Biden admin eases Trump-era solar tariffs but doesn't end them
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[February 05, 2022]
By Jarrett Renshaw and Nichola Groom
(Reuters) -President Joe Biden extended
Trump-era tariffs on imported solar energy equipment by four years on
Friday, but in a major concession to installers he also eased the terms
to exclude a panel technology dominant among big U.S. projects.
The decision represented a balancing act by the Biden administration to
meet the demands of two important political constituencies: union labor
which supports import restrictions to protect domestic jobs, and clean
energy developers keen to access cheap overseas supplies.
The four-year extension of the tariff exempts so-called bifacial panels,
which can generate electricity on both sides and are favored by large
scale developers, according to a White House announcement. That
technology was nascent when the tariffs were first imposed by Trump but
it is now used in most large U.S. solar facilities.
The extension also doubles the import allowance on solar cells - the
main components of panels - to 5 gigawatts (GW) before tariffs kick in,
far more than the 2.7 GW the United States is estimated to have imported
last year, according to energy research firm Rystad.
The administration also opened a pathway for duty-free supply from
neighboring Canada and Mexico, which currently supply less than 1% of
imports.
Domestic solar manufacturers condemned the decisions to exclude bifacial
panels and to raise the cell quota, while industry trade groups
representing installers and developers said they were pleased with those
terms.
The chief executive of Auxin Solar, a San Jose, California-based
domestic solar producer that sought an extension of the tariffs, said
the bifacial exclusion and increased cell import allowance reduce "the
value of the safeguard to not much more than the paper it is written
on."
First Solar Inc, which makes panels that compete with bifacial
technology, said the decision "effectively allows China to outflank
American efforts to grow self-reliant solar supply chains."
Shares of the company, which is by far the biggest U.S. solar
manufacturer, were down 1.5% following the announcement.
Just 1% of panels imported last year came from outside of Asia,
according to Rystad.
The American Clean Power Association, a renewable energy trade group,
praised the administration's decision, calling it "a win for jobs and a
win for the President’s climate agenda."
Manufacturing makes up a small portion of the solar industry, with most
of the jobs concentrated in installation and construction. Proposed
legislation that would incentivize domestic solar manufacturing is
currently stalled in Congress.
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Rows of solar panels at the Toms River Solar Farm which was built on
an EPA Superfund site in Toms River, New Jersey, U.S., 26 May, 2021.
Picture taken May 26, 2021. REUTERS/Dane Rhys/File Photo
Former President Donald Trump
imposed a four-year tariff regime on solar imports in 2018, using
authority under section 201 of the 1974 trade act, in an effort to
create manufacturing jobs in the U.S. solar sector. The tariffs
started at 30% and declined to 15% in the final year.
Bifacial panels were initially included in the Trump tariffs but
were excluded in November of last year due to litigation stemming
from a series of Trump administration reversals on the issue.
The tariffs had been set to expire on Feb. 6, but Auxin and four
other domestic solar manufacturers last year sought the extension,
saying their products were still unable to compete with
overseas-made goods that dominate the U.S. market. They cited
headwinds including import stockpiling by companies before the
tariffs took effect, the economic fallout of the coronavirus
pandemic, and cost inflation.
U.S. panel manufacturing capacity has tripled over the last four
years, with companies like JinkoSolar, Hanwha Q Cells and LG setting
up module assembly plants in response to the tariffs.
However, the nation's roughly 7 GW of panel manufacturing capacity
is nowhere near enough to meet the demands of an industry that
installed more than 20 GW last year. There is currently no U.S.
solar cell production.
Industry trade groups had argued that the continuation of the
tariffs would threaten Biden's goal to dramatically expand clean
energy and decarbonize the U.S. electricity sector by 2035 to fight
climate change.
Most panels installed in the United States are made in Asia, and
solar companies rely on those cheap imports to compete with energy
produced from fossil fuels.
The U.S. International Trade Commission said in November after a
three-month review that the tariffs were still necessary to prevent
harm to the U.S. solar manufacturing industry. But the president
makes a final decision on whether to provide relief to producers.
"The President agreed with the determination of the U.S.
International Trade Commission and decided to extend the Section 201
Safeguards for four more years to prevent or remedy serious injury
to the U.S. solar manufacturing sector," the senior administration
official said.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw and Nichola GroomEditing by Richard
Valdmanis, Edmund Blair, Mark Potter, Frances Kerry and Marguerita
Choy)
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