How a Tiny Solar Company in California Might Convince Biden To Sabotage America's Whole Solar Industry
Tariffs requested by an "artisanal solar boutique" based in San Jose might jeopardize 45,000 jobs and halve America's future solar panel deployments.

A tiny solar panel manufacturing firm with outsized political clout is poised to wreak havoc on the entire American solar energy industry.
And the White House, which at least theoretically supports expanding America's green energy industries, might just go along with the madness. It's a tricky situation for President Joe Biden to navigate, one that requires choosing between two of his top policy priorities: industrial protectionism and combatting climate change.
In February, the California-based company Auxin Solar submitted a petition to the U.S. Department of Commerce asking for a more expansive set of tariffs targeting imported solar panels and their component parts. The company alleges that American solar panel manufacturers are avoiding tariffs on Chinese-made solar panels and components—tariffs originally imposed in 2018 by the Trump administration but renewed earlier this year by Biden—by buying parts made in Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam that are sometimes made with Chinese parts.
That is, of course, pretty much exactly what you'd expect any company to do. But Auxin argues that the federal government now has a responsibility to stop what it calls attempts to "circumvent" those tariffs on Chinese imports by imposing new tariffs on imports from those four other countries as well. In March, the Commerce Department launched an investigation to determine whether those tariffs are to be added.
According to the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA), those prospective tariffs would target the source of about 80 percent of America's supply of crystalline silicon photovoltaic cells, the fundamental building blocks of solar panels. In a letter to Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo in March, dozens of the SEIA's member companies warned that the tariffs would "stall both ongoing and planned U.S. solar projects and lead to the loss of over 45,000 American jobs, including 15,000 domestic solar manufacturing jobs." It would also mean losing about 14 gigawatts of planned solar deployment—about two-thirds of the Energy Information Administration's target for solar deployment this year
All that, the SEIA warned, "because a single company is seeking to inappropriately exploit the law for market advantage."
It sounds like a typical story of big business using its political clout to shut smaller competitors out of the market. But the bizarre thing about this fight is that relatively unsuccessful businesses are holding the rest of the market hostage. Because they have friends in Washington, natch.
Eric Wesoff, editorial director for Canary Media, did some terrific shoe-leather reporting to learn that Auxin Solar's San Jose headquarters is little more than "a rundown industrial building" with a "loading dock…overgrown with weeds." Auxin has just 35 employees and a manufacturing capacity of just 150,000 megawatts annually. It is, Wesoff concludes, an "artisanal solar boutique—not even a minor player when it comes to utility-scale solar, which makes up 75 percent of the U.S. market."
Auxin's co-applicant in that February tariff petition to the Department of Commerce is the Georgia-based Suniva, Inc., a company that hasn't produced a solar panel since 2016 but remains a major player in the politics of protectionism. Suniva was one of the prime advocates for Trump's solar panel tariffs on Chinese imports in 2018, and it pushed Biden to renew those tariffs last year.
It's insane that these two companies might get to dictate U.S. trade policy for solar panels, but it could happen. As Wesoff points out in his excellent and deeply reported piece, Auxin and Suniva have some friends in high places: Sens. Sherrod Brown (D–Ohio) and Rob Portman (R–Ohio) have thrown bipartisan support behind the companies' tariff petition, likely because a major domestic solar panel manufacturer, First Solar, is located in their home state.
Making it harder to import solar panels and photovoltaic cells from overseas is a net loss for the solar industry but a victory for specific producers in America. And Biden's trade union allies support the tariffs too, which means this comes down to a choice between whether the White House would rather appease its political friends or achieve its green energy goals.
Above all, this offers a lesson about how protectionism creates perverse incentives in markets and politics. Trump's decision to impose tariffs on Chinese solar parts and Biden's decision to extend those tariffs have created a bizarre situation where a bankrupt solar manufacturer and an "artisanal solar boutique" might get to dictate the future of an entire industry.
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"artisanal solar boutique"
Sounds good to me. The idea that some mass produced solar energy is going towards heating my hot pockets makes me want to vomit.
Save that for after you eat.
It sounds like a typical story of big business using its political clout to shut smaller competitors out of the market. But the bizarre thing about this fight is that relatively unsuccessful businesses are holding the rest of the market hostage. Because they have friends in Washington, natch.
Wasn't there a story about this sort of thing? Involving steel and railroads and Galt's Gulch? It's like the moral of the story didn't really sink in.
Except nobody got past that 45 page section about John Galt that had no breaks. They just thumbed forward and said fuck it. Pretty soon the book started gathering dust. Unfinished.
I can imagine the writings of a woman who fled communism might be offensive to you, yes indeed...
I don't understand how this would even benefit the companies in question.
The companies in question are shell companies working on behalf of an industry competitor to solar.
When buying and selling are controlled by legislation, the first thing to be bought and sold are legislators.
RIP PJ
I believe the tariffs on Chinese solar panels started under Obama and were done at the behest of a single company.
It's kind of silly, actually: The only reason most of these panels are being installed in the first place are government mandates and subsidies. So there are no heroes in this fight.
Reminds me of a Hylkema cartoon in "these pages" decades ago where there's a big blackboard at the Dept. of Econometrics as they try to calculate the effects of government policies on international business.
So how did a company that hadn't produced any products since 2016 stay in business? This seems like something shady that would make a good article.
Throwing some shad on the solar industry, huh [yeah, ISWYDT]
Yes, they are really floundering.
It's a tricky situation for President Joe Biden to navigate, one that requires choosing between two of his top policy priorities: industrial protectionism and combatting climate change.
Where is the tricky situation for Biden? He gets to toot both horns. He protects US green energy jobs and he promotes US green energy. Show me the environmentalists rending their garments over the tariffs rather than over it being Trump imposing them.
This is Solyndra level easy for Brandon.
I'm going to provide an alternate thesis here, or attempt to steel-man Auxin Solar's position.
(disclaimer, I don't buy into this argument for various reasons, but there is something here worth discussing).
American manufacturing jobs have been hollowed out via outsourcing to countries like China. The companies that Auxin is "competing against" are larger manufacturers who design and sell solar panels, but manufacture in China. So engineers, designers and other high-paid jobs exist stateside, but the working-class labor of building the panels is done in China.
Auxin, for better or worse, bills itself as an "All American" manufacturing company. They engineer, design and build their entire product in the US. Their stated mission is being a sustainable, locally sourced and built product manufacturer.
If Auxin gets its way, or some version of it, this will put pressure on domestic solar firms to bring manufacturing back to the US and could... if the plan works out as advertised (it won't, with very little doubt), the number of jobs in the US will increase, not decrease.
by buying parts made in Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam that are sometimes made with Chinese parts.
And by the by, I know a little something about this because I work for a manufacturer (who manufactures in China) and we take advantage of all kinds of byzantine American import laws to claim a part "came from Vietnam" when it was absolutely made in China, but shipped through Vietnam. It's all 100% legal, but if you read it on paper, it would feel like it wasn't.
America is now a sclerotic empire. The inputs and variables into all of these problems are so fast and entrenched, I'm not sure they can be fixed. It might be time to consider the American experiment dead. We're Europe now.
Probably much like the "made in the USA" automotive industry where 95% of the work is done elsewhere and only the most minimal amount of final assembly is actually done in the US.
So I should pay more for a thing so a select group of people get jobs making that thing? Where does that stop? State lines? County lines?
No. The general idea is more that you (and everybody else) should pay more for a thing so that the manufacturing capacity for that thing is available within the national jurisdiction. And, in fact, it actually stops there, because wars happen between nations. (Civil wars don't count because the two sides don't usually get the opportunity to use tariffs internally. Well, not to both sides benefit, anyway...) I'm not saying I agree with it, but that's the theory, anyway.
I agree on the basic premises of
1) we should not be doing business with China.
2) domestic production has been eviscerated and we will continue to suffer greatly for it. When you rely on others for parts, there's a lot to go wrong.
A tiny solar panel manufacturing firm with outsized political clout is poised to wreak havoc on the entire American solar energy industry.
Ladies and Gentlecommenters, the next Solyndra.
Well, except for whatever one thinks of Auxin Solar, they seem to produce a real product that works.
Do they? The only pictures I can find of the inside of their facility show a couple of people assembling small panels with a handheld soldering iron.
They also don't seem to have a history of hiring the sort of people who would be needed to manufacture the components pictured. Nor is it very likely that such things could be manufactured in the medium sized warehouse they occupy.
It could be that they buy the components from US manufacturers. I remain skeptical.
Auxin Solar may be small but their co-complainant Sunivia actually manufactured solar cells and had a capacity of I believe 600 MW annually with plants in Georgia and Michigan. That company went through a bankruptcy and was acquired in a series of companies eventually becoming a part of Maxeon Solar Technologies which is partially owned by a Chinese company.
When it comes to tariffs, Biden is as dumb as Trump with a little dementia mixed in, so he'll probably do it.
I'm shocked bohem take isn't "this is bad because when the Republicans take office they will subsidise their favorite companies"
But what if I want a gay solar panel?
Put an ad in an personal column, tender, or whatever, you want want to move in. I’m sure somebody identifies as a gay solar panel.
I challenge anyone to find the least bit of 'free market' in the solar energy business.
The government puts tariffs on incoming materials and then subsidizes the sale of them.
This is so ridiculous!
Now do bird choppers
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Good. As Germany, France, and the UK have shown, heavy dependence on intermittent Wind/Solar drives up costs & increases demand for fossil fuel to balance out the intermittent supply. Nuclear is the solution.
thanks for this post.