Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. cites illegally imported solar cells

China firms said to avoid tariffs

- EVAN HALPER

The Biden administra­tion found a widespread flouting of trade laws by the world’s biggest solar manufactur­ers amid an investigat­ion that has rattled the industry and will likely push companies to invest more heavily in producing components in the United States.

Four companies that account for as much as half of the solar cells imported into the U.S. are avoiding steep tariffs on solar products manufactur­ed in China by using other nations as a pass-thru in the production process, according to preliminar­y findings of a Department of Commerce investigat­ion.

The findings come despite large solar industry groups and many lawmakers aggressive­ly lobbying Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo to drop the investigat­ion. Dozens of solar companies in the U.S. blame the probe for price spikes and panel shortages in the spring and summer. They warn this stepping up of enforcemen­t will inhibit growth and undermine the president’s goal of further driving down the cost of solar energy.

But the administra­tion is pressing ahead with robust enforcemen­t of U.S. trade laws as it tries to steer clean energy manufactur­ing back to the U.S. The investigat­ion was launched in March at the behest of a small U.S. manufactur­er in California called Auxin So

lar. The company said it was being driven toward financial ruin by competitor­s making panels with materials illegally sourced in China.

“What we’re trying to do is just provide relief against unfair trade practices,” said a senior Commerce official who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity. The official said the administra­tion is merely enforcing laws that have been in place for more than a decade.

“There’s no reason for anyone to be confused about how this operates,” the official said.

Federal investigat­ors found ample evidence supporting the allegation­s that Chinese firms are dumping heavily government-subsidized solar components into the American market.

They are focused on the role of Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia as conduits for such Chinese materials.

Federal investigat­ors are now headed to Southeast Asia to verify their findings, a step largely considered a formality.

The companies the Commerce Department believes to be violating trade law are BYD Co., Canadian Solar Internatio­nal Ltd., Trina Solar Science & Technology Ltd. and Vina Solar Technology Co. The size of the tariff on products from those companies varies based on how much of production is linked to China.

The Commerce Department analyzed the extent to which initial investment, research and developmen­t and parts manufactur­ing is happening in China versus in nations where companies claim to be operating.

Officials from the companies did not immediatel­y respond to request for comment. But executives from Chinese solar companies had earlier said the allegation­s are baseless, noting hundreds of millions of dollars are being invested locally in their Southeast Asia subsidiari­es on solar technology and operations.

They maintain that the factories are not merely pass-thrus to avoid tariffs. The U.S. began placing the tariffs on Chinese solar products in 2012, after finding highly subsidized panels were being “dumped” into the American market at prices below the cost of production.

Months before the department issued its latest findings, the investigat­ion had already sent the American solar industry into turmoil, as firms worried they would be hit with steep retroactiv­e penalties that could add up to 50% the cost of panels.

The White House stepped in to assuage those concerns and get the industry back on track in June with an order that exempts American companies buying the components in question from getting slapped with any tariffs or penalties until mid-2024.

The interventi­on succeeded in revitalizi­ng the market, but tensions and anxiety in the solar industry continued to simmer as the investigat­ion lumbered on.

The Biden administra­tion promises an infusion of subsidies from the Inflation Reduction Act will give the industry the resources it needs to shift more manufactur­ing to the U.S. and move supply chains away from China.

China now controls more than 80% of solar panel production.

It commands 95% of production of certain elements that are essential to making a panel, including polysilico­n and wafers.

China’s market dominance was seeded by its government with a $50 billion investment into the solar supply chain.

As China drove prices down, companies elsewhere, including the United States, stopped trying to compete in vital areas of solar manufactur­ing.

Cheap Chinese materials ultimately factored big in making solar some of the most affordable energy in the U.S.

But moving production back to the U.S. has since become a major White House priority.

Biden administra­tion officials say China’s control over the solar supply chain poses an increasing threat to America’s energy independen­ce and financial health as the nation’s reliance on solar power grows.

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