Los Angeles Times

Biden calls for solar projects

President signs order to halt new tariffs on panel parts from Asia.

- By Eli Stokols

WASHINGTON — President Biden sought to boost the new energy sector with actions Monday aimed at increasing the production and installati­on of solar panels.

Biden signed an executive action halting for two years any new tariffs on solar panel parts from Asia. Imports of such panels have been held up because of a Commerce Department investigat­ion. He also invoked the Defense Production Act to accelerate domestic manufactur­ing for clean energy projects including solar panel components.

“For too long the nation’s clean energy supply chain has been over-reliant on foreign sources and adversaria­l nations,” said Energy Secretary Jennifer M. Granholm in an official statement. “With the new DPA authority, DOE can help strengthen domestic solar, heat pump and grid manufactur­ing industries while fortifying America’s economic security and creating goodpaying jobs, and lowering utility costs along the way.”

Solar projects, including those in California, have slowed in recent months amid the Commerce Department’s lengthy investigat­ion into whether imports of solar panels from Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam are circumvent­ing tariffs on goods made in China.

The industry — nervous about the imposition of retroactiv­e tariffs on already imported goods once the investigat­ion concludes — has been forced to hold billions of dollars in reserve.

Biden’s action, the administra­tion said, is an attempt to free up that capital to increase production and serve as “a bridge” for solar companies over the next two years while domestic production ramps up.

Under Biden’s orders, the Defense Production Act will also be used to boost manufactur­ing of transforme­rs and grid components, insulation and heat pumps, an increasing­ly common alternativ­e to natural gas furnaces that the administra­tion views as vital in the transition to cleaner energy sources. That is especially so given the market implicatio­ns of Russia’s war in Ukraine.

“To reduce the amount of energy needed in our buildings, leading to less reliance by the U.S. and allies on adversarie­s such as Russia for oil and gas, heat pumps are an important solution,” the Energy Department stated in its official announceme­nt.

Just last month, the Los Angeles City Council voted to ban gas appliances in new constructi­on as part of the broader initiative to shift toward a zero-emissions policy by next year.

With Biden’s broader domestic agenda — including a proposed $550 billion to combat climate change — stalled in the Senate and inflation still high as the the midterm election season draws closer, the president has increasing­ly turned to executive action to try to stabilize the economy.

He has already invoked the Defense Production Act several times: to address the infant formula shortage, to ramp up domestic output of key minerals for electric vehicle batteries and to boost the production of tests and vaccines amid an ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

Biden’s latest actions, the White House said, put the U.S. on pace to triple domestic solar manufactur­ing capacity by 2024.

Kevin Johnson, a spokesman for Clean Energy Freedom, a climate advocacy group, heralded the moves as “a historic step.”

“This is the kind of unilateral action that is needed from the White House to address the energy and climate crises,” Johnson said.

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