SolarWorld Industries America Inc. commended a key, unanimous U.S. trade
determination issued today that Chinese imports of solar cells and
panels into the United States have harmed American domestic solar
manufacturers. The company said the resounding ruling confirms the
position of a manufacturing coalition it leads that China’s systematic
and state-sponsored unfair trade practices are anticompetitive.
The U.S. International Trade Commission ruling advances its
investigation, along with a parallel U.S. Department of Commerce
investigation, into whether the government should apply remedies to
prevent further harm. The investigations began in response to petitions
by SolarWorld Industries America Inc., the largest U.S. solar
manufacturer, and the Coalition for American Solar Manufacturing (CASM),
which represents more than 150 employers of more 11,000 workers. So far,
CASM contends, China’s export drive has cost Americans about 2,000
direct jobs throughout the United States and many more at the
subcontractor level.
"SolarWorld and countless other participants in the U.S. solar industry
stand for sustainable production in the major markets where solar is
sold, for healthy, international and sustainable competition, and for
sustainable environmental practices in producing and deploying renewable
energy,” said Gordon Brinser, president of SolarWorld Industries America
Inc. and leader of CASM. "Conversely, nothing about China’s export
campaign has proven to be sustainable, including its subsidized and
dumped pricing.
"Today’s unanimous vote is another step toward restoring the healthy
global competition in the solar industry that has reliably driven down
production costs and prices by 10 percent or so a year for many years,”
Brinser said. "We only ask for fair and legal competition, which is good
for industry and consumers alike.”
In a letter to President Obama issued today, about 60 members of the
U.S. Senate and House of Representatives concurred, raising concerns
that China’s anticompetitive trade practices undermine innovation, jobs
and efficiency. Obama has expressed similar concerns in response to
questions about the case last month.
As soon as Jan. 12, the U.S. Department of Commerce could determine
preliminary trade remedies as well as "critical circumstances,” meaning
that China had mounted a surge of U.S. imports to circumvent the
imposition of tariffs. If Commerce does both, importers would have to
put up bonds or cash deposits on estimated duties on imports back to
Oct. 14, 2011. On Nov. 9, the Commerce Department initiated its
investigations and found that the domestic industry supported the
petitions.
About SolarWorld (www.SolarWorld.com)
SolarWorld is a worldwide leader in offering brand-name, high-quality
silicon crystalline solar-power technology. Its strength is its fully
integrated solar production. From silicon as the raw material through
wafers, cells and modules all the way to turn-key solar systems of all
sizes, the group combines all stages of the solar value chain. The
central business activity is selling quality modules into the
installation and distribution trades and crystalline wafers to the
international solar cell industry. Group headquarters are located in
Bonn, Germany. The group´s largest production facilities operate in
Freiberg, Germany, and Hillsboro in the U.S. State of Oregon.
Sustainability is the basis of the group strategy. Under the name
Solar2World, the group supports care projects using off-grid solar-power
solutions in developing countries, exemplifying sustainable economic
development. Worldwide, SolarWorld employs about 3,300 people.
SolarWorld AG has been quoted on the stock exchange since 1999 and today
is listed on, among others, the TecDAX and ÖkoDAX as well as in the
sustainability index NAI.
