The
agreement between Georgia-based solar cell producer Suniva and
Canada's Heliene, which has panel-making operations in
Minnesota, is being touted by the Biden administration as
evidence that Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) subsidies are
succeeding in building a domestic solar manufacturing industry
to compete with China.
"Before this Administration, solar companies across the United
States were struggling," Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who
will visit Suniva's Norcross, Georgia, facility later on
Wednesday, said in a statement provided to Reuters. She noted
that 20% of U.S. solar manufacturing jobs were lost between 2016
and 2020.
Suniva itself is restarting an idled factory.
"Now, though there remain significant challenges, Inflation
Reduction Act tax credits are helping change the game," Yellen
added.
Under the three-year, $400 million deal, Suniva will supply
cells to Heliene, which will assemble them into panels. The
products will be able to supply about 2 gigawatts of solar
projects, according to Suniva. That would be enough capacity to
power about 350,000 homes.
Solar project builders that use panels containing American-made
cells will be able to claim a 10% tax credit for using domestic
content, according to Treasury Department rules unveiled nearly
a year ago. That bonus credit, created in the 2022 IRA, has been
regarded by developers as elusive because there is no current
U.S. supply of silicon-based solar cells, the predominant
industry technology.
Some solar manufacturers have lobbied for more stringent
domestic content rules to counter a flood of Chinese-made
products in the global market.
"This contract is a testament to the effectiveness of the
Inflation Reduction Act and Treasury's May 2023 domestic content
guidance," Suniva CEO Cristiano Amoruso said in a statement. "We
are proud to fulfill our long-standing promise to bring back
cell manufacturing to the United States at our Norcross
facility."
The domestic content bonus credit is in addition to a 30% IRA
tax credit for renewable energy facilities.
(Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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