The US solar energy industry hopes to persuade Customs officials to reverse a decision to impose a 2.5 percent tariff on solar panel imports after more than two decades of duty-free trade in the product, an industry official said on Thursday.
"We're taking it very seriously and we will be responding. ... The industry is in the process of preparing a challenge," said Rhone Resch, president of the Solar Energy Industries Association, whose members include both US and foreign solar energy companies. In the worst case scenario, US importers of solar panels could face some $70 million in tariffs and penalties for product already imported this year.
The tariff comes at a time when concern about global climate change has prompted the United States and the European Union to push for deal with other leading developed countries and China to eliminate duties on environmental goods. As the New York Times reported on Wednesday, the US Custom service ruled in January a panel made by Trina Solar of China was a generator because it contains a diode that allows electric current to pass around shaded areas of the panel.
That ruling was a surprise because "all solar panels contain bypass diodes and have forever. It's a safety issue not to have them," one industry official said. Although the ruling only applies to the Trina panel, it has implications for other manufacturers, he said. The industry hopes it can persuade officials at US Customs and Border Protection headquarters in Washington to overturn the ruling made by the New York office. If that fails, the case could go to the US Court of International Trade in New York.