Is this solar panel American? Companies eyeing US subsidy await rules
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[April 24, 2023] By
Nichola Groom
(Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden's plan to challenge China's
dominance in solar panel manufacturing hinges in large part on rules his
administration will soon release defining what it means for a product to
be American-made, according to industry officials.
The Biden administration's Inflation Reduction Act is offering billions
of dollars in tax incentives for facilities using American equipment to
accelerate decarbonization of the U.S. power sector while creating
domestic jobs.
But the subsidies, signed into law last year, have yet to trigger a boom
in U.S. solar manufacturing as investors await guidance on those perks.
Their main question: will solar panels qualify if they are assembled in
the United States using components made overseas?
As soon as this month, the U.S. Treasury Department is expected to
release those details, the latest in a series of advisories on how
companies can take advantage of the landmark law.
The IRA contains a 30% tax credit for renewable energy facilities, with
the domestic content bonus worth an additional 10% of the project cost.
The IRA contains a number of such bonuses, including for building
projects in disadvantaged communities and for adhering to certain labor
standards.
"The average project size that we do is $300 (million) or $400 million.
So you're talking about a lot of money," George Hershman, CEO of solar
contractor SOLV Energy, said in an interview.
Last month, the U.S. Energy Information Administration projected that
the law's bonus credits would generate enough additional development to
reduce power sector greenhouse gas emissions 34% by 2050, compared with
a 1% reduction with just the base IRA credits.
Array Technologies Inc of Albuquerque, New Mexico, which makes solar
trackers, said its business has not yet experienced an expected
IRA-related boom.
"The main feedback we get is that there needs to be clarification from
the Department of Treasury on what qualifies as domestic content under
the IRA," CEO Kevin Hostetler said on a call with investors last month.
A Treasury Department spokesperson said the agency was "focused on
providing clarity and certainty for taxpayers and ensuring the bonus as
written in the statute is workable for taxpayers."
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Solar panels are set up in the solar
farm at the University of California, Merced, in Merced, California,
U.S. August 17, 2022. REUTERS/Nathan Frandino
INDUSTRY DIVIDED
The top U.S. solar trade group, the Solar Energy Industries
Association (SEIA), has proposed that panels assembled in the United
States should qualify for the credit regardless of where the cells
inside them are produced.
There are no cells being made in the United States currently, the
group argues, so the credit would be useless if panels were required
to have American-made cells.
"Requiring U.S. cells, which currently don't exist, would hold back
solar deployment," SEIA CEO Abigail Ross Hopper said in an emailed
statement.
But manufacturers hoping to set up or expand domestic factories for
solar components want stricter rules, saying requiring solar wafers
and cells to be made in America is key to producing goods that today
are almost exclusively made in China.
In February, top U.S. solar manufacturer First Solar Inc said it
would delay further expansion decisions until Treasury releases its
guidelines.
A manufacturing group, Solar Energy Manufacturers for America (SEMA),
said both manufacturers and developers want clear rules that will
fuel growth.
A potential approach could be to allow the bonus credit to apply to
domestically available goods, with that standard changing over a set
timeline.
"There's a lot of money that is ready to invest in this, and it is
just waiting for this last tidbit of information to secure those
investments," Mike Carr, SEMA's executive director, said in an
interview. "Then everybody can march forward in lockstep.
(Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing by David Gregorio)
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