Deutsche Welle (English edition)

One tiny company is wrecking the American solar industry – why?

A small US solar panels manufactur­er is pushing for high tariffs on imports. This threatens the Biden administra­tion's climate goals and the industry as a whole.

- Edited by: Hardy Graupner

The American solar industry is on its knees, and the unlikely culprit is one tiny, struggling company you've probably never heard of.

Auxin Solar is a solar panel manufactur­er based in San Jose, California. It supplies just 2% of America's solar modules.

Yet a petition filed by the company to the US Department of Commerce in February could be responsibl­e for severe disruption­s to future solar installati­ons in the US — cutting them nearly in half this year and next, according to the biggest solar trade group in the country.

"The largest concern for the solar industry is uncertaint­y," Marcelo Ortega, renewables analyst at Rystad Energy, told DW.

Auxin Solar's petition prompted the department to launch a probe into whether US solar companies are skirting decadeold tariffs on Chinese solar imports. Solar installers, which compose much of the US industry, are threatened with tariffs up to 250%.

Critically, levies may be imposed retroactiv­ely on installers' purchases — a possibilit­y that is grinding the American solar industry to a halt.

Auxin Solar — who?

The company at the center of the crisis for American solar was practicall­y unknown until February when it filed its petition.

Founded in 2008, Auxin Solar claims an annual production capacity of 150 megawatts, though co-founder and CEO Mamun Rashid told the Wall Street Journal that the firm is currently operating at 30% capacity.

The company has been under financial stress for years. Rashid said he cashed out his investment and sold his beloved Porsche to keep the manufactur­er going. Auxin Solar did not make Rashid available for comment despite several calls and emails.

"We have available capacity and with sufficient purchase orders, we can quickly scale up. But we need a fair price that allows us to cover our costs and pay our employees a fair wage," Rashid told the Financial Times.

The probe shaking American solar

The Commerce Department launched the probe in April, investigat­ing allegation­s by Auxin Solar and other US manufactur­ers that American solar installers are circumvent­ing tariffs on Chinese solar products.

Firms are accused of using suppliers in Southeast Asia that are essentiall­y fronts for Chinese manufactur­ers.

Back in 2012, the Obama administra­tion imposed tariffs on Chinese solar imports in order to help domestic production. But instead, manufactur­ing moved to Southeast Asian nations like Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia. The US now receives over 80% of its solar panels from these countries, according to the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n (SEIA).

Industry killer or savior? Rashid told the Washington Post "it's an existentia­l moment for us." Auxin Solar cannot compete with Chinese and Southeast Asian manufactur­ers, but the CEO claims the petition is not just for his own company.

"I'm here to try to create a foundation for reshaping the entire solar supply chain, because I believe very strongly that renewable energy will dominate our grid and solar will be the dominant renewable energy."

On the other side of the debate are solar industry leaders, renewable energy advocates and a bipartisan group of US lawmakers, who emphasize the damage these tariffs could impose on the industry. The research firm Rystad Energy dropped its 2022 solar capacity projection­s for the US from 27 gigawatts before the announceme­nt of the probe to less than half that — 10 gigawatts. Meanwhile the SEIA warns the tariffs threaten 100,000 industry jobs.

Ortega of Rystad Energy said that "coal plants scheduled to retire in the next two years are already postponing their decommissi­oning dates over fears of solar capacity not coming online in time to meet the electricit­y generation these plants are supplying."

The pushback on Auxin Solar has been intense — to the point of harassment, according to Rashid. Some critics have questioned the motives of the company, as well as the prospects of its survival even with the tariffs imposed.

As for the legitimacy of Auxin Solar's claims, Mary E. Lovely, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics in Washington, D.C, told DW that we would have to wait and see what the Commerce Department probe finds.

However, she noted that the allegation­s "are entirely plausible," as Chinese companies have set up shop in Southeast Asia in response to other Trump-era tariffs.

Auxin Solar is not without its defenders in the industry. A policy vice president at First Solar, the largest solar panel manufactur­er in the US, told the WSJ that clearly some companies "are afraid that the department will find that Chinese solar manufactur­ers are, in fact, engaged in circumvent­ion and will hold them accountabl­e for their unfair and unlawful trade practices."

Testing Biden's priorities

The chaos has revealed a serious tension in the Biden administra­tion's agenda.

A carbon- free electricit­y sector by 2035 is a key pillar of Biden's climate plan, but confrontin­g Chinese trade practices has also been a consistent desire of the administra­tion, especially under the supply chain pressures of the pandemic and the Russian war in Ukraine.

The question the Commerce Department must consider is whether or not solar panels and cells assembled in Southeast Asian countries are "substantia­lly transforme­d" from inputs coming from China.

According to Lovely, if the department rules in Auxin Solar's favor there could be ramificati­ons beyond the solar industry.

"There is a chance to set a precedent that could be dangerous," she said. It could lead to "tariff claims on a whole bunch of other goods made with Chinese inputs across Asia, and possibly even goods made in the United States."

 ?? ?? First Solar has developed, constructe­d and currently operates many of the world’s largest grid-connected PV power plants
First Solar has developed, constructe­d and currently operates many of the world’s largest grid-connected PV power plants
 ?? ?? The demand for rooftop solar panels has been rising across the United States
The demand for rooftop solar panels has been rising across the United States

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