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American Solar Employers Condemn China’s Retaliatory Trade Action against US Industry

published: 2014-01-24 13:28

The Coalition for American Solar Manufacturing (CASM) protested the government of China’s imposition of duties against U.S. and South Korean producers of polysilicon, the main raw material for production of photovoltaic solar cells and panels.

According to a report on Business Wire, once again applying a tactic that it has abused, China mounted the polysilicon case immediately after SolarWorld, with support from CASM, filed initial trade cases against China’s state-backed solar cell and panel producers in October 2011. On 20th Janyary, China announced final duties of up to 57% against U.S. polysilicon imports. CASM said the imposition of retaliatory tariffs came even as China heralded new opportunities for its solar-panel industry to access illegal, export-intensive subsidies.

CASM also said that China’s adjudication of its case was neither transparent nor shown to be supported by facts, yet it will harm U.S. producers anyway. China processed its claims without the kinds of open, adversarial and investigative proceedings that the U.S. government applied in SolarWorld’s cases.

In CASM’s opinion, China brought the polysilicon case to divide U.S. finished-products manufacturers against polysilicon manufacturing suppliers, punish the U.S. government’s adjudication of SolarWorld’s cases in favor of the domestic industry and increase leverage for all manner of trade issues with the U.S. government, indicated in the report.

U.S. solar-panel manufacturers continue to suffer layoffs, bankruptcies and other harms and China keeps propping up its own producers as both industries suffer from China’s steps to designate the industry as a strategic target within its Five-Year Planning Process, support its industry with export-directed subsidies, trigger enormous factory overcapacity, price products below production costs in the U.S. market, harvest U.S.-taxpayer-funded solar incentives and enjoy access to the U.S. market, including military bases, while keeping its borders closed to foreign competitors.

Meantime, CASM said, China keeps flooding the U.S. market with state-underwritten solar products that increasingly are cited as the source of sharply higher defect rates. China’s precipitous industry entry and the ensuing rise in faulty panels came in the wake of America’s decades of pioneering and optimizing the industry.

“China’s retaliation against the U.S. industry violates international trade rules,” said Mukesh Dulani, president of SolarWorld Industries America Inc., the largest U.S. manufacturer for more than 35 years. “Time and time again, these retaliatory cases have been found to be without merit.”

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