The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gwinnett solar firm wins ITC support

Norcross-based Suniva, other U.S. companies, threatened by imports.

- By Russell Grantham rgrantham@ajc.com

The U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission on Friday agreed with a bankrupt Gwinnett company’s complaint that America is being flooded with cheap imported solar cells, setting up a potential trade battle with China or other countries that export solar panels.

Norcross-based Suniva said it was “gratified” by the trade commission’s finding, which opens the way for the agency to recommend actions such as trade quotas or tariffs on imported solar panels.

President Donald Trump will have the final decision on what trade penalties to impose. If penalties are imposed, that could lead to retaliatio­n by China or other countries.

“We brought this action because the U.S. solar manufactur­ing industry finds itself at the precipice of extinction at the hands of foreign market overcapaci­ty,” Suniva said in a statement.

But Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n, a trade group for companies that install solar power projects ranging from roof-top panels on homes to giant solar power farms, said the decision could endanger jobs and derail up to two-thirds of utility-scale solar projects.

“The ITC’s decision is disappoint­ing for nearly 9,000 U.S. solar companies and the 260,000 Americans they employ,” Abigail Ross Hopper, president of the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n, said in a statement.

She said Suniva’s proposed tariffs “will double the price of solar, destroy two-thirds of demand, erode billions of dollars in investment and unnecessar­ily force 88,000 Americans to lose their jobs.”

The trade commission’s finding was unanimous that U.S. solar cell manufactur­ers had been harmed by an increase in imported solar cells and panels. The ITC did not mention Chinese manufactur­ers specifical­ly in its decision, but did state that imports from Mexico and Korea had caused “substantia­l harm.”

Suniva had said its business was crippled by illegal dumping of cheap solar panels in the U.S. by Chinese manufactur­ers, even though a Chinese firm, Shunfeng Internatio­nal Clean Energy Limited, bought a majority stake in the company in 2015.

The petition also was supported by another panel manufactur­er, SolarWorld Americas, which is owned by a German company.

Suniva also complained that the U.S. industry was being harmed by Chinese subsidies for solar panel makers and moves by those companies to circumvent U.S. tariffs by shifting production to factories in other countries.

Suniva, which shut down two plants in Michigan and Georgia, filed its petition in April, a few days after it filed bankruptcy. Late last year, the company had about 380 employees, but had downsized to a few dozen employees by the time of its bankruptcy.

Suniva, which was founded in 2007 as a spin-off from the Georgia Institute of Technology, had been something of a local darling among people hoping to foster the high-tech solar industry in Georgia.

But it and other U.S solar manufactur­ers stumbled in recent years as Chinese manufactur­ers vastly expanded solar panel production and drove down prices.

The lower prices benefited customers ranging from homeowners to utility companies, powering dramatic growth in solar energy installati­ons across the nation.

 ?? DEBORAH CANNON / AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? Cheap imports have led to a boom in the use of solar power in the U.S., where rooftop and other installati­ons have surged tenfold since 2011.
DEBORAH CANNON / AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN Cheap imports have led to a boom in the use of solar power in the U.S., where rooftop and other installati­ons have surged tenfold since 2011.

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