Current:Home > NewsSuniva Solar Tariff Case Could Throttle a Thriving Industry -Excel Money Vision
Suniva Solar Tariff Case Could Throttle a Thriving Industry
View
Date:2025-04-18 14:53:23
Would an intervention by Washington to save this industry end up destroying it? That’s the question confronting the solar industry as the U.S. International Trade Commission meets this week on a petition to protect domestic manufacturers with tariffs on solar panel imports and price supports.
The commission will hear competing views at a meeting on August 15 and has said it will make a preliminary ruling in late September on whether the petitioners, a pair of domestic manufacturers that have filed for bankruptcy, have been so badly injured by imports that they need relief.
The case is unusually complex, and it’s hard to know what relief the ITC and, ultimately, the Trump administration may impose. (As Bloomberg News noted in June, Trump’s instincts are to protect domestic manufacturers, and he is more fond of the coal industry than of solar.)
The trade petition was filed after Suniva, which had been taken over by a foreign firm, filed this year for bankruptcy; it was joined by SolarWorld, another foreign-controlled and bankrupt company.
Most of the rest of the domestic solar industry—including some other manufacturers but mainly those who install and finance solar gear and can thrive on cheap systems from abroad—is lined up against the petition. Their business has been booming as costs have steadily declined, making it easier for consumers, businesses and power companies to shift from fossil-fuel electricity.
Hundreds of workers from the industry are expected to attend the hearing, pressing the case that the economic harm from protectionism would far outweigh the benefits.
Jobs and an Industry in Jeopardy
On Friday, a bipartisan group of senators sent an open letter to the ITC urging the commission to reject the petition.
“Increasing costs will stop solar growth dead in its tracks, threatening tens of thousands of American workers in the solar industry and jeopardizing billions of dollars in investment in communities across the country,” the senators wrote.
Opponents cite a recent study by Greentech Media that found that the protective relief sought by the petition “would strike a devastating blow to the U.S. solar market, erasing two-thirds of installations expected to come online over the next five years.” In rebuttal, the petitioners turned to analysts who issued a report claiming much the opposite: that relief would result in a “net gain in employment of at least between 114,796 and 144,298 jobs for the U.S. solar industry” over the next five years.
Forecasts for the growth of solar electricity have never been very reliable. They are especially difficult now. Congress passed a law that over the next few years will phase out most of the tax subsidies that make it cheaper to install solar power. That would be happening just as the temporary tariffs and price supports kick in if Suniva and SolarWorld win their case.
Among the unpredictable factors: the rapid pace of innovation and the intense competition in the global marketplace, the economies of scale that develop as solar power becomes ever cheaper, and policies around the world supporting solar. It all makes a big difference in a world trying to head off climate change caused by fossil fuel emissions of greenhouse gases.
Although the U.S. hardly dominates the global solar marketplace—China is a much bigger supplier of equipment, and its installed solar capacity is growing much faster than America’s—any big change in solar incentives or penalties in the U.S. will be felt.
Tariff Fears Are Already Having an Impact
For the first half of 2017, solar module prices were declining in the United States, but now there are reports that prices have been increasing—by as much as 20 percent, in some cases—due to fears of a tariff. For solar farm developers that provide energy for big companies and utilities, panels account for as much as half of their project costs.
“We’re already seeing that people are hedging their bets by buying modules ahead and stockpiling them because they’re worried if tariffs are put in place, prices for domestic installers will go up dramatically,” said Robert Margolis, a senior energy analyst at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.
“We could see a double whammy of higher prices and declining subsidies, which could have a pretty serious effect on U.S. solar deployment,” said Dan Reicher, executive director of Stanford University’s Steyer-Taylor Center for Energy Policy and Finance. “We don’t know how the commission is going to rule, so it’s hard to speculate about the actual impacts on carbon reduction goals and energy efficiency. But higher solar technology costs can only give a leg up to other technologies.”
His center’s recent report, The New Solar System, set forth the case for American manufacturers to build more “first factories” near laboratories whenever a new solar technology is developed; increase investment in large solar goods that are costly to ship overseas; and be granted more substantial government support for research and development.
Opponents say the fate suffered by Suniva and SolarWorld was the result of insufficient production capacities and a “series of damaging business decisions that had absolutely nothing to do with imports,” according to a brief from the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA).
“They did not make a product that could compete at the utility scale, where 80 percent of solar market growth has been, effectively icing themselves out of the biggest and fastest growing part of the market,” said Abigail Ross Hopper, CEO of the SEIA. “On the residential solar side, they didn’t align themselves with some of the biggest residential developers.”
“We’re talking about a fairly new energy source that is competing with other renewable energy sources, such as wind and natural gas, as well as the traditional ones, like oil,” said Paul Nathanson, a spokesperson for the Energy Trade Action Coalition, a group recently created to formally oppose the petition.
“This nascent industry will be devastated by cost increases to solar energy. The end result is people will turn to alternatives,” he said. “This couldn’t happen at a worse time for the industry.”
veryGood! (67)
Related
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Netflix debuts first original African animation series, set in Zambia
- 60 Scientists Call for Accelerated Research Into ‘Solar Radiation Management’ That Could Temporarily Mask Global Warming
- In California’s Central Valley, the Plan to Build More Solar Faces a Familiar Constraint: The Need for More Power Lines
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Former gynecologist Robert Hadden to be sentenced to 20 years in prison for sexual abuse of patients, judge says
- Stop Buying Expensive Button Downs, I Have This $24 Shirt in 4 Colors and It Has 3,400+ 5-Star Reviews
- A Status Check on All the Couples in the Sister Wives Universe
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- John Cena’s Barbie Role Finally Revealed in Shirtless First Look Photo
Ranking
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- Intensifying Cycle of Extreme Heat And Drought Grips Europe
- New US Car and Truck Emissions Standards Will Make or Break Biden’s Climate Legacy
- Matt Damon Shares How Wife Luciana Helped Him Through Depression
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- America’s Forests Are ‘Present and Vanishing at the Same Time’
- We've Uncovered Every Secret About Legally Blonde—What? Like It's Hard?
- Inside Penelope Disick's 11th Birthday Trip to Hawaii With Pregnant Mom Kourtney Kardashian and Pals
Recommendation
Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
Texas woman Tierra Allen, social media's Sassy Trucker, trapped in Dubai after arrest for shouting
Carbon Removal Projects Leap Forward With New Offset Deal. Will They Actually Help the Climate?
Some will starve, many may die, U.N. warns after Russia pulls out of grain deal
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
3 dead in Serbia after a 2nd deadly storm rips through the Balkans this week
Supreme Court Sharply Limits the EPA’s Ability to Protect Wetlands
Kate Spade 24-Hour Flash Deal: Get This $400 Shoulder Bag for Just $95
Like
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Climate Resolution Voted Down in El Paso After Fossil Fuel Interests and Other Opponents Pour More Than $1 Million into Opposition
- A Proposed Utah Railway Could Quadruple Oil Production in the Uinta Basin, if Colorado Communities Don’t Derail the Project