CLA-2 CO:R:C:V 555354 BJO

Mike Ainsa, Esq.
Grambling & Mounce
P.O. Drawer 1977
El Paso, Texas 79950-1977

RE: Request for Reconsideration of Customs Ruling Letter 554914 dated August 11, 1988.

Dear Mr. Ainsa:

This is in response to your letters of March 28, and April 25, 1989, on behalf of your client, Epson El Paso, Inc. ("importer"), requesting reconsideration of Headquarters Ruling Letter 554914 (August 11, 1988). That ruling held that a polymer used in the manufacture of ophthalmic plastic lenses in Mexico was not a substantially transformed constituent material of the lenses for purposes of the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP)(19 U.S.C. 2461-2465).

FACTS:

In HQ 554914, we considered whether three chemicals imported into Mexico -diallyl diglycol carbonate (a liquid monomer), diisopropyl peroxydicarbonate (a solid initiator), and a solid ultra violet absorber- were substantially transformed by their combination into a new and different article of commerce, a liquid polymer, which was then used in the manufacture of ophthalmic plastic lenses imported into the U.S. We stated that in the absence of evidence showing that the liquid polymer was a distinct commercial entity separately bought and sold or ready to be marketed, it was our opinion that the production of the molded plastic lenses in Mexico from the three chemicals was a continuous manufacturing process resulting in the creation of only one separately identifiable article of commerce, the plastic lenses imported into the U.S.

You now claim that polymers like those produced by the importer are distinct articles with numerous commercial uses, and are marketed and sold by companies unrelated to the importer.

You state that PPG Industries, Inc. ("PPG") manufactures and sells to the importer the diallyl diglycol carbonate (sold under the trade name "CR-39\ Monomer"), and diisopropyl

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peroxydicarbonate ("IPP") used in the production of the plastic lenses. As documented by PPG's October 31, 1988 letter to the importer, PPG itself sells under the trade name "CR-39\ LS" the same combination of PPG's CR-39\ monomer and IPP used by the importer. Further, a December 15, 1988 letter from a PPG representative to the importer states:

"On my last visit to your manufacturing facility in Juarez, Mexico, I found that you also manufacture a pre-polymerized resin. The process by which you manufacture this resin may differ from PPG's; however, the end result appears to be in the same family of products as CR-39\ LS. By pre- polymerizing CF-39\ with IPP and strict temperature control methods, Seiko-Epson has developed their own unique product for use in their casting operation of plastic, ophthalmic lenses." (emphasis in original)

The PPG representative also notes that the price for CR-39\ LS is $15.30 per pound, while the price to the importer of CR-39\ Monomer and IPP is $2.00 and $7.80 per pound, respectively. PPG's sale brochure submitted with your reconsideration request indicates that CR-39\ may be used in the production of a variety of transparent plastic articles, including lenses, safety shields, and test animal cages.

Also submitted are letters from AZKO Chemicals, Inc. ("AZKO") and Nippon Oil & Fats Co., Ltd. ("Nippon"). These letters indicate that both companies manufacture or purchase products chemically equivalent to PPG's CR-39\ and IPP, and produce and market a polymer which is substantially similar or identical to PPG's CR-39\ LS. Invoices issued by Nippon to Seiko Epson Corporation, Japan, for the sale of such a polymer are submitted in further support of the claim that the polymer is a distinct article of commerce.

In further response to our conclusion that the production of the plastic lenses appeared to be a continuous process not resulting in any intermediate article, you state that the importer manufactures and stores the polymer in sufficient quantities to enable it to produce ophthalmic lenses from a single manufactured quantity for a period of a week or more.

Finally, you note that subsequent to our decision in the instant case, we issued a ruling to a direct competitor of your client in which we stated that the combination of CR-39\ and IPP\ was an article of commerce for GSP purposes. See HQ 555060, dated March 20, 1989. In that ruling, we reversed our earlier

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position, and held that the resultant combination, characterized by your client's competitor as a "polymerized mixture...[or] 'initiated concentrate'," was a substantially transformed constituent material of ophthalmic lenses, and therefore could be counted toward the GSP 35% value-content requirement. You state that because the chemicals and processes described in HQ 555060 are almost identical to those employed by your client in the creation of the intermediate product, the ruling issued to your client should be likewise reversed.

ISSUE:

Whether a liquid polymer produced from the combination of CR-39\, IPP, and an ultra violet absorber is a substantially transformed constituent material of ophthalmic plastic lenses for purposes of the GSP.

LAW AND ANALYSIS:

Under the GSP, eligible articles may receive duty-free treatment if imported directly from a beneficiary developing country (BDC), and if the sum of the cost or value of materials produced in the BDC plus the direct costs of processing operations performed in such BDC is not less than 35% of the appraised value of the article at the time of its entry into the customs territory of the U.S. See 19 U.S.C. 2463.

Pursuant to section 10.177, Customs Regulations (19 CFR 10.177), the words "materials produced in the BDC" are defined for purposes of 19 U.S.C. 2463 as "constituent materials of which the eligible article is composed which are either: (1) Wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of the BDC; or, (2) Substantially transformed in the BDC into a new and different article of commerce."

In Azteca Milling Co. v. United States, ___CIT___, 703 F. Supp. 949 (1988), the Court of International Trade defined "article of commerce" for purposes of 19 CFR 10.177 as:

"the new and different product [must] be commercially recognizable as a different article, i.e.,...the new and different article [must] be readily susceptible of trade, and be an item that persons might will wish to buy and acquire for their own purposes of consumption or production." 703 F. Supp. at 954.

The court also noted that evidence that no sales of the purported intermediate articles were made was a factor to be considered in determining whether they are articles of commerce. 703 F. Supp.

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at 955; see also The Torrington Company v. United States, 3 CAFC 158, 764 F. 2d 1563 (1985) (shipment on two occasions of the intermediate article to a related company is adequate evidence that the articles are articles of commerce for GSP purposes).

Based on the evidence presented, we are of the opinion that the liquid polymer produced from the CR-39\, IPP, and ultra violet absorber is a substantially transformed constituent material of the ophthalmic plastic lenses. The evidence establishes that the intermediate product is similar to that marketed by PPG and Nippon. In Azteca, the purported intermediate product, processed corn, was not readily susceptible of trade because it was never gathered in the aggregate but was immediately processed into the final article. 703 F. Supp. at 954. In contrast, the importer here manufactures the polymer in a process whereby liquid polymer is manufactured and stored in quantities sufficient to produce ophthalmic lenses for a period of a week or more. Further, because the importer's liquid polymer is substantially similar or identical to a product PPG and Nippon have apparently successfully marketed and have offered to the importer for sale in substitution of its own product, it is clearly an item that is bought and acquired for purposes of consumption or production. Finally, we accept your contention that the chemicals and processes employed by your client in producing the intermediate product are nearly identical to those involved in HQ 555060. In that ruling, we reconsidered and reversed our earlier opinion that the combination of CR-39\ and IPP was not a substantially transformed constituent material of ophthalmic plastic lenses. In accordance with that ruling, the ruling issued to your client is likewise reversed.

CONCLUSION:

Liquid polymer produced from the combination of CR-39\, IPP and ultra violet absorber is a substantially transformed constituent material of ophthalmic lenses for purposes of the GSP. Accordingly, its cost or value may be counted toward the GSP 35% value-content requirement. That portion of HQ 554914 that is inconsistent with this conclusion is hereby revoked.

Sincerely,

John Durant
Commercial Rulings Division