U.S. solar panel import tariff to hit European, Asian manufacturers

Reuters  |  SINGAPORE/BERLIN 

By Gloystein and Christoph Steitz

SINGAPORE/(Reuters) - U. S. Donald Trump's decision to slap tariffs on panel imports is a blow to a booming global industry, and hit stocks in European and Asian groups on fears their business might suffer.

Although the move was intended to help American manufacturers, some in the sector said it would slow U. S. investment in power and cost thousands of U. S. jobs.

Trump on Monday approved a 30 percent tariff on cell and module imports, dropping to 15 percent within four years. Up to 2.5 gigawatts (GW) of unassembled cells can be imported tariff-free in each year.

The sent SMA Solar, Germany's largest group, which makes 46 percent of its sales in the Americas, down 4.6 percent to a four-week low, while Norway's shed 1.2 percent.

German said the cost of products in the U. S. was likely to increase, and that would discuss the matter with

The U. S. has the world's fourth-largest capacity after China, and Globally, capacity soared to almost 400 GW last year from under 10 GW in 2007, according to the

The U. S.-based Energy Industries Association said the decision could cause the loss of around 23,000 U. S. jobs this year, and result in the delay or cancellation of billions of dollars in investments.

TO FEEL THE PAIN

The

argued that its domestic manufacturers could not compete with what it said were artificially lower-priced Asian panels.

The Chinese firms that are the world's biggest makers of photo-voltaic cells will be hit by the tariffs at their production sites across

Jack Feng, vice at Trina Solar, one of China's top alongside Jinko Solar, said his firm would "expand their territory to a broader range in the globe", including Europe, China, and

on Tuesday said the decision damaged the global trade environment, and the said Chinese companies were likely to curb overseas expansion.

"China's industry has been growing at a fast pace in recent years, making itself a target of protectionism in some countries," it said.

said it would "actively respond to U. S. trade protectionism", including exercising its rights under the

warned of wider economic damage as the protectionist stance "could challenge investors' perception whether the U. S. will adhere to current free trade policies".

POTENTIAL EXEMPTIONS

There is still uncertainty on when the tariffs will be imposed and how the tariff-free imports will be shared out.

said it could not yet make a full assessment but added: "We do not expect a major collapse of the U. S. market."

Shares in U. S. climbed 0.8 percent on Monday and Tesla, which also produces panels, gained 1.5 percent.

Yet analysts said the benefits for U. S. firms were not clear-cut. "The overwhelming majority of the 260,000 jobs in the U. S. depend on the cheaper imported products," Height Securities said.

estimated that the tariffs implied "a 3-7 percent cost increase for utility-scale and residential costs, respectively".

However, there remains the possibility of some manufacturers winning exclusions.

"Two key exclusions with respect to technology and certain countries (Canada/Singapore, among others) were included as part of the (initial) recommendation," said.

Canadian is one the world's biggest panel manufacturers. In Singapore, unlisted REC operates one of the city-state's biggest

Doran Hole, for at U. S.-listed ReneSola, said there may still be ways to settle the trade dispute.

"There is quite a bit of discretion about ... negotiations for a settlement. Having a global settlement would certainly be useful to the industry as a whole."

(Additional reporting by and in SEOUL; Muyu Xu and Josephine Mason in BEIJING; David Stanway in SHANGHAI; Christoph and Vera Eckert in BERLIN; Nina Chestney in LONDON; Peter Maushagen and Alissa de Carbonnel in BRUSSELS; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, January 23 2018. 18:08 IST