Sec. 146.94 Records concerning establishment of manufacturing period.
(a) Feedstock admitted into the refinery subzone. The operator must
maintain appropriate inventory records during the manufacturing period
to substantiate the feedstock(s) eligible for attribution under
Sec. 146.93(b) and in accordance with the operator's selected
attribution method.
(b) Final product consumed in or removed from subzone. The operator
must record the date and amount of each final product consumed in, or
removed from the subzone.
(c) Consumption or removal. The consumption or removal of a final
product during a week may be considered to have occurred on the last day
of that week for purposes of attribution and relative value calculation
instead of the actual day on which the removal or consumption occurred,
unless the refiner elects to attribute using the FIFO method (see
section II of the appendix to this part).
(d) Gain or loss. A gain or loss that occurs during a manufacturing
period must be taken into account in determining the attribution of a
final product to a feedstock and the relative value calculation of
privileged foreign feedstocks. Any gain in a final product attributed to
a non-privileged foreign status feedstock is dutiable if entered for
consumption unless otherwise exempt from duty.
(e) Determining gain or loss; acceptable methods.--(1) Converting
volume to weight. Volume measurements may be converted to weight
measurements using American Petroleum Institute conversion factors to
account for gain or loss.
(2) Calculating feedstock factor to account for volume gain or loss.
A feedstock factor may be calculated by dividing the value per barrel of
production per product category by the quotient of the total value of
production divided by all feedstock consumed. This factor would be
applied to a finished product that has been attributed to a feedstock to
account for volume gain.
(3) Calculating volume difference. Volume difference may be
determined by comparing the amount of feedstocks introduced for a given
period with the amount of final products produced during the period, and
then assigning the volume change to each final product proportionately.