China’s solar industry faces second EU probe
Commission investigation into alleged dumping of solar glass comes three months after start of a bigger case against Chinese makers of solar panels.
The European Commission today (28 February) launched a second investigation into allegations that Chinese producers in the solar-energy sector are dumping their products on the European market.
In November, the Commission said it was investigating whether Chinese producers of solar panels – which comprise cells, wafers and modules – have been selling their products on the European market at below their market value. The investigation announced today is into prices charged for one component of solar panels – solar glass used in solar modules – and the size of the European market is substantially smaller, at €150 million-€200m rather than €21 billion in the case of solar panels.
The Commission, which is obliged to take up dumping complaints with corroborating evidence, now has 15 months – until late May next year – to complete its investigation. After nine months, it could decide whether to impose temporary duties on Chinese solar glass. Once the investigation is complete, it could apply duties for five years.
The group of European producers that brought the complaint – ProSun Glass – says that some Chinese solar glass is being sold in Europe at half its market value.
The Commission has not decided yet how it will gauge what the fair market value is. In the case of solar panels, the reference – or ‘analogue’ – market was the United States and the prices charged by its producers. For solar glass, the prices charged by Turkish or Taiwanese producers may serve as the reference.
The group that brought the complaint against Chinese solar-panel producers, ProSun, says that its membership and operations are distinct from those of the group that lodged the complaint taken up today by the Commission, ProSun Glass.
The Commission says that the two cases are being handled by two separate teams and that the two markets are distinct, in part because solar glass can also be used in products other than solar panels.
Both investigative teams would, however, have to consider the impact on the broader solar-energy market in Europe, as investigators are obliged to consider the ‘community interest’ – the potential impact of duties on other markets and policy area.
ProSun’s decision to bring a complaint to the Commission has split the solar industry in Europe, with many companies arguing that imposing duties would shrink the market, potentially costing hundreds of thousands of jobs.
The effect, they argue, would be to make the solar industry less competitive at a point when the industry, whose birth was eased with large subsidies, is capable of producing energy at prices that are competitive with those charged for traditional sources of energy.
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