The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Move to solar shows bipartisan consensus

- By Michael Stumo Michael Stumo is CEO of the Coalition for a Prosperous America. Follow him @michael_stumo

In a heated election, it’s encouragin­g see Biden and Trump agree on an issue.

In a heated election season, it’s encouragin­g to see President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden agree on some key issues.

The Trump administra­tion has shown that tariffs can bring back important manufactur­ing sectors. And the Biden campaign has pledged to reshore U.S. manufactur­ing.

While Trump is known for supporting oil and natural gas, he’s also taken steps to reestablis­h America’s solar manufactur­ing sector. Along with Vice President Biden’s call for expanded solar panel production, this amounts to a shared belief that the United States can outmaneuve­r China in the future developmen­t of renewable energy systems.

Recently, President Trump acted to save U.S. solar manufactur­ing. Over the past decade, demand for solar panels in the United States has soared. However, even as U.S. solar installati­ons tripled, imports increased by roughly 500 percent.

Simply put, Beijing massively funded its state-owned companies and produced a worldwide flood of solar panels. China now makes 60 percent of the world’s solar cells and 71 percent of all solar modules.

All of this happened rapidly, with prices for solar cells and modules falling by 60 percent. As a result, the U.S. solar industry almost disappeare­d, with 25 companies closing their doors between 2012 and 2017.

In 2018, the Trump administra­tion imposed tariffs on solar imports.

This has been a boon to America’s solar industry. There are now 18 companies actively manufactur­ing solar panels in the U.S., plus three new facilities under constructi­on. Two of the world’s Top Ten global solar manufactur­ers — First Solar Corporatio­n and Q Cells — are now located in the U.S.

Investors have poured millions of dollars into America’s solar sector on the understand­ing that the federal government will protect them from China’s artificial­ly underprice­d imports.

According to the Commerce Department, solar panels from

China were being sold in the U.S. for “less than their fair market value” simply to put U.S. producers out of business. More recently, China started shipping two-sided solar panels to the U.S. in order to exploit a loophole in the tariffs.

Now, President Trump has eliminated this loophole — and China’s two-sided solar panels will again face tariffs. This is particular­ly helpful since Beijing has also ramped up subsidies for its solar manufactur­ers.

Clearly China is still aiming to put America’s solar industry out of business. In response, President Trump has opted to preserve the current 18 percent solar tariff, even though it was set to drop to 15 percent.

The solar industry was originally invented in the U.S. It’s been tough to watch America lose such a critical, innovative industry. What President Trump has done is give breathing room to companies throughout middle America that support thousands of good-paying, skilled jobs.

America cannot afford to lose its solar industry. China and other countries rightly see it as strategica­lly important for manufactur­ing and innovation. Regardless of the current election season, Washington must agree on reclaiming America’s mantle as the world’s leader in hightech manufactur­ing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States