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Biden waives solar panel tariffs for Malaysia, 3 others

He also invoked the Defense Production Act to spur solar panel manufacturing in the US.

Reuters
2 minute read
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A worker installs solar panels on the roof of a church in Alexandria, Virginia on May 17, 2021. Manufacturing makes up a small portion of the US solar industry, with most of the jobs concentrated in project development, installation and construction. Photo: AFP
A worker installs solar panels on the roof of a church in Alexandria, Virginia on May 17, 2021. Manufacturing makes up a small portion of the US solar industry, with most of the jobs concentrated in project development, installation and construction. Photo: AFP

President Joe Biden waived tariffs on solar panels from four Southeast Asian nations for two years and invoked the Defense Production Act to spur solar panel manufacturing at home, the White House said on Monday, confirming a Reuters report.

The tariff exemption applies to panels from Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam and will serve as a “bridge” while US manufacturing ramps up, the White House said.

Shares in US solar companies including SunPower Corp, Enphase Energy Inc and Sunrun Inc climbed after Reuters earlier reported that Biden would issue a proclamation that ensured panels accounting for some 80% of US imports would not face tariffs, which could have been levied retroactively as part of a Commerce Department probe.

The move comes in response to concerns about a freezing of solar projects nationwide and the resulting impact on the administration’s plans to fight climate change. The investigation, announced in March, is considering whether solar panel imports from the four countries were circumventing tariffs on goods made in China.

The probe had prompted the largest solar trade group to cut its installation forecasts for this year and next by 46% as developers including NextEra Energy Inc, Southern Co warned of major project delays.

The White House said the Defense Production Act would also be used to expand manufacturing of building insulation, heat pumps, transformers, and equipment for “clean electricity-generated fuels” such as electrolysers and fuel cells.

“With a stronger clean energy arsenal, the US can be an even stronger partner to our allies, especially in the face of (Russian President Vladimir) Putin’s war in Ukraine,” the White House said in a statement.

Manufacturing makes up a small portion of the US solar industry, with most of the jobs concentrated in project development, installation and construction. Proposed legislation that would encourage domestic solar manufacturing is currently stalled in Congress.

Heather Zichal, chief executive of the American Clean Power Association, said Biden’s announcement would “rejuvenate the construction and domestic manufacturing of solar power by restoring predictability and business certainty.”

The Commerce Department investigation – kicked off in response to a complaint from a small solar panel provider, Auxin – essentially halted the flow of solar panels that make up more than half of US supplies and 80% of imports.

Auxin’s CEO, Mamun Rashid, criticised the White House move as having “opened the door wide for Chinese-funded special interests to defeat the fair application of US trade law.”

Top US panel manufacturer First Solar said the administration’s move “undermines American solar manufacturing.” Its shares were down more than 2% in midday trade on the Nasdaq.

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