The European Union will scrap import controls on solar panels and cells from China in September, rejecting a request from EU producers who argue that the bloc will be opening its doors to a flood o.
Are solar panels a risk to the EU?
The EU is fully dependent on China for solar panels and at least two conventional risks are associated with this. The first is the economic risk that China might in the future make use of its predominant position in global solar PV manufacturing to distort the market and artificially obtain additional economic rents.
The EU needs to have access to affordable photovoltaic panels, in her view. McGuinness did admit that the dependence on Chinese imports could strengthen further. More than 97% of solar panels installed in the EU are imported and most come from China, she asserted.
Are solar panels imported from China?
More than 90 percent of solar panels deployed in the EU are still imported from China, primarily because of their low price. In 2022, Chinese solar panels were estimated to be the cheapest in the world at $0.26/watt (Woodhouse et al, 2021).
If nothing changes, this expansion will be based almost exclusively on solar panels imported from China, which supplies over 95 percent of solar panels used in the EU. This dependence has raised concerns about EU economic security and geopolitical vulnerabilities, especially in light of recent global disruption.
Imposing trade restrictions on Chinese solar panels would lead to higher costs, slowing deployment of panels and, possibly, a net-negative job effect. That would occur if more jobs were lost from a slowing of deployment than new jobs were created in possible new manufacturing facilities.
Should European solar manufacturers be regulated by the European Commission?
The solar industry letters both recommended that the commission makes an emergency acquisition of European solar manufacturers' inventories and accelerates a planned regulation banning products made with forced labour.