EU to Hit 100+ China Solar Panel Makers With Anti-Dumping Tariffs
Herman K. Trabish: May 9, 2013
An import charge of 37.2% to 67.9% will fuel the fire of the solar trade war.
An import charge of 37.2% to 67.9% will fuel the fire of the solar trade war.
SolarWorld is running out of time to restructure itself, deal with its debt, and find a way to survive.
SolarWorld, not usually a big utility-scale developer, does a 21-megawatt SoCal project from soup to nuts, and Duke Energy scoops it up.
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Updated with a response from SolarWorld’s legal counsel.
SolarCity gets solar power to Honda and Acura customers.
China accuses the EU and member states of violating international trade accords on solar, the latest volley in the escalating dispute.
Industry, government, and Wall Street reaction to the Department of Commerce ruling
The legal wrangling of the U.S. solar trade war is coming to an end. What is the aftermath?
Unless Commerce closes this damaging loophole, China will have a way to circumvent the rules of fair trade.
The fight for differentiation in the PV module business gets fierce. Announcements from Yingli, Q.Cells, Motech, Kyocera, Solar Frontier, Hanwha, Solarworld, and SunPower.
Trade claims and anti-dumping tariffs don’t always have clear and intended consequences.
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GTM Research publishes its flagship analysis on the PV supply market, detailing the technology, economic and competitive dynamics at play in the global PV industry.
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There are usually no ultimate winners in a trade war.