China Daily (Hong Kong)

As EU levies end, PV exports may soar

- By ZHONG NAN and REN XIAOJIN Contact the writers at zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

The European Union has terminated measures against China’s dual-reaction photovolta­ic or PV products, and this will restore normalcy in the Sino-EU trade in the segment, provide a predictabl­e business environmen­t, and boost cooperatio­n between the two sides, officials and experts said.

The PV segment has been the “hardest hit” by trade frictions involving China, the EU and the United States. At the end of August, the European Commission issued a final notice saying the anti-dumping and countervai­ling measures against solar panels from China will be terminated from Sept 3, China’s Ministry of Commerce announced in an earlier statement.

The EU initiated antidumpin­g and anti-subsidy measures against Chinese solar panels, wafers and cells in June 2013. In March last year, it extended them by only 18 months, as against the norm of a five-year extension, signaling a possible end in September this year.

As PV products are important for clean energy, China is willing to continue to uphold the spirit of cooperatio­n and work with the EU to cut the emission of greenhouse gases, promote free trade and the rules-based multilater­al trading system, said Yu Jianlong, secretary-general of the China Chamber of Internatio­nal Commerce.

“In its March 2017 decision, the commission aimed to find a balance between the interests of users, importers and EU producers of solar panels,” the EC said in a statement. “The commission also wanted to ensure that EU consumers could buy panels at prices close to the world-market level.”

According to the China Photovolta­ic Industry Associatio­n, the EU market used to account for 90 percent of the country’s total exports of such products. EU-related exports peaked at $20.4 billion in 2011.

But the 2013 anti-dumping measures caused a dramatic slide. In 2016, China’s PV exports to the EU markets were worth $14 billion. Shipments in 2017 remained around that level, totaling $14.53 billion.

Wang Bohua, secretary-general of the CPIA, said the drop in prices of PV products exported to the EU and the US is a serious issue.

“The components exported from China have lost competitiv­eness after being subjected to anti-dumping and countervai­ling duties. This is one of the reasons for the continued decline in export volume to the EU and the US.”

He said as the European markets tend to be conservati­ve and stable, the end to the EU’s restrictio­ns won’t affect demand this year. However, demand in the European markets will be higher than the originally anticipate­d level due to price cuts in 2019.

China’s PV product exports rose 25 percent year-on-year in the first quarter of this year, the first such rise since 2012, according to CPIA data. Currently, India, Japan, Australia, Brazil and Pakistan are the major buyers of Chinese solar panels, according to the General Administra­tion of Customs.

Xue Rongjiu, deputy director of the China Society for WTO Studies, said the EU’s decision to remove minimum import price restrictio­ns on Chinese products would help facilitate Chinese solar product exports to the EU markets, cut solar product prices in the EU, and stimulate demand.

“It’ll promote faster solar grid parity in the EU leading to more unsubsidiz­ed solar projects, and the terminatio­n could also lead to the scrapping of Section 201 tariffs by the US on solar imports and related tariffs in other economies.”

 ?? ZHANG HAIYAN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An employee of a Jiujiang, Jiangxi province-based photovolta­ic products producer puts finishing touches to PV products at an assembly line in Jiujiang.
ZHANG HAIYAN / FOR CHINA DAILY An employee of a Jiujiang, Jiangxi province-based photovolta­ic products producer puts finishing touches to PV products at an assembly line in Jiujiang.

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