US-China trade tensions hit Southeast Asia’s solar industry, impact EU

US tariffs on Southeast Asian solar panel exports may disrupt Chinese-owned solar companies in the region, complicating the EU’s solar expansion efforts.

David Hutt reports for Deutsche Welle.


In short:

  • Southeast Asian solar producers face rising US tariffs, which could reduce solar panel exports to the US.
  • Chinese solar firms in the region have scaled back operations, affecting the EU’s solar manufacturing ambitions.
  • Some manufacturers are shifting production to other Southeast Asian nations not currently facing tariffs, like Indonesia and Laos.

Key quote:

"Southeast Asian solar panels could flood the EU market as they are squeezed out of the US."

— Indra Overland, head of the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs' Center for Energy Research

Why this matters:

US tariffs could undermine the EU's solar industry by increasing competition from Southeast Asia. These shifts may also reshape global solar supply chains, influencing renewable energy access worldwide.

Related: American solar firms request federal action against Asian competitors

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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