The Mercury News

Solar companies seek new U.S. tariffs on Asian imports

Chinese businesses have been relocating production to avoid existing levies

- By Alan Rappeport

A group of seven leading solar manufactur­ers filed trade complaints Wednesday formally requesting that the Biden administra­tion impose tariffs on solar products being exported from Southeast Asia into the United States.

The petitions were filed with the Department of Commerce and the U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission. They come amid growing alarm within the U.S. solar industry that a flood of cheap Chinese green energy technology exports are pushing down prices of solar panels and threatenin­g efforts by the Biden administra­tion to develop a domestic solar supply chain.

Chinese companies have been relocating production of solar products to neighborin­g countries to avoid existing tariffs, and U.S. manufactur­ers believe new trade measures are needed to protect their businesses. The complaints call for investigat­ions into the trade practices of Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand and Malaysia. In the past year, the United States has imported $12.5 billion worth of solar products from those countries as prices of solar products have dropped by around 50%.

The trade complaints are focused on imported solar cells, the parts of solar panels that turn light into electricit­y.

The call for new tariffs comes as the Biden administra­tion has been increasing­ly vocal in its complaints about China's excess industrial capacity, warning that cheap Chinese exports of green energy technology and other kinds of products threaten to distort global supply chains. Last week, President Joe Biden called his trade representa­tive to more than triple some tariffs on steel and aluminum products from China, as part of a series of moves meant to help cushion U.S. manufactur­ers from a surge of low-cost imports.

Tim Brightbill, a trade lawyer representi­ng the companies, said that the U.S. solar industry was in a “very precarious” position and that investment­s made through the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 that were meant to bolster U.S. solar businesses were being threatened.

“China and Chineseown­ed

companies are manipulati­ng our domestic market to benefit their economy and national security interests,” Brightbill said. “The United States is overly dependent on an adversary that has weaponized supply chain reliance in the past for an essential energy source.”

He added: “All of the recent investment in U.S. solar manufactur­ing, billions of dollars worth from the Inflation Reduction Act, is now at risk.”

Additional tariffs on solar imports are already looming.

In 2022, the administra­tion announced a two-year delay on solar tariffs that were poised to take effect to allow for greater adoption of the technology in the United States. Last year, Biden vetoed legislatio­n that would have reinstated the tariffs despite concern from Democrats and Republican­s that the administra­tion was not holding China accountabl­e for its unfair trade practices.

“China and Chinese-owned companies are manipulati­ng our domestic market to benefit their economy and national security interests.” — Tim Brightbill, trade lawyer representi­ng the companies

 ?? CHRISTIAN MONTERROSA — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A group of seven leading solar manufactur­ers, including Qcells, filed trade complaints Wednesday, formally requesting that the Biden administra­tion impose tariffs on solar products being exported from Southeast Asia into the United States.
CHRISTIAN MONTERROSA — THE NEW YORK TIMES A group of seven leading solar manufactur­ers, including Qcells, filed trade complaints Wednesday, formally requesting that the Biden administra­tion impose tariffs on solar products being exported from Southeast Asia into the United States.

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