Chattanooga Times Free Press

Solar industry adds jobs in 2018 Gains made despite nationwide decline

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

Employment in the solar industry is shining less brightly since President Trump imposed tariffs on imported solar panels nearly two years ago, although Tennessee’s solar industry has managed to buck the nationwide drop in solar jobs last year due to its solar equipment manufactur­ing in the state.

The Solar Foundation reported Tuesday that the solar industry suffered a loss of nearly 8,000 jobs in 2018, its second straight year of job losses after seven years of growth. Abigail Ross Hopper, president and CEO of the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n, blamed the 3 percent decline in U.S. solar jobs last year primarily on a drop in solar panel installati­ons because of higher prices due to the import duties.

“The impact these unnecessar­y tariffs are having on America’s economy and its workers should not be ignored,” she said. “The damage, from a decline in jobs to a decline in deployment, far outweighs any potential benefits the administra­tion intended. We hope this data serves as a wake-up call to the administra­tion that the tariffs should be reversed before any more Americans lose their jobs.”

The U.S. solar industry employed 242,343 workers in 2018, according to the National Solar Jobs Census 2018 prepared by The Solar Foundation. Tennessee and Alabama were among 24 states where solar-related employment still grew during 2018.

In Tennessee, solar employment grew by 6.3 percent last year to nearly 4,700 jobs, including more than 650 at the $2.5 billion Wacker Chemie polysilico­n production plant in Charleston, Tennessee. Wacker and the Shoals Technology Group in Portland, Tennessee,

each employ hundreds of workers and continue to expand by supplying the growing industry outside Tennessee and much of it outside the United States, according to Gil MelearHoug­h of the Tennessee Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n.

“We have global suppliers for the solar industry in Tennessee and they continue to grow supplying this growing industry of the future, even though we haven’t seen much growth recently in Tennessee installati­ons,” Melear-Hough said. “Facebook and Google have helped encourage TVA to add more solar, but we have a lot of mom-and-pop installers struggling with the residentia­l market in Tennessee as TVA has cut back what it pays for solar and hasn’t made some of the investment­s we’ve seen in other states.”

Google and Facebook combined are investing nearly $2 billion in the Tennessee Valley and have contracted with TVA for a combined 674 megawatts of renewable power from solar farms in Alabama and Tennessee.

TVA has reduced what it pays to buy power generated from rooftop and other small solar installati­ons to better reflect its actual costs, TVA spokesman Scott Fiedler said. But even with fewer new installati­ons of solar compared with other Southern states such as Florida, North Carolina and Georgia, TVA still ranked No. 5 among all electric utilities in the nation for renewable energy sales in 2018, Fiedler said.

Over time, however, Melear-Hough said falling solar power production costs from improved efficiency and power storage capability could make solar the dominant source of electricit­y in 20 years in the Tennessee Valley.

“Despite two challengin­g years, the long-term outlook for this industry remains positive as even more Americans turn to low-cost solar energy and storage solutions to power their homes and businesses,” said Andrea Luecke, president and executive director at The Solar Foundation. “However, it will take exceptiona­l leadership at the federal, state, and local levels to spur this growth and address the urgent challenge of climate change. Expanding solar energy and storage across America will create high-quality jobs, reduce carbon emissions, boost local economies, and build resilient and adaptive communitie­s.”

Contact Dave Flessner at dflessner@timesfreep­ress.com or at 423-757-6340.

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