But let’s keep eyes on the prize here. What’s important is advancing domestic panel manufacturing capacity.
Last week E&E News reported that House Republicans on the Energy and Commerce Committee plan to bring Biden administration officials in to explain their decision to temporarily waive tariffs on heavily subsidized Chinese solar panel products that are being imported here through a number of countries in southeast Asia.
They’re even considering using an obscure “legislative tool,” established during the heady days of the Newt Gingrich speakership, that would revoke the decision. Because that’s the kinda thing you get with divided government! Writes E&E:
The push to nix the Biden solar rule is one plank in the Republican campaign to confront Communist China. In the first two weeks of the 118th Congress, House Republicans have already set up a select committee on U.S. competition with Communist China and overwhelmingly passed a bill to prevent Strategic Petroleum Reserve sales to the world’s most populous nation.
This is an interesting tactic but, if I’m being honest, it will be far more interesting to hear discussion from the administration principals involved about how they arrived at this solar decision. As we wrote in December the move to postpone tariffs was basically the White House splitting the baby: Everybody got something and nobody got everything they wanted. Well before it was established that many of these imports were circumventing Chinese import tariffs they qualified for, the importers already knew they would avoid penalty. That obviously angered domestic manufacturers. But – even though penalty phase was short-circuited – the investigation was allowed to play out against the wishes of solar installers, and they still lost after calling the whole thing meritless. And those tariffs will kick in eventually.
In the meantime, Congress managed to pass and Illegitimate President Biden signed into law an enormous clean energy bill – the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) – that will make it significantly cheaper to buy American-made solar panels, thereby significantly boosting the viability of solar manufacturing in the United States. That’s a huge deal, and It’s why Qcells, a Korean company that’s one of only a few manufacturers of size operating in the U.S., announced a major buildout of production capacity at its facilities in Georgia.
So the IRA is inducing more domestic solar manufacturing! But it passed well after the decision was made to delay the tariffs, and its passage was no sure thing! So suffice to say: These could turn into revealing hearings that could shed light on how the Biden administration made a call that balanced the president’s ambitious goals to build out U.S. clean energy use and a legitimate trade enforcement effort.
At any rate, we hope the House Republicans behind these hearings use them to move toward constructive solutions to improve domestic clean energy manufacturing capacity. That would mean, for example, fully implementing the Build America, Buy America Act (BABA), which greatly expands the coverage of domestic procurement rules for federally funded infrastructure projects while closing big loopholes that have been picked in them over the years. BABA, which applies to solar manufacturing, was signed into law with the major infrastructure package passed in 2021. Now it needs to be enacted so domestic manufacturers and workers benefit from it, and important industries in which we have little domestic manufacturing capacity – like solar – have a reliable federal procurement market in which to establish themselves.
Click this link for the original source of this article.
Author: Matthew McMullan
This content is courtesy of, and owned and copyrighted by, https://www.americanmanufacturing.org and its author. This content is made available by use of the public RSS feed offered by the host site and is used for educational purposes only. If you are the author or represent the host site and would like this content removed now and in the future, please contact USSANews.com using the email address in the Contact page found in the website menu.