[Solar panel installers, developers of utility-scale solar panel power generation projects and others connected to the industry also oppose broader tariffs. The Solar Energy Industries Association, which represents those groups, contends that the tariffs would destroy more installation jobs than they would protect or create among manufacturers.]
By
Keith Bradsher
prices by close to 90 percent
over the past decade.
Credit Adam Dean for The New
York Times
|
But
Mr. Trump’s first big international trade fight could be over solar panels.
Major
manufacturers in the United States and China, as well as a slew of other
businesses that buy and use solar panels, are readying for a clash that could
begin as soon as January. The solar panel dispute comes at a time when senior
administration officials have been signaling their intention to take a much
tougher trade stance toward China , where most solar panels are made.
The
solar panel industry could be Mr. Trump’s first test of whether his harsh
rhetoric toward China will result in significant trade measures —
and whether those moves would help restore American businesses. Factories in China now account for more than two-thirds of the
world’s production, up from a negligible share a decade ago. Faced with intense
competition, more than a dozen solar companies in the United States have closed factories over the past six
years.
Chinese
officials contend they are helping the world move toward cleaner energy. “Everybody
needs the kinds of cheaper panels, not only in China , but also the world,” said Li Junfeng, a
senior Chinese economic adviser and the architect of many of China ’s renewable energy policies, at The New York
Times’s Climate Tech conference on Thursday in San Francisco .
But
American manufacturers say the cheap panels have been unfairly financed by the
Chinese government. Chinese manufacturers have benefited from cheap loans from
government-run banks. Even some Chinese companies that have struggled with
losses and had trouble making loan payments have been able to stay afloat.
Such
manufacturers in China “are technically insolvent, but they still
get capital,” said Mark Widmar, the chief executive of First Solar, a large
manufacturer based in Phoenix .
The
United
States
has already imposed tariffs on solar panels from China over the past five years, prompting Chinese
manufacturers to build vast factories in Southeast Asia . Now, the Trump administration has indicated
it may raise the stakes by authorizing tariffs on all solar panel imports, including
those from Southeast
Asia .
Administration
officials have so far allowed two solar-panel companies with factories in the United States to ask Washington for tariffs on all solar panel imports.
Thanks
to a complicated series of maneuvers within the United States system for evaluating trade cases, the Trump
administration now has a Jan. 26 deadline to grant the companies’ requests for
wider tariffs.
Solar
panel installers, developers of utility-scale solar panel power generation
projects and others connected to the industry also oppose broader tariffs. The
Solar Energy Industries Association, which represents those groups, contends
that the tariffs would destroy more installation jobs than they would protect
or create among manufacturers.
“If
my price goes up, I’m not going to win” orders, said Abigail Ross Hopper, the
chief executive and president of the Washington-based association, a telephone
interview.
Yet
the effects of tariffs are disputed within the industry. Solar panel makers in
the United
States
say higher tariffs would add only modestly to the cost of projects.
“That’s
still very compelling for any utility,” said Mr. Widmar, of First Solar.
Many
trade experts predict the United States will impose tariffs on all solar panel
imports, because President Trump has expressed sympathy for industrial workers in
the United
States
and for fossil fuels, while voicing skepticism about the use of renewable
energy.
If
the Trump administration decides to impose more tariffs next month, it could be
the first blow in a one-two punch to China on trade, making it even more likely that Beijing might retaliate against American exports. The
deadline for the administration to act on possibly imposing tariffs on washing
machines from around the world, and particularly from China , comes a little more than a week later, on
Feb. 3.
Mr.
Li, the Chinese economic adviser, contended that China , not the United States , was the country that has proved willing to
let market forces determine winners and losers in the solar panel market. China had 800 solar panel companies a decade ago
and now has just 70 or 80, after allowing the rest to become insolvent. Yet China ’s solar panel production has more than
quintupled in the past decade because, he said, Beijing has allowed market forces to winnow the
industry to the most efficient competitors.
By
contrast, political support in the United States for solar panel manufacturing wilted after a
single solar equipment company in California , Solyndra, collapsed in 2011 after obtaining
$535 million in Energy Department loan guarantees.
“You
are a little bit worried by Solyndra, very small companies, why are you worried
about them?” Mr. Li said. “Then you hurt all the users.”
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Keith Bradsher on Twitter,@KeithBradsher