
US clears way for stiff tariffs on Southeast Asian solar imports
The US International Trade Commission determined on Tuesday that domestic solar panel makers were materially harmed or threatened by a flood of cheap imports from four Southeast Asian nations, bringing the United States a step closer to imposing stiff duties on those goods.
The 'yes' vote by the three-member ITC means the US Commerce Department will issue orders to enforce countervailing and anti-dumping tariffs on solar products imported from Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam that the agency finalised last month.
The vote resolves a year-old trade case in which American manufacturers accused Chinese companies of flooding the market with unfairly cheap goods from factories in Southeast Asia. Since that time, US President Donald Trump has pursued a broad strategy to impose tariffs on imported products to protect manufacturers of US-made goods.
The US Commerce Department cannot impose tariffs unless the ITC finds that the domestic industry was harmed or threatened by overseas rivals receiving unfair subsidies and dumping products in the US market.
The outcome of the vote was posted in a brief notice on the ITC's website. It was not immediately clear how each commissioner voted.
01:13
Qatar opens first solar power plant built with Chinese equipment and technology
Qatar opens first solar power plant built with Chinese equipment and technology
The trade case was brought last year by Korea's Hanwha Qcells, Arizona-based First Solar Inc and several smaller producers seeking to protect billions of dollars in investments in US solar manufacturing.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
40 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
US judge blocks Trump administration from overhauling federal elections
A federal judge on Friday blocked President Donald Trump's administration from implementing parts of his sweeping executive order overhauling federal elections, including by requiring proof of US citizenship to register to vote and barring states from counting mail-in ballots received after Election Day. US District Judge Denise Casper in Boston issued a preliminary injunction at the behest of 19 Democratic-led states who had argued that the Republican president lacked the authority to mandate changes to elections and the states' voting procedures. The lawsuit is one of several across the nation challenging Trump's March 25 executive order, which he signed after years of raising doubts about the integrity of the US electoral system and falsely claiming that his 2020 loss to Democratic former president Joe Biden resulted from widespread voter fraud. While parts of Trump's order had already been blocked in April by a judge in Washington, Casper's ruling went further as she concluded the states had established key pieces of the president's order were likely unlawful and unconstitutional. A voter casts a ballot at a ballot drop box in Seattle during early voting for the 2024 US presidential election. Photo: dpa 'The Constitution does not grant the president any specific powers over elections,' Casper, an appointee of Democratic president Barack Obama, wrote.

The Standard
2 hours ago
- The Standard
US stocks open lower as Israel-Iran conflict hits risk appetite
A Wall Street sign hangs in front of a U.S. Flag outside the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
EU sidelined by US-China showdown, Moutai faces sobering reality: SCMP daily highlights
Catch up on some of SCMP's biggest China stories of the day. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing Over two rounds of high-stakes talks on European soil, Europe has watched from the sidelines as the US and China tried to reach a truce that might stabilise the global trading system on which the continent is entirely reliant. The Chinese embassy in Israel warned its citizens on Friday morning to take safety precautions for potential attacks as Tehran considers a retaliation against Israeli strikes targeting its nuclear sites. Moutai, one of China's most popular liquor brands, is being put in a difficult position by rules limiting extravagant spending by officials. Photo: Reuters China's premier liquor distiller Kweichow Moutai – a brand that had, over decades, become synonymous with sumptuous feasts – is heeding a renewed mandate for austerity from Beijing, distancing its products from the extravagant hard-drinking lifestyle with which it had been linked in the public consciousness.