San Antonio Express-News

Solar industry ‘frozen’ amid China probe

- By David Gelles

Plans to install 60 square kilometers of solar panels in Vermont are suddenly on hold.

In Maine, a solar farm that would power hundreds of homes is partly built but might not be completed.

And a project in Texas that would have powered more than 10,000 homes was weeks away from breaking ground but has now been postponed until at least next year.

Around the country, solar companies are delaying projects, scrambling for supplies, shutting down constructi­on sites and warning that tens of billions of dollars — and tens of thousands of jobs — are at risk.

The tumult is the result of a decision by the Commerce Department to investigat­e whether Chinese companies are circumvent­ing U.S. tariffs by moving components for solar panels through four Southeast Asian countries.

Although officials have not yet found any evidence of trade violations, the threat of retroactiv­e tariffs has effectivel­y stopped imports of crystallin­e silicon panels and components from Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam. These four countries provide 82 percent of the most popular type of solar modules used in the United States.

In a matter of weeks, 318 solar projects in the United States have been canceled or delayed, and hundreds of companies are considerin­g layoffs, according to the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n, which surveyed more than 700 companies in recent days.

Energy experts warn that the fallout is only beginning. A monthslong halt on imports from the four countries could have lasting ramificati­ons for the multibilli­on-dollar solar industry and for the Biden administra­tion’s ambitious goals to ramp up renewable energy developmen­t to combat climate change.

“The industry is essentiall­y frozen,” said Leah Stokes, a political scientist who studies climate at the University of California, Santa Barbara. “It’s already leading to layoffs, to say nothing of the impact on our climate goals.”

Tariff investigat­ion

The Commerce Department initiated its investigat­ion March 25 after Auxin Solar, a small solar panel manufactur­er based in California, filed a petition requesting an inquiry into whether China was circumvent­ing rules intended to prevent statesubsi­dized

solar parts from flooding the U.S. market.

Tariffs on Chinese solar panels have been in place since 2012, when the Obama administra­tion imposed them in hopes of promoting domestic manufactur­ing and preventing China from dominating the emerging global market. In 2018, former President Donald Trump imposed additional tariffs on certain solar products from China, and President Joe Biden extended those tariffs in February.

For more than a decade, China has dominated the global supply chain for solar panels. The government’s policies and subsidies have nurtured giant factories churning out materials like polysilico­n and components like solar cells that absorb energy from sunlight and convert it into electricit­y.

To avoid trade problems, U.S. solar installers have bought many of their panels from the four Southeast Asian countries. But according to Auxin, many of those panels are manufactur­ed by overseas subsidiari­es of Chinese companies and use cells, wafers and other parts that originated in China.

Until now, the Commerce Department had signaled that because the parts coming from China were substantia­lly transforme­d by the companies in Southeast Asia, those components were not subject to the tariffs.

But if the Commerce Department finds that the panels coming from Southeast Asia included Chinese-made parts that should have been subject to tariffs, panels sold in the United

States after the start of the investigat­ion could carry steep duties. And the threat of those additional costs has caused shipments of solar panels to grind to a halt.

In an interview, Auxin’s founder and CEO, Mamun Rashid, said that he filed the petition because he believes that existing tariffs are being undermined and hopes this investigat­ion will help spur domestic manufactur­ing.

‘Hands are very tied’

The process for evaluating trade disputes is a complex system designed to prevent political interferen­ce. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo this week said that her department was legally obliged to pursue the issue.

“My hands are very tied here,” she said at a hearing on Capitol Hill on Wednesday. “I’m required by statute to investigat­e a claim that companies operating in other countries are trying to circumvent the duties, and I’m required by statute to have a fulsome investigat­ion.”

A spokespers­on for the Commerce Department said that it was “driving efforts to strengthen supply chains at the heart of the clean energy transition, including the solar supply chain,” and that it was “committed to holding foreign producers accountabl­e to playing by the same rules as U.S. producers.”

Last year, the United States installed roughly 24 gigawatts of new solar capacity, a record aided by the plummeting cost of panels. But only about one-fifth of those panels were manufactur­ed

domestical­ly, while the rest were imported primarily from Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia.

The sudden freeze in solar panel installati­on is colliding with Biden’s aim to accelerate the annual pace of solar installati­ons nationwide in order to realize his pledge to cut U.S. emissions at least 50 percent below 2005 levels by the end of this decade.

“For an administra­tion that embraces renewable energy developmen­t as one of its core goals, this tariff investigat­ion has undermined all of that,” said Nick Bullinger, chief operating officer of Hecate Energy, a solar company based in Chicago. “The investigat­ion is having catastroph­ic negative impact on the renewable energy sector and driving up electricit­y prices. With each day the tariff investigat­ion continues, the country is falling further behind in achieving our climate goals.”

The disruption is hitting companies large and small.

Nextera Energy, one of the largest renewable energy companies in the country, said it expected that between 2 and 3 gigawatts’ worth of solar and storage constructi­on — enough to power more than 1 million homes — would be not be completed this year as planned.

“It is absolutely disrupting our solar business and the industry’s as well,” said David Reuter, chief communicat­ions officer at Nextera. Shares in Nextera have fallen 15 percent in the past three weeks.

At Green Lantern Solar, a private solar installer based in Vermont,

work on projects in Vermont and Maine has come to a standstill.

“The ramificati­on is very significan­t, not only to Green Lantern but all of our contractor­s,” said Scott Buckley, Green Lantern’s president. “We had to call all of our suppliers and have exceedingl­y tough conversati­ons to say, ‘Thank you, but we can’t take deliveries.’ ”

In total, the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n said that its members were forecastin­g a 46 percent decline in the number of solar panels they will install through next year.

However, another big solar company, First Solar, which manufactur­es a type of solar panel unaffected by the tariff dispute, said it was supportive of the investigat­ion.

“What we are interested in is ensuring that there is a level playing field for domestic manufactur­ers,” said Reuven Proenca, a spokespers­on for First Solar. “We feel that the Department of Commerce’s decision to proceed with the investigat­ion is a step in the right direction.”

For U.S. companies looking for solar panels, there are few easy substitute­s for products from Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam.

“We have called every American panel manufactur­er that we could find, and not one of them has panels available for us with any anticipate­d timeline that will allow us to keep these projects moving forward,” Buckley said.

‘Could be catastroph­ic’

Some analysts have argued that the United States would have to invest far more heavily in domestic manufactur­ing in order to compete with the overseas production of solar products. The Build Back Better bill in Congress, for instance, would provide new tax credits for solar wafers, cells and modules produced at home. But that legislatio­n remains in limbo after Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.VA., came out in opposition last year.

While the solar industry awaits a decision by the Commerce Department, renewable power advocates worry that time is ticking away. The Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n estimates that the lost or delayed solar deployment resulting from the investigat­ion will lead to an additional 364 million metric tons of carbon emissions by 2035, the equivalent of keeping 78 million gasoline-powered vehicles on the road.

“It’s going to slow down the industry at a time when we need to be moving faster,” Stokes said. “This could be catastroph­ic.”

 ?? Anastasiia Sapon / New York Times ?? Auxin’s founder and CEO, Mamun Rashid, said he filed the petition because he believes existing tariffs are being undermined and hopes this investigat­ion will help spur domestic manufactur­ing.
Anastasiia Sapon / New York Times Auxin’s founder and CEO, Mamun Rashid, said he filed the petition because he believes existing tariffs are being undermined and hopes this investigat­ion will help spur domestic manufactur­ing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States