Biden to Authorize Defense Production Act to Push Green Agenda

President Joe Biden will authorize the Defense Production Act (DPA) to advance his clean energy and climate change agenda, a senior administration official said during a call with reporters.

According to the White House, the president will approve the use of the DPA to expand domestic output of clean energy technologies, including solar panels, heat pumps, transformers, and equipment for utilizing electricity-generated fuels, such as fuel cells and electrolyzers.

By invoking the DPA, manufacturers of solar panels and other green technologies will receive grants and loans.

In addition, the president will employ federal procurement to support greater U.S. solar manufacturing capacity that will involve “master supply agreements” and “super preference status.” The former consists of companies accelerating the sale of their products to the federal government, while the latter applies domestic content standards for federal procurement that is “consistent with the Buy American Act.”

In the meantime, Biden will institute a 24-month tariff exemption for solar panels created in Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam. Obtaining cells and modules duty-free, according to the senior administration official, will ensure the U.S. maintains access to enough solar modules to satisfy current electricity generation needs.

 

U.S. President Joe Biden at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building in Washington on June 1, 2022. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

The administration will take other steps to promote clean energy, including approving more green projects on public lands, bolstering clean energy in cities and rural areas, supporting a diverse solar workforce, and investing in renewable electricity in Puerto Rico.

“The president is signing several executive actions that together will mean that we are building the strength of our clean energy,” the administration official said in a call, adding that the private sector has already committed more than $100 billion in new private capital to produce electric vehicles and batteries domestically.

This is the moment for the United States to deploy its clean energy arsenal with ally nations, “especially in the face of Putin’s war in Ukraine,” the senior administration official said.

“The stakes are high and the president is taking action. And he’s taking action just as he calls on Congress to quickly pass tax cuts and additional investments that will further advance U.S. clean energy manufacturing and deployment,” the source added.

The suite of actions is expected to triple U.S. solar manufacturing capacity by 2024 to 22.5 gigawatts. When Biden took office, U.S. solar manufacturing capacity was just 7.5 gigawatts.

Commerce Department Investigations

In March, the Department of Commerce announced that it would be investigating whether solar panel part firms in four Southeast Asian markets are using these companies to circumvent U.S. tariffs slapped on Chinese firms. The purpose behind these anti-dumping duties is to punish China for subsidizing and implementing predatory pricing measures for the last decade.

Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam account for about 80 percent of annual solar imports.

This has created a tense situation for the White House as it tries to juggle between advancing the president’s climate agenda and remaining distant from the Commerce Department’s probes.

The president will tap an emergency under Section 318 A of the Tariff Act that allows the Secretary of Commerce to facilitate certain imports and take other action to respond appropriately.

“[It] allows him to recognize emergency circumstances and provide and take action as a result of that,” the senior official noted. “He’s using that authority to ensure the reliable supply of solar components from Southeast Asian countries Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam, that play a key role in in the reliable supply of this solar as a bridge.”

The industry response has been mixed since reports surfaced that Biden will provide a 24-month tariff suspension.

“The president’s action is a much-needed reprieve from this industry-crushing probe,” said Abigail Ross Hopper, chief executive officer of the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA), in a statement. “During the two-year tariff suspension window, the U.S. solar industry can return to rapid deployment while the Defense Production Act helps grow American solar manufacturing.”

But Auxin Solar, the company that urged the Commerce Department to establish the investigation, accused the administration of interfering in the investigation, callingthe move “unprecedented” and a “potentially illegal action.”

Officials note that the White House could reintroduce tariffs on panels imported from these markets once the 24-month period is over. But applying these levies retroactively are not on the table, officials confirm.

Market analysts believe that the 24-month pause might not offer enough clarity for the sector since a resolution to the case is more important.

“This approach allows the Biden team to appear to be responsive to repeated requests for intervention. However, the issue may still be challenged in court, and it is unclear on potential impact of tariffs that may be announced on past shipments,” wrote Jeff Osborne, an analyst at Cowen & Co., in a note Monday.

Multiple Chinese solar energy company stocks rallied on the news on the New York Stock Exchange, including LONGi Green Energy Technology Co Ltd (+6 percent) and Jinko Solar Co (+7 percent).

Andrew MoranFollow

Andrew Moran covers business, economics, and finance. He has been a writer and reporter for more than a decade in Toronto, with bylines on Liberty Nation, Digital Journal, and Career Addict. He is also the author of “The War on Cash.”


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