China speeding US solar-dumping case as election nears

GCL Poly Energy Holdings China solar
A GCL Poly Energy Holdings subsidiary is at the centre of China's case against the US on unfair solar trade practices. Image: GCL Poly Energy Holdings

China is accelerating a dispute with the US over solar-energy taxes, moving forward its next salvo to hit as President Barack Obama faces re-election.

China’s Ministry of Commerce will make preliminary findings as early as November, eight months before the deadline, on a complaint that US manufacturers are dumping polysilicon, according to officials at Daqo New Energy and Jiangsu Zhongneng Polysilicon Technology Development, two of four companies that brought the case. Ministry officials are visiting the companies to gather proof of damage.

“We’ll show our financial condition, workforce details and the impact on income,” Kevin He, investor relations manager for Daqo, said in an interview. “We hope the government sets appropriate punishment tariffs to curb dumping and protect us from damages” from US and South Korean imports.

China’s potential penalties on imported polysilicon, the most costly material in making solar cells, comes after the Obama administration announced plans to impose punitive duties of as much as 250 percent on US imports of Chinese solar cells. The trade dispute is heating up as Obama seeks re- election in November. The Chinese government hasn’t said its move is a retaliatory measure.

The struggle between the world’s biggest energy-consuming nations centers on state support for the solar industry, a business both Obama and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao have said is a priority. Global investment in solar projects rose 61 percent to $137.8 billion last year.

‘Broader’ conflict

The Chinese case “is part of a broader trade conflict extending far beyond the polysilicon and solar industries, as an escalating number of trade disputes have been initiated throughout the globe in the last 12 months,” Dow Corning, President Bob Hansen said in July.

The biggest US polysilicon producers are MEMC Electronic Materials of St Peters, Missouri, and Hemlock Semiconductor, whose largest market is China. An MEMC spokesman didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment. A spokesman for Hemlock, based in Hemlock, Michigan, declined to comment and referred to Hansen’s earlier comments.

Chinese ministry officials have already visited Jiangsu Zhongneng to gather evidence of damage, company Deputy Manager Lv Jinbiao said in an interview. The company is a unit of China’s GCL-Poly Energy Holdings, the world’s largest polysilicon maker by annual production capacity, which is 65,000 metric tons, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Lv and He both said they expect a preliminary decision on possible duties against US companies as early as November. The administration of Obama, who has dueled with challenger Mitt Romney over Chinese trade policy, said the duties it plans are necessary to counter Chinese dumping, or selling below cost.

Solarworld instigation

The US Commerce Department announced in May it will impose sanctions on Chinese solar cells. It set preliminary tariffs on imports after companies including the US unit of Germany’s Solarworld AG (SWV) said Chinese rivals were selling products below their costs in the US.

The Chinese solar-silicon makers have begun pushing for the punitive tariffs to be imposed 90 days retroactively after a decision is announced against US importers, He and Lv said.

“We’re seeing signs that more and more sales are being lost” because of cheaper US imports Lv said. His company joined Daqo, LDK Solar and China Silicon in calling for the investigation and duties earlier this year.

Polysilicon prices

Overcapacity and slower demand from Europe following a cut in subsidies has resulted in lower earnings at global suppliers of solar panel makers. The average spot price of polysilicon has dropped about 26 percent this year to $20.33 a kilogram. Prices for silicon-based solar cells have lost about 18 percent to 42 US cents a watt this year, Bloomberg New Energy Finance data shows.

Hong Kong based GCL-Poly last month reported a quarterly loss of HK$330 million ($43 million), its first since the second half of 2009. Daqo said on August 17 that its net loss in the second quarter was $7.1 million compared with a profit of $25.7 million a year earlier.

GCL-Poly’s shares traded in Hong Kong have plunged 45 percent this year compared with a 5.4 percent gain for the benchmark Hang Seng. Daqo’s shares are down 50 percent in New York. The 17-member Bloomberg Industries Global Large Solar Index has declined 39 percent in the period.

LDK Solar’s credit rating on September 3 was cut one level to A by Shanghai Brilliance Credit Rating & Investors Service, its second downgrade since June, on the solar-wafer maker’s operating losses and souring export outlook.

China will take “relevant measures” to require the US to provide fair treatment to renewable energy goods, according to a Ministry of Commerce statement released on August 20.

While solar spending surged last year, wind investment was $82.4 billion, an 11 percent decline from the previous year, according to a 2012 Bloomberg New Energy Finance report prepared for the United Nations.

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