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China slams US solar probe as 'protectionist'
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 4, 2011


China on Sunday accused the United States of "protectionist attitudes" towards Chinese solar panel makers and warned that a US investigation could hurt global efforts to cut emissions cheaply.

A US trade panel vote to continue a probe into Chinese imports "betrayed the insincerity of America ... in pushing climate talks while being indifferent to cutting emissions in an affordable way", the official Xinhua news agency said.

As countries try to reach an agreement on emission cuts at the global climate talks in Durban, "the US government's protectionist attitudes towards China's solar products could pull back the global green agenda," Xinhua said.

"The availability of high-quality, low-priced panels in America is a blessing for the debt-ridden country's efforts to reduce emissions, and serves to avoid its green efforts being retarded by financial strains."

China's commerce ministry said earlier it was "deeply concerned" about the International Trade Commission's ruling on Friday that there was a "reasonable indication" that Chinese solar panel imports have harmed the US industry.

"The United States should avoid abusing trade remedies which will affect bilateral trade and mutually beneficial cooperation between China and US enterprises in the new energy sector," the ministry said a statement.

The decision allows the US Commerce Department to continue its probe into complaints by US solar firms -- led by SolarWorld Industries America -- that China was dumping solar cells and panels in the US market at prices below the cost of production.

The Commerce Department investigation, which could lead to retaliatory duties on Chinese imports, sparked tit-for-tat action from China, with Beijing announcing last month a probe into US subsidies for renewable energy companies.

"While censuring Chinese producers benefiting from state subsidies, the US makers applied double standards by selectively ignoring the millions of dollars in tax breaks and public subsidies ... they themselves received," Xinhua said. It added that China hoped the United States would "objectively analyse" their domestic industry for the real reason US companies lacked competitiveness "before any grave consequences are incurred".

"Citing Chinese imports as a key reason for its failure would only underscore their incompetence and heighten their embarrassment if the whole industry is disrupted by the steep duties that could be levied," it said.

The United States will release its preliminary findings early next year.

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US lawmakers urge probe of China on 'clean energy'
Washington (AFP) Dec 2, 2011 - A group of 59 US lawmakers urged President Barack Obama in a letter released Friday to open an investigation into China's alleged unfair trade practices in the clean energy sector.

"We cannot strengthen our energy security, or create jobs and economic growth, by replacing Middle East petroleum imports with unfairly traded clean energy technologies imported from China," the lawmakers wrote.

Representative Sander Levin, the top Democrat on the House committee with jurisdiction over taxes and trade, led the group, which included members of both parties from the House and Senate.

The letter echoed a plea last month from SolarWorld Industries America, a subsidiary of SolarWorld AG of Germany and the sector's leading manufacturer in the US, for Obama to impose trade sanctions on China for what the firm charged were unfair subsidies to its solar panel exporters.

"We urge you to take all available measures to expeditiously investigate these allegations and take swift and appropriate action based on those findings," the lawmakers said.

Chinese solar panel makers this week rejected the complaint, warning it risked "seriously hindering the development of green energy," and accused SolarWorld of benefiting from lavish government subsidies.

The US Congress has stepped up attacks on Beijing's allegedly unfair trade practices in the face of deep US voter anger at the sour economy and high unemployment, blaming China's rise for job losses at home.



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SOLAR DAILY
SolarStrong proceeds without federal help
San Mateo, Calif. (UPI) Dec 2, 2011
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