Imperial Valley Press

Solar industry on edge as Trump weighs tariffs on panels

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DALLAS (AP) — Solar energy is booming in the United States, but companies riding the wave fear that President Donald Trump could undercut them this week if he decides to impose new tariffs on imported solar panels.

Businesses that install solar-power systems are benefiting from a glut of cheaper panels made overseas, mostly in Asia. That has made solar power more competitiv­e with electricit­y generated from coal and natural gas.

A green-technology research firm estimates that tariffs could cost up to 88,000 U.S. jobs related to installing solar-power systems.

On the other side are two U.S. subsidiari­es of foreign companies that argue the domestic manufactur­ing of solar cells and modules has been decimated by a flood of imports, mostly from Chinese companies with operations throughout Asia. Imports of silicon photovolta­ic cells, the building blocks of solar panels, soared nearly 500 percent between 2012 and 2016, according to the U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission.

The four members of the commission — two Republican­s and two Democrats — unanimousl­y ruled in October that import are hurting American manufactur­ers, although they differed on exactly how the U.S. should respond. Trump has until Friday to act on the agency’s recommenda­tions for tariffs of up to 35 percent.

Trump has wide leeway — he can reject the recommenda­tions, accept them, or go beyond them and impose tougher tariffs. Congress has no authority to review or veto his action. Countries harmed by his decision could appeal to the World Trade Organizati­on.

The trade case grew out of a complaint by Suniva Inc., a Georgia-based subsidiary of a Chinese company, which declared bankruptcy last April. Suniva was joined by SolarWorld Americas, the U.S. subsidiary of a German company. Suniva wants higher tariffs than those recommende­d by the trade commission.

The U.S. Commerce Department imposed stiff anti-dumping duties on imported panels made from Chinese solar cells in 2012 and 2015. Tim Brightbill, SolarWorld Americas’ lawyer, said Chinese companies have gotten around those sanctions by assembling panels from cells produced in other Asian countries such as Malaysia and Vietnam.

 ?? AP PHOTO/SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN ?? This April 20, 2011, file photo shows some of the 30,000 solar panels that make up the Public Service Company of New Mexico’s new 2-megawatt photovolta­ic array in Albuquerqu­e, N.M. The solar business in the U.S. has boomed in recent years, driven by...
AP PHOTO/SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN This April 20, 2011, file photo shows some of the 30,000 solar panels that make up the Public Service Company of New Mexico’s new 2-megawatt photovolta­ic array in Albuquerqu­e, N.M. The solar business in the U.S. has boomed in recent years, driven by...

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