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Epoch Times
25-05-2025
- Business
- Epoch Times
Solar Tech: China's Trojan Horse
Commentary Some of China's PV Tech, a solar trade publication, The risk is real—and global. In November, some inverters in the United States were, in fact, disabled from China. China is the world's largest exporter of power inverters, which connect renewable energy sources to electric power grids. The inverters are considered the 'brains' of devices such as solar panels, wind turbines, heat pumps, and electric vehicle chargers. The rogue devices are 'undocumented communication channels that could allow firewalls to be circumvented remotely, with potentially catastrophic consequences,' according to the sources cited by Reuters. Malicious tampering of them in a coordinated manner poses the risk of widespread blackouts and damage across the U.S. and European electric grids. At the whim of a dictator in Beijing, or for something more serious like a war over Taiwan, Chinese regime hackers could use the rogue devices to skirt cybersecurity firewalls, communicate back to China, and take down larger portions of U.S. and allied electrical grids. 'Beijing blackouts' could be simultaneous and widespread. This would make it difficult for the United States and allies to mount the kind of rapid defense necessary to defend far-flung territories. The regime could also use the threat of hacking the grid for blackmail against the U.S. and European governments. Kaupo Rosin, Estonia's chief of intelligence, said the country risks blackmail by China, unless China's technology is banned in key parts of the economy, including solar inverters. The U.S. and allies have therefore been increasingly careful about allowing the purchase of utility-scale Chinese electronics. But even home solar inverters are a risk. If just 1 percent of Europe's 338 gigawatts of installed solar power capacity were hacked by the regime in Beijing, widespread and prolonged blackouts could result. That shouldn't be hard for the regime to do, as about 200 GW, or almost 60 percent, of Europe's solar capacity is linked to inverters manufactured in China. The European Solar Manufacturing Council (ESMC) was quoted in PV Tech saying that the security risk from China's inverters is 'systemic.' The ESMC called on the European Commission to investigate the 'risk potential for sabotage and espionage' of high-risk manufacturers from China. PV Tech interviewed a leading European inverter manufacturer who said that 'it's very clear inverter companies could switch off the grid if they want to.' He noted that 'Probably 99% of people would have said 'No, there's no risk [of Russia restricting gas supply to Europe after the Ukraine invasion].' But it did. We saw it. And I see the same risk here.' The United States has worked hard to reduce vulnerabilities to China's telecom and semiconductor technologies, as well as the products of forced labor. However, similar U.S. laws to mitigate the risk from inverters are absent. A new U.S. bill, called the Decoupling from Foreign Adversarial Battery Dependence Act, would at least ban the Department of Homeland Security from buying some Chinese batteries. The bill targets six companies that are allegedly closely linked to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). They are BYD Company, Contemporary Amperex Technology Company, Envision Energy, EVE Energy Company, Gotion High-tech Company, and Hithium Energy Storage Technology Company. That ban would start in October 2027. Huawei, Ginlong Solis, and Sungrow are also allegedly linked to the CCP and export large numbers of converters. Huawei has alleged links to Chinese But the bill has been sitting in the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs since March 11. And it only applies to the Department of Homeland Security. Why not make its applicability general? And why limit the ban to just six companies from China? We know from other whack-a-mole laws that they typically fail. Company names and addresses in China can and will be changed in response, with no change to the underlying technology or manufacturing processes. Bans on China's technologies in U.S. energy grids, and elsewhere in the United States, should be as general as possible. Former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld famously China's solar inverter Trojan horse demonstrates that it's time for our leaders in Washington to respond with greater alacrity and foresight, and in more general ways, to protect the United States of America from the CCP threat. Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.


Reuters
12-02-2025
- Business
- Reuters
China aids Russian drone production with smuggled Western parts, says Estonia
Summary China is key hub for smuggling arms to Russia, says Estonia Beijing wants Moscow to prevail in Ukraine war, report says Estonia closely tracks Russian military capabilities VILNIUS, Feb 12 (Reuters) - China is helping Russia's military drone production by becoming a hub for the smuggling of critical Western components for Moscow's armed forces, Estonia's foreign intelligence said in its annual national security report published on Wednesday. Some 80% of such components reaching Russia now come from China, it said. Previous Ukrainian reports have suggested that roughly 60% of foreign parts found in Russian weapons on the battlefield in Ukraine have come via China. China is Russia's "primary hub" for importing high-tech and dual-use goods, evading Western sanctions, according to the report. "Chinese interests here lie in preventing Russia from losing the war in Ukraine as such an outcome would represent a victory for the United States, which is the main rival for China," Kaupo Rosin, director general of the service, told reporters in a video call. Reuters has sought comment on the report from China's embassy in Tallinn. NATO member Estonia closely tracks Russian military capabilities as it regards Moscow as the major threat to its security, especially since Russia's invasion of Ukraine in Feb. 2022. Estonia, like its Baltic neighbours Latvia and Lithuania, was forcibly annexed by Moscow during World War Two, regaining its independence only in 1991 as the Soviet Union fell apart. Russia does not have domestic alternatives for drone parts, so these are largely sourced from the West, said the report. "The Chinese government... facilitates bilateral cooperation and covert transfers of dual-use components through private companies," it said. "This approach will likely decrease Russia's dependency on Western components and, in the long term, could undermine the West's ability to leverage influence in this domain," it said. The offices of Western companies in China are likely involved in the schemes, said Estonian intelligence. BOOSTING CAPABILITIES Russia is investing heavily in expanding its drone production, including producing an advanced domestic version of Iranian one-way drones, said the report. The Kremlin is on track to expand its military to 1.5 million personnel, up from 600-700 thousand in autumn 2022, with new units sent to Ukraine for combat experience, it said. They will be deployed along borders with NATO countries - which include the Baltic states - after the war, said Rosin, adding that the alliance should reinforce its presence there. Russia is "in principle willing" to negotiate a ceasefire in Ukraine but only "to catch breath" because President Vladimir Putin has not abandoned his "imperial ambitions", Rosin said. In any such negotiations, Russia is likely to push for NATO to remove its troops from NATO's eastern border which, if successful, would give it dominance in the Baltic region. Moscow denies having expansionist designs against its neighbours and says it had to send troops into Ukraine to counter what it regards as a hostile, aggressive West that threatens Russia's own security.