Planet Gore

The ‘Sun Sets’ on China’s Solar Industry

So writes Gordon Chang at Forbes.com:

On Friday, shares of Trina Solar closed at $4.62, down $0.18 for the day.  The stock has been falling for a long time, declining more than 85% in the last three years.  That’s not bad, however, considering Trina is a Chinese solar company.  Rival Suntech Power has seen its shares, also listed on the Big Board, drop.  They are at about 2% of their 2007 values.  And Yingli Green Energy plunged 7.3% on Friday in New York, and it is now trading close to its five-year low.

In last two years, shares of Chinese solar cell producers have fallen by about half, and more price declines are on the way.  The prospects for these manufacturers are poor.

More important, the seemingly intractable problems of the sector highlight the limits—and impending failure—of the country’s industrial policy.  It’s not that Chinese technocrats did not accomplish their ambitious goals.  They set out to create an industry that would dominate the world, and they succeeded.  They aided solar cell manufacturers with easy credit from state banks—perhaps as much as $18 billion of cheap loans—and, some say, subsidies.  As a result of central and local government support, Chinese manufacturers began to expand rapidly.  Chinese competitors now own 70% of the world’s wafer-producing capacity.

Make that overcapacity.  “Massive subsidies and state intervention have stimulated overcapacity more than 20 times total Chinese consumption and close to double total global demand,” said Milan Nitzschke, president of EU ProSun, in a statement released late last month.  The company alleges that 90% of Chinese production had to be exported and that Beijing used subsidies to keep its manufacturers in business.

EU ProSun, a subsidiary of SolarWorld of Germany, has filed a complaint with the European Commission alleging China’s subsidies were illegal.  The Commission is already investigating charges that Chinese producers have been dumping production in Europe.  In July, ProSun filed an anti-dumping complaint with the Commission.  European solar panel makers say Chinese companies have been selling at 80% below their cost.

Chinese producers are clearly worried about the investigations in Brussels.  Europe, the world’s largest solar market, accounted for $27 billion of their sales last year.  That was about a third of their production and 7% of all Chinese exports to the European Union.

The U.S., on the other hand, takes around 7% of China solar exports, and what is left of the American industry is filing trade actions against Chinese producers as well.

The rest here.

Exit mobile version