The Telegram (St. John's)

EU countries to pledge help for solar sector, but no trade curbs on China

- KATE ABNETT REUTERS

BRUSSELS — Most European Union countries are set to commit more support to help Europe’s ailing solar panel manufactur­ers on Monday, but steer clear of restrictio­ns on cheap panel imports from China, a draft document showed.

While Europe is installing new solar panels at record speed, most come from China, and Europe’s few panel manufactur­ers are struggling to compete, prompting some to cut production or make plans to shift investment­s to the U.S.

A draft “European Solar Charter” set to be signed by the European Commission and most EU countries on Monday said government­s would consider using more EU funding and national aid to back solar manufactur­ing projects.

“Further urgent action is needed in the short term to address the crisis in the European manufactur­ing industry,” said the draft document, seen by Reuters.

EU officials said more than 20 of the EU’S 27 countries were set to sign up to it.

The government­s said they would add criteria like cybersecur­ity and sustainabi­lity requiremen­ts to their renewable energy auctions to help local manufactur­ers, and quickly apply EU rules to speed up permits for manufactur­ing facilities.

The draft said the European Commission would work with the European Investment Bank to support projects and consider launching a cross-border European solar manufactur­ing project.

It steered clear, however, of any commitment­s on EU trade tariffs or restrictio­ns on solar panel imports.

European solar panel manufactur­ers have previously asked the EU to consider trade safeguards on Chinese imports, but Brussels and government­s including Germany have warned broad curbs on Chinese supply could stunt Europe’s fast expansion of clean energy.

The vast majority of solar panels and parts installed in Europe come from China — in some cases, 95 per cent, Internatio­nal Energy Agency data show. Utilities and panel installers generally do not support import curbs.

The EU has so far taken more targeted actions, looking at individual instances of Chinese subsidies, as it attempts to help European clean tech manufactur­ers compete with foreign suppliers.

Brussels launched two investigat­ions this month into whether Chinese bidders benefited excessivel­y from subsidies in their offers in a European public tender.

The EU said last week it will also investigat­e subsidies received by Chinese wind turbine suppliers.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A drone view shows solar panels at a photovolta­ic park in Sevremoine near Cholet, France, on March 25.
REUTERS A drone view shows solar panels at a photovolta­ic park in Sevremoine near Cholet, France, on March 25.

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