Houston Chronicle

Yellen: China’s green push is unfair

- By Fatima Hussein

WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen called out China’s ramped-up production in solar energy, electric vehicles and lithium-ion batteries, calling it unfair competitio­n that “distorts global prices” and “hurts American firms and workers, as well as firms and workers around the world.”

Yellen, who is planning her second trip to China as Treasury secretary, said Wednesday in Georgia that she will convey her belief to her Chinese counterpar­ts that Beijing’s increased production of green energy also poses risks “to productivi­ty and growth in the Chinese economy.”

“I will press my Chinese counterpar­ts to take necessary steps to address this issue.”

China is the dominant player in batteries for electric vehicles and has a rapidly expanding auto industry that could challenge the world’s establishe­d carmakers as it goes global. The Internatio­nal Energy Agency, a Parisbased intergover­nmental group, notes that in 2023 China accounted for around 60% of global electric car sales.

Yellen delivered remarks Wednesday afternoon at Suniva — a solar cell manufactur­ing facility in Norcross, Ga. The plant closed in 2017 in large part due to cheap imports flooding the market, according to Treasury. It is reopening, in part, because of incentives provided by the Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act, which provides tax incentives for green energy manufactur­ing.

The firm’s history is something of a warning on the impact of oversatura­tion of markets by Chinese products — and a marker of the state of U.S.-China economic relations, which are strained due to investment prohibitio­ns, espionage concerns and other issues.

China on Tuesday filed a World Trade Organizati­on complaint against the U.S. over what it says are discrimina­tory requiremen­ts for electric vehicle subsidies.

The Chinese Commerce Ministry didn’t say what prompted the move.

U.S. Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai said in response to the complaint that the U.S. subsidies are a “contributi­on to a clean energy future” while China “continues to use unfair, nonmarket policies and practices to undermine fair competitio­n.”

The European Union, also concerned about the potential threat to its auto industry, launched its own investigat­ion into Chinese subsidies for electric vehicles last year.

“In the past, in industries like steel and aluminum, Chinese government support led to substantia­l overinvest­ment and excess capacity that Chinese firms looked to export abroad at depressed prices,” Yellen said. “This maintained production and employment in China but forced industry in the rest of the world to contract.”

“These are concerns that I increasing­ly hear from government counterpar­ts in industrial­ized countries and emerging markets, as well as from the business community globally,” she said.

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