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US set to impose steep tariffs on solar panel imports from Southeast Asia, Solar panels. (Illustrative photo: AFP/VNA) |
Hanoi – The US International Trade Commission (ITC) determined on May 20 that domestic solar panel makers were materially harmed or threatened by a flood of cheap imports from four Southeast Asian nations, bringing the US a step closer to imposing stiff duties on those goods.
The "yes" vote by the three-member ITC means the US Department of Commerce will issue orders to enforce countervailing and anti-dumping tariffs on solar products imported from Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam that the agency finalised last month.
The vote resolves a year-old trade case. The Commerce Department cannot impose tariffs unless the ITC finds that the domestic industry was harmed or threatened by overseas rivals receiving unfair subsidies and dumping products in the US market.
The trade case was brought last year by the Republic of Korea's Hanwha Qcells, the US’s First Solar Inc, and several smaller producers seeking to protect billions of dollars in investments in US solar manufacturing.
In 2022, former President Joe Biden's signature climate change law, the Inflation Reduction Act, created a tax credit for clean energy manufacturing. More than 100 solar factories have been announced or expanded since then.
A top US solar trade group, the Solar Energy Industries Association, said new tariffs would actually harm domestic producers by increasing costs for panel buyers.
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