American workers can out-work and out-compete anyone as long as the competition is fair, but for too long it hasn't been fair. We're not going to let China flood our market.
—President Biden, during a May 2024 speech in the White House Rose Garden before unions and companies
President Biden and I have seen firsthand the impacts of surges of certain artificially cheap Chinese imports on American communities in the past, and we will not tolerate that again.
—Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen in a May 2024 speech
Markets need reliable demand signals and fair competition for the best firms and technologies to be able to innovate and invest in clean energy and other sectors. By undercutting global prices for these goods, Chinese policy-driven overcapacity disrupts the necessary demand signal that would enable market-based investment to be viable.
—Lael Brainard, Director of the National Economic Council of the United States (May 2024)
In 2023, the price of a solar panel manufactured in China dropped to 15 cents per watt, more than 60% below the price of a U.S.-made panel. These heavily subsidized and artificially low prices put U.S. solar manufacturers at an extreme disadvantage during a critical turning point in the development of the domestic solar manufacturing industry.
—Sens. Ossoff, Sherrod Brown (D-OH), Marco Rubio (R-FL), and Reverend Raphael Warnock (D-GA) in a January 2024 letter to President Biden calling for increased tariffs on Chinese solar panels
The bottom line is China wants to kill the American solar industry. I'll say that again: China wants to kill the American solar industry.
—Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) in a January 2024 interview with the Toledo Blade
In order to compete on a global scale and advance U.S. energy independence, we must put American manufacturers first and hold Communist China accountable for its use of forced labor and unfair trade practices – period.
—Rep. Bob Latta (OH-05) in a January 2024 interview with the Toledo Blade
There is wide ranging evidence China is targeting the US solar industry. It is an existential threat to an American growth industry and requires a forceful response … Thousands of workers at Ohio hometown companies work day in and day out to expand our domestic solar manufacturing capability. It is time we stand with those workers and fight off China’s unfair trade practices.
—Rep. Marcy Kaptur (OH-09) in a January 2024 interview with the Toledo Blade
American workers and American businesses should be building our clean energy economy, but Chinese companies are working overtime to cheat the rules, our economy, and our workers out of the job.
—Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) in a May 2023 statement
As America works to build out manufacturing in key clean energy supply chains to reduce the country’s reliance on China’s supply chains, we need to use every tool at our disposal to boost the U.S. solar manufacturing industry. The administration made the right decision to strengthen protections for solar components we seek to build in the U.S.
—Mike Carr, Executive Director of the Solar Energy for America (SEMA) coalition in an May 2024 statement
Yes, trade in clean energy products by all means, but global dependence on one source whose interests differ from our own is not ideal.
—Michael Parr, Executive Director at The Ultra Low Carbon Solar Alliance in a November 2023 Letter to the Editor in the Washington Post
... The U.S. should work to loosen China’s chokehold. The domestic clean energy manufacturing incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act are a start. The Biden Administration can also re-impose tariffs on Chinese-made solar components routed through Southeast Asian countries.
—Quillan Robinson, Associate Fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in a January 2024 TIME Magazine Op-Ed
American solar manufacturers have been rightly sounding the alarm bell about deteriorating market conditions for months now and the need to take corrective actions.
—Abigail Ross Hopper, president of the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) in an April 2024 interview
There is great risk that the largest beneficiary of the IRA’s solar energy tax credits may be China.
—Mark Widmar, CEO of First Solar in an April 2024 interview with Foreign Policy Magazine