Could America’s 250 Percent Tariff on Chinese PVs Help the Mideast?

yen china solar panels

The United States Department of Commerce ruled yesterday that Chinese photovoltaic panel prices were below production costs and therefore their sale constituted dumping.   Proposed antidumping tariffs ranged from 31 percent to 250% and would come into force sometime after October 2012.  The tariff is expected to significantly increase the cost of solar installations in the US.  This ruling was widely praised by struggling US photovoltaic manufacturers, several of which are on the brink of bankruptcy as solar panel prices dropped below $1 per watt.  Others, such as Tom Gutierrez, chief executive officer of GT Advanced Technologies Inc. (GTAT) have a different view.  In a recent interview he said, “The war we are fighting is a technology war.  If we get stuck protecting low level assembly jobs, we lose on the future.”

Are Solar Tariffs Self Destructive?

This debate has replayed itself many times over the last half century.  Would higher tariffs against Japanese microchip dumping in the 1990s have saved the US chip industry while preventing the rise of Microsoft, Apple, Google and hundreds of other Silicon Valley software companies?  Did Bush era steel tariffs save a few hundred steel industry jobs at the expense of hundreds of thousands in the domestic auto industry?

Will  American solar installation jobs disappear because photovoltaics are now only cost effective in other countries?   Will oil-dependent U.S. companies be able to compete on the global market when other nations can power their industries with cheap imported solar panels?

$1 per watt should have been old news

No one should have been surprised by the rapidly falling price of solar panels.  In fact, if photovoltaics had followed the trend line of other silicon wafer technologies (e.g. microchips), their cost would have fallen below $1 per watt years ago.  Given the mathematics of Moore’s law, what looks like dumping now will be ridiculously overpriced in 18 months.  One wonders if the tendency for US companies to form massive oligopolies is what leads to their sluggish response to a changing world.  Detroit automakers were blindsided twice by high oil prices.  Is the US solar industry repeating history?

Tariffs are generally bad for all parties involved.  China can be expected to retaliate with its own tariffs against US products as shots are fired in what could become a full-fledged trade war.  The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930 is widely regarded as a significant factor in deepening the Great Depression.

But could US solar tariffs help the Middle East?  Certainly those in the oil industry should cheer for anything which raises the cost of solar in the US and removes solar’s threat as a competing energy source there.

Isn’t oil dumping more of a threat to the solar industry?

President Obama recently begged Saudia Arabia to dump shiploads of oil into the US market.  Arguably, cheap oil is a much bigger threat to the fledgling solar industry than a little friendly competition from photovoltaic manufacturers in the far east.

There is yet another way this tariff might help the Mideast.  When the US raised tariffs against Japan for “microchip dumping” in the 1990s, chip manufacturing quickly migrated to Singapore, China, Mexico, El Salvador and other parts of Asia and Central America.  Would tariffs against Chinese photovoltaic panels shift manufacturing to somewhere in the Mideast?

Image of solar yen from Shutterstock

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Brian Nitz
Author: Brian Nitz

Brian remembers when a single tear dredged up a nation's guilt. The tear belonged to an Italian-American actor known as Iron-Eyes Cody, the guilt was displaced from centuries of Native American mistreatment and redirected into a new environmental awareness. A 10-year-old Brian wondered, 'What are they... No, what are we doing to this country?' From a family of engineers, farmers and tinkerers Brian's father was a physics teacher. He remembers the day his father drove up to watch a coal power plant's new scrubbers turn smoke from dirty grey-back to steamy white. Surely technology would solve every problem. But then he noticed that breathing was difficult when the wind blew a certain way. While sailing, he often saw a yellow-brown line on the horizon. The stars were beginning to disappear. Gas mileage peaked when Reagan was still president. Solar panels installed in the 1970s were torn from roofs as they were no longer cost-effective to maintain. Racism, public policy and low oil prices transformed suburban life and cities began to sprawl out and absorb farmland. Brian only began to understand the root causes of "doughnut cities" when he moved to Ireland in 2001 and watched history repeat itself. Brian doesn't...

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One thought on “Could America’s 250 Percent Tariff on Chinese PVs Help the Mideast?”

  1. Minwoo Kim says:

    The World Goes Solar. Japan’s FiT in July is among the highest in the world. It’s clear that Japan’s FiT will shake the solar market. Now, US has the same options. New solar technology will show in Japan. This is it!
    As you know, earthquake in japan is happening frequently. Floating solar panels installation is one of the best solutions for power crisis in Japan. So you have to reduce the vibration to install Floating solar panels. Because, it makes many kinds of problems! The vibrations caused by wind, waves and external forces. New Floating Body Stabilizer for Floating solar panels installation has been created in South Korea. The Floating Body Stabilizers generate drag force immediately when Floating solar panels are being rolled and pitched on the water. Recently, this Floating Body Stabilizers using to reduce the Vibration of Floating Solar Panels in South Korea. You can see New Floating Body Stabilizer videos in YouTube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=moO–q5B92k, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nA_xFp5ktbU&feature=youtu.be.

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