Biden waives tariffs on Asian solar modules
Low domestic production capacity means imports from Asia will be critical to US solar growth
US president Joe Biden has waived import tariffs on solar panels and modules from Southeast Asia for up to two years to help combat an acute shortage of components amid rising prices. In his declaration, Biden notes that c.75pc of solar modules imported into the US come from Southeast Asia and that “roughly half of the domestic deployment of solar modules that had been anticipated over the next year is currently in jeopardy as a result of insufficient supply”. The previous Trump administration imposed tariffs in 2018 on all silicon PV imports for four years to protect domestic manufacturing. Before that, the Obama administration introduced tariffs on Chinese solar module imports in 2012. The

Also in this section
28 March 2025
The massive expansion of the Northern Lights project in Norway is the clearest sign yet that the European oil and gas companies mean business when it comes to CCS
27 March 2025
Awards celebrate global innovation, leadership and achievement across the energy sector’s people, projects, technologies and companies.
20 March 2025
While advanced economies debate peak fossil fuel demand, billions of people still lack access to reliable and affordable energy, especially in the Global South
14 March 2025
Ignoring questions of sustainability will not make the problems they focus on go away