Above: Chinese solar factory workers from Chinatopix.
More Tariffs on Chinese Solar Will Ensue US Continues to have Most Expensive Solar In The World
The US Commerce Department is imposing higher tariffs on Chinese solar products imported to the US marketplace.
Commerce had indicated that Chinese companies may be entitled to lower rates, but the decision announced on Wednesday to impose tariffs of 238.95 percent reverses that.
The department had conducted a review of whether solar manufacturing companies in China had received subsidies from the government between March 2012 and November 2013. Manufacturers now face anti-dumping and anti-subsidy rates of about 31 percent on products made in China.
The review and tariff rates are part of an ongoing trade dispute between the US and China that was initiated by SolarWorld, a German-owned US-based company that filed a petition accusing Chinese manufacturers of receiving subsidies from the government and dumping them in the US market. SolarWorld had said that Chinese companies avoided duties by taking production of certain solar panel parts to Taiwan instead.
Philip Shen, senior research analyst at Roth Capital Parnters, said in a research note to clients that the duties were “much worse than expected” — and that this is overall a “negative for Chinese module vendors addressing the US market.”
Since the rates apply retroactively, the new rates may be liabilities for companies who are already underwater and don’t have options for improving their economics, Shen said.
Jigar Shah, president of the Coalition for Affordable Solar Energy (CASE) who has been vocal about the tariffs being bad for the solar industry, said that the final determination was “another disappointing move” toward protectionism for the American solar industry.
“The Department of Commerce chose against lowering the tax on solar imports. Keeping these stiff tariffs in place makes solar power less affordable, slows job growth and prevents more American homes, businesses and utilities from switching to clean solar energy,” Shah said in a statement released in response to the review’s results.
“Despite booming solar employment, economically counterproductive tariffs have artificially made solar panels prices in the United States the most expensive in the world. This decision does nothing to correct this imbalance,” he added.
Yingli Green Energy, or Yingli Solar, a solar panel manufacturer with headquarters in Baoding, China, received a lower tariff rate as a result of the review compared to the rate they had been paying in 2012 (21.73 percent versus 29.18 percent).
The company said on Thursday that it is disappointed that the Commerce department is continuing its decision to place tariffs on the industry, but they are now “very securely positioned” to succeed in the US market.
“So long as these tariffs are in place, we will continue our vigorous defense and fight for solar power’s cost-competiveness,” said Robert Petrina, managing director of Yingli Green Energy Americas.
amyhe@chinadailyusa.com