Edmonton Journal

China strikes back to protect solar panel makers

-

BEI J I NG/ HONG KONG – China will open investigat­ions into imported U.S. and South Korean solar-grade polysilico­n, the country’s trade ministry said on Friday, in the latest instance of growing tensions between major solar manufactur­ers.

The Ministry of Commerce said that it would open antidumpin­g and anti-subsidy probes on U.S. imported polysilico­n, and an anti-dumping probe on South Korean imports of the raw materials used to make solar products.

The Chinese ministry issued the decisions in two statements on its website, citing preliminar­y evidence from several companies — GCL Poly-Energy Holdings, LDK Solar, and Daqo New Energy.

Chinese officials have threatened to impose trade duties on U.S. shipments of polysilico­n if the U.S. moved to penalize Chinese solar companies.

A spokeswoma­n for the U.S. Trade Representa­tive’s office said the U.S. was disappoint­ed with the Chinese move and would “vigorously defend its interests” in the case.

“As we have stated with respect to similar actions by China, we are concerned that China appears to have establishe­d a practice of using trade remedy investigat­ions to retaliate against legitimate actions taken by its trading partners,” USTR spokeswoma­n Nkenge Harmon said.

Western solar companies have been at odds with their Chinese counterpar­ts for years, alleging they receive lavish credit lines to offer modules at cheaper prices, while European players struggle to refinance.

China’s move came a day after Germany’s Environmen­t Minister Peter Altmaier gave backing to German companies’ efforts to launch anti-dumping proceeding­s in Europe. Germany is the world’s largest solar market.

Earlier this year, the U.S. put two new import duties totalling about 35 per cent on solar equipment from China, citing the country’s unfair support of its industry and illegal dumping of inventorie­s in the U.S. market.

The Coalition for American Solar Manufactur­ing, the U.S. industry group that sought duties on Chinese-made solar panels, blasted the new Chinese investigat­ion as “an abuse of internatio­nal trade rules.”

“Today’s announceme­nt by the Chinese government proves once and for all that it is intent on unfairly and illegally allowing its manufactur­ers to dominate the global solar industry,” Gordon Brinser, president of SolarWorld Industries America, said.

China’s solar manufactur­ers such as Suntech Power Holdings, Yingli Green Energy and Canadian Solar, have criticized the tariffs set this year as a threat to their young industry that will slow its growth by raising costs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada