Crystalline silicon photovoltaic (PV) cells and related components from Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam will now be subject to anti‑dumping duties from 21. 2%, according to a preliminary decision posted by the DoC on 29 November 2024.
Jason Doiy via Getty Images The U.S. Commerce Department on Monday announced its final determinations in an antidumping and countervailing duty investigation into solar cell imports from four Southeast Asian countries, setting individual tariff rates of more than 3,400%.
Why have US tariffs on solar panels been imposed?
U.S. trade officials with the Department of Commerce have finalized steep tariff levels on most solar cells from Malaysia, Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam, after U.S. solar manufacturers claimed China was manufacturing them for export to the United States to avoid tariffs that began during the Obama Administration.
Does China impose tariffs on solar panels?
The Commerce Department in 2023 found that manufacturers had operated in Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam to dodge tariffs on Chinese-made solar components, and it imposed import duties accordingly. Chinese solar module manufacturer JinkoSolar is subject to an 38.38% subsidy rate in Malaysia, and an 125.91% dumping rate in Vietnam.
Bloomberg HANOI: The US has officially imposed steep tariffs on solar energy products imported from four South-East Asian countries, including Vietnam, Malaysia, Thailand and Cambodia. The tariffs unveiled on April 21 vary widely depending on the company and country, but were broadly higher than the preliminary duties announced late last year.
Why is China Shipping solar products through Southeast Asian countries?
The U.S. Commerce Department found that some Chinese producers have been shipping solar products through Southeast Asian countries to avoid paying tariffs imposed in the past. The department has slapped high tariffs on four Southeast Asian countries: Malaysia, Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam.
Additionally, all imported solar panels from Cambodia face a tariff rate of 117.12%, while exporters in Vietnam not specifically identified by the DoC, are subject to a 271.28% rate. The DoC will make its final determinations on 18 April 2025 and issue its final orders on 9 June 2025.