.” Id. § 1677(5)(E)(iv).

Further, a financial contribution of any kind may exist where a government authority “entrusts or

directs a private entity to make a financial contribution,” so long as “providing the contribution
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                 Page 22


would normally be vested in the government and the practice does not differ in substance from

practices normally followed by governments.” 19 U.S.C. § 1677(5)(B)(iii).

       Here, Commerce determined that, through the use of the 2015 Export Levy on crude palm

oil and the 1994 Export Tariff, the Government of Indonesia kept crude palm oil in Indonesia,

increasing the domestic supply, and thus lowering its price in the Indonesian market.

       A.      The 2015 Export Levy Resulted in Goods Provided to Wilmar and Musim
               Mas for Less than Adequate Remuneration

       Plaintiffs challenge Commerce’s subsidy determination on three grounds. First, Plaintiffs

challenge the Department’s finding that the Government of Indonesia entrusted and directed

private producers of crude palm oil to provide their product to Wilmar and Musim Mas for less

than adequate remuneration. Next, Plaintiffs challenge the Department’s measurement of the

benefit Plaintiffs allegedly received: that is, Plaintiffs disagree with the benchmark that Commerce

established for measuring the adequacy of remuneration received for crude palm oil. Finally,

Plaintiffs argue that the alleged subsidy was not sufficiently specific.

       The court sustains all three of Commerce’s findings in support of its subsidy determination

with respect to the 2015 Export Levy.

               1.      The Government of Indonesia Entrusted and Directed Private
                       Producers to Provide Wilmar and Musim Mas with Cheap Crude Palm
                       Oil

       Under the statute, a countervailable financial contribution may be made indirectly where

a government authority “entrusts or directs a private entity to make a financial contribution,” so

long as “providing the contribution would normally be vested in the government and the practice

does not differ in substance from practices normally followed by governments.” 19 U.S.C.

§ 1677(5)(B)(iii).
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                   Page 23


       The Statement of Administrative Action accompanying the Uruguay Round Agreements

Act (“SAA”) 14 provides additional guidance for this type of financial contribution:

       Commerce has found a countervailable subsidy to exist where the government took or
       imposed (through statutory, regulatory or administrative action) [1] a formal, enforceable
       measure [2] which directly led to [3] a discernible benefit being provided to the industry
       under investigation. In cases where the government acts through a private party . . . the
       Administration intends that the law continue to be administered on a case-by-case
       basis . . . .

Statement of Administrative Action accompanying the Uruguay Round Agreements Act, H.R.

Doc. No. 103–316 at 926 (1994), as reprinted in 1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4040, 4239 (emphasis

added). The SAA acknowledges that “[t]he specific manner in which the government act[s]

through the private party to [make a financial contribution resulting in a benefit] varie[s] widely.”

Id. (emphasis added).

                        i.     Private Crude Palm Oil Producers Provided Cheap Crude
                               Palm Oil for Less than Adequate Remuneration to Wilmar and
                               Musim Mas

       Commerce found that the 2015 Export Levy on the Indonesian crude palm oil market

resulted in indirect financial contributions to Wilmar and Musim Mas in the form of goods

provided for less than adequate remuneration. Specifically, the Department stated that “export

restraints can amount to government entrustment or direction of private entities to provide financial

contributions,” and that the 2015 Export Levy “encourage[d] . . . private producers to sell their

products to Indonesian biodiesel producers[, thus keeping] domestic prices of [crude palm oil]

below world prices.” Final IDM at 16.




       14
               The SAA is authoritative. See 19 U.S.C. § 3512(d) (“The statement of
administrative action approved by the Congress under section 3511(a) of this title shall be regarded
as an authoritative expression by the United States concerning the interpretation and application
of the Uruguay Round Agreements and this Act in any judicial proceeding in which a question
arises concerning such interpretation or application.”).
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                   Page 24


         Plaintiffs insist that, for the 2015 Export Levy to constitute a financial contribution

qualifying as a subsidy, Commerce was required to find that the 2015 Export Levy compelled

Indonesian crude palm oil producers to sell their product at low prices to Wilmar and Musim Mas.

See Pls.’ Br. 32 (emphasis added) (“The [levy] fail[s] to meet the [entrustment and direction] test.

The [levy does] not affirmatively obligate private parties to supply [crude palm oil] to Indonesian

biodiesel producers at all, and certainly do not require them to provide [crude palm oil] at any

particular price.”). Plaintiffs also cite the SAA’s statement that “Commerce has found a

countervailable subsidy to exist where the government took or imposed (through statutory,

regulatory or administrative action) a formal, enforceable measure which directly led to a

discernible benefit being provided to the industry under investigation.” See SAA at 926, as

reprinted in 1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 4239.

         Finally, Plaintiffs argue that Commerce could not reasonably have made a subsidy

determination with respect to the 2015 Export Levy because “[p]rivate parties were free to export

[crude palm oil] from Indonesia and, in fact, more than half of the [crude palm oil] that they

produced during the [period of investigation was exported from] Indonesia [to] foreign markets.”

Pls.’ Br. 34 (citing GOI Initial Quest. Resp. at 62-63). For Plaintiffs, these foreign sales indicate

that the 2015 Export Levy did not deter crude palm oil exports, and that the 2015 Export Levy

did not keep crude palm oil in Indonesia, thus increasing the supply and lowering its domestic

price.

         On behalf of Commerce, Defendant argues that Plaintiffs assert an overly stringent

standard by requiring Commerce to find evidence that the Government of Indonesia

“affirmatively obligate[d]” crude palm oil producers to sell their product at reduced prices. Pls.’

Br. 32; see Def.’s Resp. Pls.’ & Consol. Pls.’ Mot. J. Agency R., ECF No. 52 (“Def.’s Br.”) 38
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                Page 25


(“[T]he SAA makes clear that the ‘entrusts or directs’ standard should be interpreted broadly, so

that ‘indirect provision’ of a subsidy does not become a ‘loophole’ for unfairly traded imports to

injure a United States industry.”). Likewise, in its Final Determination, Commerce rejected

Plaintiffs’ notion that, in order to satisfy the statute and the SAA, the 2015 Export Levy must

compel the sale of crude palm oil in the domestic market at below-market rates. Rather, the

Department believes that it only needed to confirm that, following the imposition of the 2015

Export Levy, prices of crude palm oil fell and Wilmar and Musim Mas were able to buy cheap

crude palm oil. Based on more than two years of data comparing Indonesian prices for crude palm

oil to world prices, Commerce determined that the 2015 Export Levy “represented a [Government

of Indonesia] policy supporting the respondents in the ultimate and indirect form of cheaper

[crude palm oil] prices.” Final IDM at 17 (emphasis added) (“From October 2014 through June

2015, after deducting freight expenses, the price of [crude palm oil] was always higher in

Indonesia than it was on the world market. In July 2015, when the $50/MT export levy was

implemented, prices of [crude palm oil] in Indonesia dropped well below world market prices for

15 out of the next 18 months.”).

       As additional evidence, the Department noted that Indonesia has conceded that its purpose

for imposing the 2015 Export Levy was to increase the domestic supply and lower domestic

prices. In an explanation to the World Trade Organization, the Government of Indonesia stated:

       The Government is making further use of export taxes [including a levy on crude
       palm oil]. . . . According to the authorities, export taxes on primary commodities
       can be used to reduce the domestic price of primary products in order to guarantee
       supply of intermediate inputs at below world market prices for domestic processing
       industries. In this way, export taxes provide an incentive for the development of
       domestic manufacturing or processing industries with higher value-added exports.

Petition Exs., Vol. V.15 (Mar. 23, 2017), P.R. 20, at Ex. CVD-IND-28 (WTO Trade Policy

Review of Indonesia) (emphasis added).
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                Page 26


       Further, Commerce’s subsidy determination as to the 2015 Export Levy relied on

language in the Indonesian regulation which created the Fund and made the levy its source of

funding. See Final IDM at 18; see also GOI Initial Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt. 8, at Ex. GOI-BSF-1

(“[The Fund’s purpose is] to ensure the sustainable development of oil palm plantation . . . [for

among other things, the] [p]rovision and utilization of biodiesel type of biofuels.”); GOI Suppl.

Quest. Resp. at 2 (“The export levies are primarily used to fund the [Biodiesel Subsidy Fund].”).

All in all, Commerce was satisfied that the Government of Indonesia’s 2015 Export Levy fulfilled

the intentions declared to the WTO, and that the 2015 Export Levy “ensure[s] that . . . private

[crude palm oil] producers play [the] role [of government] instruments to guarantee supply of

[crude palm oil] to biodiesel producers.” Final IDM at 17.

       With respect to Plaintiffs’ argument that the 2015 Export Levy failed to create the

necessary market conditions for an indirect subsidy because exports from Indonesia continued,

Commerce justified its finding as follows:

       The fact that the [Government of Indonesia] attempts to balance [its objective of
       providing cheaper crude palm oil to Wilmar and Musim Mas] with competing
       objectives such as ensuring continued revenue from [crude palm oil] exports does
       not negate the conclusion . . . that the policy has, in fact, succeeded in causing
       domestic sales and lowering domestic prices. The [Government of Indonesia] has
       simply struck a balance between different aspects of its economy and different
       development objectives by choosing a “softer” restraint over a full-out embargo.

Final IDM at 19. In sum, for Commerce, the Government of Indonesia “use[d] private [crude

palm oil] producers as its instruments to guarantee supply of [crude palm oil] to biodiesel

producers.” Final IDM at 17. The levy “ensure[d] that the private [crude palm oil] producers play

[the] role” of providing product to Indonesian biodiesel producers. Final IDM at 17. Put another

way, the 2015 Export Levy was enacted, at least in part, to increase the amount of crude palm oil

in the domestic market and lower its price by increasing the price of Indonesian crude palm oil
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                 Page 27


on the world market. Because the levy fulfilled its intended purpose, and crude palm oil prices

fell, domestic consumers, including biodiesel producers such as Wilmar and Musim Mas, were

subsidized.

       In addition, Commerce satisfied the statute and the SAA by finding that the Government

of Indonesia had implemented a “formal, enforceable measure” in the form of the 2015 Export

Levy, which the Government of Indonesia had put in place as part of a plan to suppress the

domestic price, thereby providing a cheap input for downstream products (e.g., biodiesel). See

GOI Initial Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt. 8, at Ex. GOI-BSF-1 (linking the levy to biodiesel); see also

Petition Exs., Vol. V.15, at Ex. CVD-IND-28.

       Moreover, Commerce showed that the 2015 Export Levy did directly lead to the intended

contribution: consistently lower prices for crude palm oil sold in the Indonesian market. See Final

IDM at 17; See Pet.’s Rebuttal Br. (Oct. 17, 2017), P.R. 237, at 23 tbl. 1 (showing, from a

summary of Plaintiffs’ submitted data, that the Indonesian prices for crude palm oil went down

after the implementation of the levy). 15 As noted, during the nine months prior to the




       15
                 Below is a modified version of “Table 1” from Petitioner’s Rebuttal Brief,
illustrating the difference between Indonesian prices for crude palm oil and world prices for crude
palm oil. The italicized dollar amounts represent the amount by which Indonesian prices for crude
palm oil rose above world prices. The non-italicized dollar amounts, preceded by minus signs,
represent the amount by which Indonesian prices fell below world prices.
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                               Page 28


implementation of the 2015 Export Levy, Indonesian prices were always higher than world prices

for crude palm oil. 16 Conversely, for the eighteen months following the implementation of the

2015 Export Levy, including the twelve-month period of investigation, Indonesian prices only

exceeded world prices on three occasions. See Final IDM at 17; Pet.’s Rebuttal Br. at 23 tbl. 1.

The court holds that Commerce reasonably relied on this evidence in making a finding that

Indonesian prices for crude palm oil were lowered by the 2015 Export Levy.

       As for Plaintiffs’ argument relating to evidence of continuing exports of crude palm oil

after the implementation of the levy, Commerce rightly recognized that nothing in the statute or

the SAA required it to show that a majority of exports had ceased, or even that a complete




       16
               Indonesian prices were always higher than world prices for crude palm oil when
accounting for the deduction of freight. See Final IDM at 17.
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                  Page 29


embargo on crude palm oil had occurred. 17 See Final IDM at 18-19 (“Our analysis is not whether

there is a complete embargo or whether the [Government of Indonesia] seeks to support the

respondents through the complete prohibition of [crude palm oil]. Rather, the analysis is whether

the [Government of Indonesia] seeks to support the respondents through a policy and a pattern of

practice that lowers [crude palm oil] prices paid domestically by altering the attractiveness of the

domestic market vis-à-vis the export market, thereby causing private [crude palm oil] producers

to sell more of their product domestically.”); see also, e.g., SAA at 926, as reprinted in 1994

U.S.C.C.A.N. at 4239 (“Commerce has found a countervailable subsidy to exist where the

government took or imposed (through statutory, regulatory or administrative action) a formal,

enforceable measure which directly led to a discernible benefit being provided to the industry

under investigation.”). In other words, substantial evidence of cheaper prices resulting from the

2015 Export Levy supports Commerce’s subsidy determination.

       Finally, the law speaks of enforceable measures leading to a contribution that provides a

benefit. The law does not require that private actors be compelled to perform a government

function for entrustment and direction to be found. See SAA at 926, as reprinted in 1994

U.S.C.C.A.N. at 4239 (“The specific manner in which the government act[s] through the private

party to [make a financial contribution resulting in a benefit] varie[s] widely.”).




        17
               Plaintiffs also claim that Commerce was required to look at more than the thirty
months of price data that it analyzed, because it has examined longer periods of time in other
proceedings concerning “export restraints.” See Pls.’ Br. 36. As the Department points out,
however, this argument is not properly before the court because Plaintiffs failed to raise it before
the agency. See Def.’s Br. 40; compare Pls.’ & Consol. Pls.’ Joint Case Br. (Oct. 12, 2017), P.R.
230-234, at 15-24, with Pls.’ Br. 35-37; see also 28 U.S.C. § 2637(d) (“[T]he Court of
International Trade shall, where appropriate, require the exhaustion of administrative
remedies.”).
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                    Page 30


       Therefore, the Department’s financial contribution finding, based on the Government of

Indonesia’s entrustment and direction of private parties through the 2015 Export Levy, is

sustained.

                       ii.     The Use of the Export Levy to Lower Prices Was a Practice
                               That Would Normally Be Vested in a Government

       The court also finds that Commerce did not err in finding that providing crude palm oil

for below-market prices, by means of a governmentally enacted tax system, qualified as a practice

normally vested in a government. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677(5)(B)(iii) (emphasis added) (“A subsidy

[exists when] an authority . . . makes a payment to a funding mechanism to provide a financial

contribution, or entrusts or directs a private entity to make a financial contribution, if providing

the contribution would normally be vested in the government and the practice does not differ in

substance from practices normally followed by governments.”).

       Plaintiffs maintain that “Commerce took the position that [the statute] requires . . . an

assessment of ‘whether the activity would constitute a financial contribution if performed by the

government directly, rather than by the private entity that was entrusted or directed.’” Pls.’ Br.

39-40 (quoting Final IDM at 19). In so doing, they claim, Commerce duplicated its financial

contribution analysis and “render[ed] portions of the statutory text superfluous.” See Pls.’ Br. 40.

Plaintiffs argue that more is required than a finding that a financial contribution exists. To satisfy

the “entrusts or directs” standard, they argue, Commerce must have shown that the type of

contribution was one that would be “normally vested in the government”—i.e., Commerce had

to do more than repeat its determination that a financial contribution existed. See Pls.’ Br. 39-40.

       Commerce, relying on this Court’s holding in Hynix Semiconductor Inc. v. United States,

stated that “the question is whether the activity would constitute a financial contribution if

performed by the government directly, rather than by the private entity that was entrusted or
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                 Page 31


directed.” Final IDM at 19 (citing Hynix Semiconductor Inc. v. United States, 30 CIT 288, 308,

425 F. Supp. 2d 1287, 1305 (2006)) (approving Commerce’s decision to countervail a financial

contribution that “could be characterized as fulfilling a ‘governmental subsidy function’”)).

       Plaintiffs’ arguments are without merit. As has been established, the Government of

Indonesia created the 2015 Export Levy on crude palm oil, with the intention of supporting the

biodiesel industry by providing crude palm oil at below-market prices. By imposing the levy, the

Government of Indonesia increased the price of Indonesian crude palm oil on the world market

and lowered it on the domestic market. The upshot was that the Indonesian Government used the

domestic producers of crude palm oil as its instrument to supply buyers with inexpensive crude

palm oil. Therefore, the Government of Indonesia entrusted and directed Indonesian crude palm

oil producers to provide their product, a primary biodiesel input, to biodiesel producers such as

Wilmar and Musim Mas at lower prices.

       Also, Commerce reasonably found that a government’s use of a tax regulation to drive

down prices within the domestic market was uniquely within that government’s powers.

Delegating the actual provision of goods to private producers of crude palm oil is exactly the sort

of action that the entrustment and direction statute is meant to govern. See 19 U.S.C.

§ 1677(5)(B)(iii). And, in fact, that is what happened. The crude palm oil producers provided

goods for less than adequate remuneration as a result of a tax program, put in place by the

Government of Indonesia, designed to have crude palm oil producers do just that.

       Therefore, the court sustains Commerce’s entrustment and direction finding with respect

to the 2015 Export Levy.
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                Page 32


               2.      Commerce Reasonably Used a World Price Benchmark to Measure
                       the Benefit Resulting from the 2015 Export Levy

       Commerce must make distinct findings as to the elements of financial contribution and

benefit. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677(5)(B)(i) (financial contribution); id. § 1677(5)(E) (benefit). The

benefit derived from a countervailable subsidy is measured according to the type of financial

contribution made. See id. § 1677(5)(E).

       When a subsidy takes the form of goods or services provided for less than adequate

remuneration, it must have a comparison price by which to measure any benefit. By regulation,

Commerce finds this comparison price by establishing a “benchmark” price by means of “a three-

tiered, hierarchical approach” that “determin[es] the adequacy of remuneration of an investigated

good or service.” Maverick Tube Corp. v. United States, 41 CIT __, __, 273 F. Supp. 3d 1293,

1299 (2017) (citation omitted); see 19 C.F.R. § 351.511(a)(2)(i)-(iii). Commerce’s first

benchmark preference is for “a market-determined price for the good or service resulting from

actual transactions in the country in question.” 19 C.F.R. § 351.511(a)(2)(i).

       If, however, the “[a]ctual market-determined price [is] unavailable,” Commerce will

compare

       the government price to a world market price where it is reasonable to conclude
       that such price would be available to purchasers in the country in question. Where
       there is more than one commercially available world market price, the [Department]
       will average such prices to the extent practicable, making due allowance for factors
       affecting comparability.

Id. § 351.511(a)(2)(ii).

       Thus, the regulation provides for the establishment of a benchmark. Here, Commerce

determined that crude palm oil prices from Indonesia were too distorted by the effects of the 2015

Export Levy to be used as a benchmark for measuring “adequate remuneration.” See Final IDM

at 20-21 (“[T]he record empirically demonstrates that there are no market prices of [crude palm
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                    Page 33


oil] due to market distortion. Comparing the respondents’ distorted domestic purchase prices to

similarly distorted domestic prices via a ‘tier one’ benchmark would not measure the extent of

the distortion and, thus, the extent of the benefit.”). That is, because Commerce found that the

2015 Export Levy had artificially lowered crude palm oil prices within Indonesia, it could not

depend on those same prices to stand in for “adequate remuneration” when evaluating the prices

of the subset of crude palm oil sales made to Wilmar and Musim Mas. Commerce then turned to

the world market price for crude palm oil.

       Plaintiffs argue that “Commerce has no such evidence of market distortion on the record,

much less evidence of ‘significant’ market distortion. . . . Commerce simply assumed domestic

sales were distorted based on pricing differentials with no basis in the statute or regulations for

doing so.” Pls.’ Br. 44, 45. To bolster their arguments, Plaintiffs point to “substantial exports” of

crude palm oil, a “large number of domestic suppliers competing for business,” and claim that

“[crude palm oil] prices in Indonesia are set by open bids and auctions on a daily basis. . . . Market

participants in Indonesia are also free to sell their [crude palm oil] to domestic buyers, or export

it.” Pls.’ Br. 45. Plaintiffs, then, would have Commerce use Indonesian domestic prices for crude

palm oil as the benchmark for comparison with the allegedly cheaper prices at which Wilmar and

Musim Mas purchased crude palm oil.

       Substantial evidence, however, supports the Department’s benchmark choice. After the

2015 Export Levy was enacted in July 2015, Indonesian crude palm oil prices frequently and

sharply fell below world market prices, though they had often surpassed world market prices

before July 2015. See Final IDM at 17; Pet.’s Rebuttal Br. at 23 tbl. 1 (summarizing Plaintiffs’

submitted data). During the period of investigation, therefore (January 2016 to December 2016),

the crude palm oil market in Indonesia experienced increased supply and lowered prices. See
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                   Page 34


Final IDM at 17. Although Plaintiffs propose alternative reasons for these changes, Commerce

reasonably concluded that the timing of the imposition of the 2015 Export Levy and the supply

and price change was not merely a coincidence. See Final IDM at 20 (“Our conclusion [that prices

were distorted] was not a theoretical assertion based solely on the ‘alleged’ effects, but was

instead an analysis of how and whether the price data on the record, discussed above and in the

Preliminary Determination, demonstrated a significant price differential between Indonesian and

global [crude palm oil] prices occurring alongside the implementation of the export levy.”).

Therefore, the Department reasonably found that domestic prices were distorted, and turned to a

world price benchmark in accordance with the regulation.

               3.      The 2015 Export Levy Was Sufficiently Specific for Purposes of the
                       Statute

       To constitute countervailable subsidies, both direct and indirect financial contributions

that benefit a recipient must also be “specific.” See 19 U.S.C. § 1677(5)(A). The statute provides:

       Where there are reasons to believe that a [domestic] subsidy may be specific as a
       matter of fact, the subsidy is specific if one or more of the following factors exist:

       (I) The actual recipients of the subsidy, whether considered on an enterprise or
       industry basis, are limited in number.

19 U.S.C. § 1677(5A)(D)(iii) (emphasis added). The SAA additionally states that the specificity

analysis is intended to “avoid the imposition of countervailing duties in situations where, because

of the widespread availability and use of a subsidy, the benefit of the subsidy is spread throughout

an economy.” SAA at 930, as reprinted in 1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 4242 (emphasis added).

       The issue here is whether the indirect financial contribution, that is, the provision of goods

for less than adequate remuneration stemming from the 2015 Export Levy on crude palm oil, was

de facto specific. In its Final Determination, Commerce found that crude palm oil’s usage was
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                  Page 35


limited to fourteen Indonesian industries, as identified by the Government of Indonesia. See Final

IDM at 19 (citing 19 U.S.C. § 1677(5A)(D)(iii)(I)).

       Plaintiffs maintain that these fourteen industries are distinct and diverse from one

another, 18 and that Commerce “summarily decided that 14 industries is a ‘limited’ number,” and

failed to “reveal against what standard the agency measured whether 14 users reflects a

sufficiently large number for de facto specificity purposes.” Pls.’ Br. 43. In Plaintiffs’ view,

fourteen industries were too many to support a finding of specificity because the use of crude

palm oil was so widespread (from ice cream and margarine to fatty alcohol), and because the

relevant use—producing biodiesel—accounted for a relatively small percentage of crude palm oil

used in Indonesia. See Pls.’ Br. 42 (citing Petition Exs., Vol. V.16 (Mar. 23, 2017), P.R. 21, at

Ex. CVD-IND-28) (“The record also shows that a relatively small amount of [crude palm

oil] is used for the production of biodiesel, as opposed to the many other uses of [crude palm

oil]. According to the WTO Trade Policy Review of Indonesia, 19 the use of [crude palm oil] for

biofuels represents less than 10 percent of total [crude palm oil] usage.”). Plaintiffs thus argue

that the specificity standard was not met.



       18
               Supported by the Government of Indonesia’s questionnaire response, Plaintiffs list
the fourteen industries as follows:

       (1) olein; (2) palm fatty acid distillates; (3) fatty acid; (4) monoglycerides,
       diglycerides, and triglycerides; (5) ice cream and margarine; (6) soap chip;
       (7) edible oil and salad oil; (8) biodiesel; (9) surfactant; (10) palmitate, stearate,
       oleate/glycol, and propylene glycol; (11) fatty amines; (12) fatty alcohol;
       (13) glycerol; and (14) food emulsifier.

Pls.’ Br. 43 (citing GOI Initial Quest. Resp. at 73-74).
       19
               The most recent WTO Trade Policy Review of Indonesia, cited by Plaintiffs in their
brief, was published in 2013. See Trade Policy Review Body, Report by the Secretariat: Indonesia,
WTO Doc. TPR/S/278/Rev.1 (July 16, 2013).
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                   Page 36


        Commerce justified its specificity determination, however, by finding that the number of

industries benefitting from crude palm oil being provided for less than adequate remuneration did

not “encompass all possible subsidy recipients within the economy of Indonesia.” Final IDM at

19. In other words, Commerce complied with both the statute’s requirement of de facto specificity,

and the SAA’s direction to avoid countervailing subsidies with a widespread benefit throughout

an economy. The Department “recognize[d] that the nature of the products’ uses as listed by the

[Government of Indonesia] (food additives, soap, and biodiesel) are clearly not uses that would be

beneficial to every industry within the Indonesian economy.” Final IDM at 19; see also Prelim.

Dec. Mem. at 16 (“Because only certain industries make use of [crude palm oil] . . . for the

production of further processed products such as biodiesel, a limited number of enterprises and

industries use this subsidy. . . . [The levy is therefore] de facto specific.”).

        The court finds that Commerce’s specificity determination is both supported by

substantial evidence and in accordance with law. The statute permits the Department to rely on a

single factor, if need be, in finding that a subsidy is de facto specific. See 19 U.S.C.

§ 1677(5A)(D)(iii) (“[T]he subsidy is specific if one or more of the following factors exist . . .”).

Commerce used the first of four factors, the “limited number of industries” factor, which required

that “[t]he actual recipients of the subsidy, whether considered on an enterprise or industry basis,

are limited in number.” Id. § 1677(5A)(D)(iii)(I).

        The law of specificity does not mandate that a subsidy be limited to the product under

investigation, here, biodiesel. Rather, the law requires that the subsidy not be spread throughout

the economy. See, e.g., SAA at 930, as reprinted in 1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 4242 (emphasis added)

(“The specificity test was intended to function as a rule of reason and to avoid the imposition of
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                  Page 37


countervailing duties in situations where, because of the widespread availability and use of a

subsidy, the benefit of the subsidy is spread throughout an economy.”).

       The evidence before Commerce supported its specificity finding because the industries

that used crude palm oil were sufficiently discrete and clearly defined subsets of the Indonesian

economy. All parties agreed that the identified industries encompassed all usage of crude palm

oil within the country. See Final IDM at 19; Pls.’ Br. 43. Industries such as biodiesel or soap chip

describe not widespread availability and use of a subsidized product, but rather, a finite list of

identifiable, actual users of crude palm oil in Indonesia.

       In other words, Commerce reasonably determined that the identified industries were

sufficiently defined and limited for purposes of the statute, so as to escape a finding that the

subsidy was widespread throughout the economy, and generally available and used. Accordingly,

the court upholds the Department’s specificity determination with regard to the 2015 Export Levy

on crude palm oil.

        B.     Commerce’s Subsidy Determination as to the 1994 Export Tariff Was Not
               Reasonable

       In addition to its subsidy determination regarding the 2015 Export Levy on crude palm oil,

Commerce also found that the 1994 Export Tariff on crude palm oil resulted in the same type of

subsidy. Unlike the 2015 Export Levy, which is collected on all exports of crude palm oil, the 1994

Export Tariff was only collected if a threshold price per metric ton of crude palm oil was reached

in a sale for export. See GOI Initial Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt. 13, at Ex. GOI-CPO-15.

       Prior to and during the first part of the period of investigation, from October 2014 to May

2016, no export tariff revenue was collected on crude palm oil exports because the threshold price

had not been reached. See GOI Initial Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt. 13, at Ex. GOI-CPO-15. From May

2016 to December 2016 (the end of the period of investigation), the threshold having been reached
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                 Page 38


for three of those months, a tariff of three dollars per metric ton was imposed. See GOI Initial

Quest. Resp., Ex. Pt. 13, at Ex. GOI-CPO-15. While the period during which the tariff was

collected was limited and the amount of the tariff collected was small, Commerce nonetheless

found the 1994 Export Tariff to be countervailable.

       The Department’s reasoning was that, since the tariff rate for crude palm oil increased

when export prices for crude palm oil increased, the Government of Indonesia intended to use the

tariff to keep crude palm oil in the country to increase the supply and lower the domestic sales

price. See Final IDM at 17-18 (“The fact that the [1994 Export Tariff] increases along with world

market prices further supports the conclusion that lowering domestic prices is an aim of the overall

regime.”).

       Commerce’s subsidy determination is not supported by substantial evidence, nor is it in

accordance with law. Under the statute, Commerce must demonstrate, based on substantial

evidence, that the Government of Indonesia entrusted or directed crude palm oil sellers to make a

financial contribution that was otherwise countervailable. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677(5)(B)(iii). Here,

Commerce failed to make an independent financial contribution finding with respect to the 1994

Export Tariff. Rather, Commerce justified its subsidy determination using the same reasoning it

applied to the 2015 Export Levy, and relied on evidence related to the 2015 Export Levy rather

than the 1994 Export Tariff. See Final IDM at 17-18 (discussing how the Indonesian price for

crude palm oil dropped after the implementation of the 2015 Export Levy). Therefore, Commerce

cites no evidence tending to demonstrate that the 1994 Export Tariff, independently, resulted in

cheap crude palm oil.

       Also, under the statute, it was not sufficient for Commerce to demonstrate with substantial

evidence that the underlying intention of the 1994 Export Tariff was to provide biodiesel producers
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                   Page 39


with cheaper crude palm oil. Rather, Commerce was required to show that crude palm oil, a good,

was provided for less than adequate remuneration—i.e., that the Government of Indonesia used

the 1994 Export Tariff to make a financial contribution to Wilmar and Musim Mas. Therefore,

Commerce’s subsidy determination was not in accordance with law because the Department

applied the wrong legal standard. That is, intention is not enough; evidence of an actual financial

contribution is required.

       Commerce failed to support a subsidy determination because it pointed to no compelling

evidence of lower crude palm oil prices in Indonesia, connected to the 1994 Export Tariff. Indeed,

it acknowledged that, during the period of investigation, the 1994 Export Tariff barely had an

effect. See Final IDM at 17 (“[T]he [export tariff] was very low during the [period of investigation]

($0 or $3 [per metric ton]).”). Yet, Commerce still made a subsidy determination with respect to the

1994 Export Tariff, claiming that it was part of Indonesia’s overall “aim” of supporting the biodiesel

industry, and relying on evidence related to the 2015 Export Levy. See Final IDM at 17, 18

(emphasis added) (“The export taxes and levies ensure that the private [crude palm oil] producers

[provide cheaper crude palm oil to biodiesel producers]. From October 2014 through June 2015,

after deducting freight expenses, the price of [crude palm oil] was always higher in Indonesia than

it was on the world market. In July 2015, when the [2015 Export Levy] was implemented, prices

of [crude palm oil] in Indonesia dropped well below world market prices for 15 out of the next 18

months.”). But evidence of the 2015 Export Levy is not relevant here, and Commerce cannot rely

on it without a reason for doing so. Commerce points to no evidence that the 1994 Export Tariff,

separate from the 2015 Export Levy, yielded financial contributions to Wilmar and Musim Mas in

the form of goods provided for less than adequate remuneration.
Consol. Court No. 18-00006                                                                  Page 40


       Therefore, the court remands the Department’s subsidy determination with regard to the

1994 Export Tariff. To the extent that Commerce attributed the alleged effects of the 1994 Export

Tariff to Wilmar’s and Musim Mas’ sales during the period of investigation, the court directs the

Department to recalculate its ad valorem subsidy rates for this program.



                                  CONCLUSION and ORDER

       Commerce’s Final Determination that the Government of Indonesia’s 1994 Export Tariff

constituted a countervailable subsidy is neither supported by substantial evidence nor in

accordance with law. Therefore, it is hereby

       ORDERED that the Final Determination is sustained in part and remanded; it is further

       ORDERED that, on remand, Commerce issue a revised Final Determination that complies

in all respects with this Opinion and Order, is based on determinations that are supported by

substantial record evidence, and is in all respects in accordance with law; it is further

       ORDERED that Commerce shall make a new subsidy determination as to the 1994 Export

Tariff that is supported by substantial evidence and in accordance with law; or, in the alternative,

recalculate its ad valorem subsidy rate for goods provided for less than adequate remuneration,

excluding any claimed effects of the 1994 Export Tariff; and it is further

       ORDERED that the revised Final Determination shall be due ninety (90) days following

the date of this Opinion and Order; any comments to the revised Final Determination shall be due

thirty (30) days following the filing of the revised Final Determination; and any responses to those

comments shall be filed fifteen (15) days following the filing of the comments.

                                                                           /s/ Richard K. Eaton
                                                                          Richard K. Eaton, Judge
Dated: August 11, 2020
       New York, New York
