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Biden Has a Solar Panel, Climate Change Dilemma, Will Hypocrisy Rule?

Tariffs Set to Expire 

Trump imposed tariffs on solar panels from China. The result was less demand for solar panels. 

Do we want to promote more clean energy or not? If, so, at what cost? Those are the question as Two U.S. Companies Seek Continued Tariffs on Imported Solar Panels

Auxin Solar Inc., a San Jose, Calif., solar panel manufacturer, and Suniva Inc., which owns an idled solar cell factory in Norcross, Ga., plan to ask the U.S. International Trade Commission on Monday to extend the solar tariffs for four years, said Mamun Rashid, Auxin’s chief executive officer. 

The 18% tariffs were imposed in 2018, and are set to expire next year. They largely affect imports from Chinese-owned companies. China is the world’s largest producer of solar cells and panels used to generate electricity, although it has moved some of its production to elsewhere in Asia to avoid U.S. tariffs.

Filing the petition triggers a monthslong review by the ITC, a quasi-judicial federal agency that will seek to determine whether the industry has made a “positive adjustment” to import competition.

The ITC can recommend extending the tariffs, but only the president has the power to do so—creating a potential dilemma for the Biden White House, which wants to encourage domestic manufacturing and wants to speed up the adoption of solar technology.

Hooray for Tariffs?!

US production of solar panels tripled under Trump tariffs. 

Q: OK, But from what to what? 
A: Imports still make up 85% of U.S. sales, according to the research firm Wood Mackenzie. 

The imports shifted from China to other places. But these shifts come at a cost and consumers pay. 

Team Biden Sounds Like Team Trump

In April, U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai indicated sympathy for the tariffs. “The issue of the solar tariffs are very much on my mind,” she said at a Senate hearing. “We are struggling with the application of these tariffs that are meant to save maybe the last producer that we have here in the United States.”

What’s the Goal?

  • Is the goal to save the last US solar panel manufacturer via tariffs? 
  • Is the goal to have a faster and more meaningful shift towards clean energy?

Biden will seek more “tax incentives” of course. That means more taxes or higher deficits or both.

Fair Trade 

At the head of the flag waving line are those demanding fair trade.

The term of course translates to more tariffs and subsidies to companies that cannot compete. 

If we assume the trade is “not fair” what it really means is that Chinese taxpayers are subsidizing US citizens. 

We should cheer such an event, if that is indeed what’s happening. Instead, we blast “It’s Not Fair!” in protest of China giving us free stuff. 

Trade Deficits

To protect a single US manufacturer Trump essentially stated “We insist on paying more.” 

Short-Term Dirty Secret

Also in the news is this line of short-term thinking: Those cheap Chinese solar panels have a dirty little secret.

“It takes a lot of energy to extract and process solar-grade silicon, and in China, that energy tends to come from dirtier and less efficient energy sources than it does in Europe,” said Argonne scientist and co-author Seth Darling.

OK, but once the panels are in, they last decades. There is a one-time energy cost of producing the panels vs a long-term benefit.

This discussion assumes there is really any net savings ever. If it’s that marginal, perhaps we should not be promoting solar panels at all. 

But if there is a long-term benefit, then faster adoption will happen much faster with cheaper prices.

Tariff Job Killers

“It is time to end the job-killing Section 201 solar tariffs,” said John Smirnow, general counsel for Solar Energy Industries Association, a trade group whose membership includes importers and installers. “They are a multibillion-dollar drag on industry growth.”

I agree wholeheartedly. 

Flashback March 1, 2018

Fair Trade = Free Trade = Smart Trade

The link above is broken but please consider these articles.

In Praise of Cheap Labor

Some of us stand in Praise of Cheap Labor

This is what I wrote: 

Moral outrage is common among the opponents of globalization–of the transfer of technology and capital from high-wage to low-wage countries and the resulting growth of labor-intensive Third World exports.

The lofty moral tone of the opponents of globalization is possible only because they have chosen not to think their position through. While fat-cat capitalists might benefit from globalization, the biggest beneficiaries are, yes, Third World workers.

The benefits of export-led economic growth to the mass of people in the newly industrializing economies are not a matter of conjecture

It is not an edifying spectacle; but no matter how base the motives of those involved, the result has been to move hundreds of millions of people from abject poverty to something still awful but nonetheless significantly better.

If Economists Ruled the World

Also consider my post What Should Trade Negotiators Negotiate?

If economists ruled the world, there would be no need for a World Trade Organization. The economist’s case for free trade is essentially a unilateral case – that is, it says that a country serves its own interests by pursuing free trade regardless of what other countries may do. Or as Frederic Bastiat put it, it makes no more sense to be protectionist because other countries have tariffs than it would to block up our harbors because other countries have rocky coasts

This suggests an alternative version of the “race to the bottom” story. An environmentalist or defender of workers’ rights might also make a related argument. ….

The true purpose of international negotiations is arguably not to protect us from unfair foreign competition, but to protect us from ourselves. (When the United States recently imposed utterly indefensible restrictions on Mexican tomato exports, an Administration official remarked off the record that Florida has a lot of electoral votes while Mexico has none. The economically correct rebuttal to this sort of thing is to point out that the other 49 states contain a lot of pizza lovers; the politically effective answer is to subject US-Mexican trade to a set of rules and arbitration procedures in which the Mexicans do too have a vote).

Oops, wait a second, “I” Did Not Write Either Article. 

I purposely misspoke to make a point.

Click on the links. The person who wrote those articles might surprise you. 

That bastion of liberal mainstream media, Paul Krugman, wrote both before his mind morphed into political mush. 

Bear in mind, Paul Krugman won a Nobel Prize in science regarding trade.

Ka-Blam

What I Did Write

Here We Go Again 

And so here we are again. If we force prices up to save a single US manufacture, the whole industry suffers. 

That industry includes importers, installers, truckers, merchants, etc. 

Uh-oh, I just mentioned trucks. 

Wait a second, I’ve got it. 

Let’s just turn off all the lights, all the cars, all the trucks, the internet, games, and air conditioning. 

We also need to milk cows by hand while equipping their rear ends with devices to capture methane.

That would fix everything. 

Disputing Trump’s NAFTA “Catastrophe” with Pictures

Sarcasm aside, it’s important to understand the true nature of trade imbalances. 

Please consider Disputing Trump’s NAFTA “Catastrophe” with Pictures: What’s the True Source of Trade Imbalances?

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RonJ
RonJ
4 years ago
Complex systems tend to fail spectacularly. A failure in a component of an electrical grid in one city, can cause a multi-state blackout, due to cascading failure.
Free trade sounds fine, but China is not just the economically natural manufacturer to the world, it is a rising global power that is going to be in more conflict with the U.S. In event of war with China, products we take for granted, could disappear. Covid lockdowns have made a mess of the global supply chain into the U.S., as well.
blacklisted
blacklisted
4 years ago
Many a truth is said in jest. Your sarcasm is spot on.  Gates is bribing everyone for his zero CO2 and depop agenda’s. He owns the most farmland, and you think he didn’t know the govt was going to pay farmers not to farm because it produces too much CO2, even though starvation is on the rise around the world.
Biden’s Climate Czar, Ketchup Kerry, has confirmed that Biden is
100% on board with Klaus Schwab’s Great Reset agenda, whose infamous leader
just said in June, “the world must act jointly and swiftly to revamp all
aspects of our societies and economies, from education to social contracts and
working conditions. Every country, from the United States to China, must
participate, and every industry, from oil and gas to tech, must be transformed.
In short, we need a ‘Great Reset’ of capitalism”, which is nutjob speak for
Communism. 

Kerry seriously continued, saying he “thinks it [The Great
Reset] will happen with greater speed and with greater intensity than a lot of
people might imagine”, and argued that the Great Reset is necessary
to slow the “climate crisis” and that “I know Joe Biden believes … it’s not
enough just to rejoin Paris [the Paris Climate Accords] for the United States.
It’s not enough for us to just do the minimum of what Paris requires.”

As a reminder, the first two goals of the Great Reset are
“you will own nothing and be happy about it”, and “the USA will
no longer be the world’s super power”.

Wake up!
Webej
Webej
4 years ago
So the choice is whether we make American tax payers or Chinese tax payers (state subsidized) carry the burden?
That should be an easy choice.
But the tariffs discussion is much more complex.
  • In the previous century, tariffs were the most important tax revenue … that has been shifted to income tax, labor.
  • No advanced country (including Asia, Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, China) ever succeeded in building its own industry without protective tariffs, and third world IMF governed examples completely underscore this truism.
  • There is real race to the bottom in terms of minimum wage, environmental standards, regulatory arbitration, social benefits.
    The agenda of globalism is to turn the world into a Brazil model, small wealthy elites amidst impoverished masses.
    That is one of the reasons countries agree to trade treaties instead of just throwing open the gates.
    Low-income workers in the West have lost ground the last 40 years due to cheap illegal migrants and outsourcing.
  • Without agricultural tariffs, countries run the risk of becoming dependent on imports for food, which is fine, until something happens (war) and you have no domestic agricultural infrastructure too eat.
anoop
anoop
4 years ago
as mentioned in the previous post, even if they try to do anything now it’s too little too late.  the damage has already been done.
RonJ
RonJ
4 years ago
 I came across a comment recently, that the “sun and wind are renewables, windmills and solar panels are not.”
The solar panels have to be disposed of at the end of their life, along with the windmills. The huge blades are some kind of composite and are currently being buried in large trenches. 
mike09
mike09
4 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
That is old news. They can now recycle wind turbines.
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
4 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
Aside from the wind turbine, the base of the turbine is a big buried dome of steel concrete. Try detonating a nuke under it, and you would fail.
Felix_Mish
Felix_Mish
4 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
Since we’re being all serious and everything, may I suggest that windmill blades can simply be buried where they are, stacked nicely. Squirt a little epoxy between them and you have a solid base upon which baby windmills can grow.

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