{"id":103221,"date":"2023-08-18T10:27:56","date_gmt":"2023-08-18T14:27:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/\/?p=103221"},"modified":"2023-08-22T15:19:00","modified_gmt":"2023-08-22T19:19:00","slug":"auxin-solar-wins-plea-to-tariff-southeast-asian-exports","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/\/2023\/08\/auxin-solar-wins-plea-to-tariff-southeast-asian-exports\/","title":{"rendered":"Auxin Solar wins plea to tariff Southeast Asian exports
AD\/CVD will be extended to solar cells and panels from Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam.<\/span>"},"content":{"rendered":"

The Dept. of Commerce has officially brought an end to an antidumping\/countervailing duties (AD\/CVD) investigation that has troubled the solar industry for the last 18 months.<\/p>\n

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Credit: Rosendin<\/p><\/div>\n

The DOC’s final decision<\/a> follows its preliminary determination: Chinese solar cell and panel producers are working in Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam as a way to avoid paying duties on Chinese-made solar goods that have been in place since 2012.<\/a> AD\/CVD rates will be extended to solar exports coming out of Southeast Asia \u2014 except for products from Hanwha Qcells (Malaysia), JinkoSolar (Malaysia) and Boviet Solar (Vietnam), which are officially exempt from the extended tariffs.<\/p>\n

New East Solar (Cambodia) was originally an excluded company in the preliminary decision but has been removed in the final decision.\u00a0Product from New East Solar will be tariffed.<\/p>\n

The case was first brought to Commerce by California-based solar panel assembler Auxin Solar in March 2022. Auxin officials said that Chinese solar producers were performing “minor or insignificant” work in Southeast Asia in order to move the panel’s country-of-origin outside China to avoid paying tariffs. Commerce took up the investigation and preliminarily decided<\/a> in December 2022 to extend the tariffs to Southeast Asia. The solar industry has been in a heated battled ever since<\/a>.<\/p>\n

“For years the Chinese have flouted the U.S. trade remedy laws and today, with Commerce\u2019s affirmative country-wide circumvention decisions on Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam, we\u2019ve successfully closed these loopholes,” stated Mamun Rashid, CEO of Auxin Solar, in a statement.<\/p>\n

While the U.S. industry slowly rebuilds its domestic solar panel manufacturing capacity<\/a>, the country depends on solar imports from Southeast Asia. Solar panels from Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam accounted for 79.3% of U.S. panel imports in Q1 2023, according to Panjiva data.<\/a> New AD\/CVD rates will not go into effect until June 6, 2024, on account of an executive action by President Joe Biden<\/a>. A rush to import tariff-free solar panels from Southeast Asia before June 2024 can be expected.<\/p>\n

Meanwhile, U.S. solar developers and contractors have been trying to source panels elsewhere. Solar product testing lab PVEL<\/a> has seen an uptick in requests for testing the performance and reliability of modules from unaffected countries like India and South Korea. Max Macpherson, Data & Analytics Report Manager at PVEL, said the U.S. solar market is currently facing a trifecta of issues that are limiting supply \u2014 this extended AD\/CVD, domestic manufacturing still ramping and solar panel deliveries delayed under Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA) detainments<\/a>.<\/p>\n

“Getting modules from China through Customs and Border Protection is already risky with UFLPA,” she said. “A pro-extension decision introduces even more risk for site owners, although the UFLPA risk is likely to remain the biggest challenge. It will be difficult to anticipate exactly how much risk will be introduced when the tariff waiver expires in June 2024. Tariff rates change regularly based on review, so duties are not set in stone.”<\/p>\n

Today’s Commerce decision has extended tariffs to Southeast Asian exports of:<\/p>\n