According to a statement by the US International Trade Commission(USITC), the body voted to continue investigating whether crystalline silicon photovoltaic (PV) cells manufactured in Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam harm US manufacturing.
The modules produced in these Southeast Asian nations are subsidized by their governments and sold at a less-than-fair value in the US market. The USITC believes this could potentially harm US manufacturing.
The Department of Commerce will set the level of duties to be imposed on the PV imports based on the USITC’s positive determination regarding the negative impact caused on the US solar power manufacturing industry.
According to the statement, a decision for preliminary countervailing duty determinations is due on or about July 18, 2024.
In addition, its preliminary antidumping duty determinations are due on or about October 1, 2024.
Also read: US solar industry races to deploy stockpiled panels as tariff holiday expires
The investigations were launched in April after major US solar manufacturers filed antidumping and countervailing duty petitions against Chinese-owned solar manufacturers in Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam, aiming to shield domestic production from the flood of imported equipment.
The ITC investigated this matter after major US solar manufacturers filed complaints regarding antidumping and countervailing duty petitions.
The petitions were filed against Chinese-owned solar manufacturers situated in Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam.
The petitions were filed as a protective measure intended to shield domestic production from excessive imported equipment.