While environmentalists tout benefits of solar power, three solar companies filed for bankruptcy in the past week.
Each of them blamed intense global competition for its downfall.
The German companies Conergy AG and Gehrlicher Solar AG filed for
insolvency in German courts in the past week. The Hawaii-based solar
company Hoku also filed for bankruptcy protection, reports Renewable Energy World.
Hoku owes up to $1 billion to creditors and had to cancel building a
manufacturing plant in Idaho, which had already been delayed several
years.
Conergy’s 800 German workers are now in line to get three months of government unemployment payments.
All three companies partially blamed fierce international competition
from places like China, which has flooded the solar market with cheap
panels. Additionally, the German government has been cutting down on
green subsidies.
The International Business Times notes:
“A global glut in supply combined with plunging prices amid stiff
competition from Asia has brought down or seriously debilitating some of
the biggest names in the sector in the past two years.”
These bankruptcies come amid a trade dispute between the European
Union and China over solar subsidies. Europe argues its businesses can’t
compete with the cheaper Chinese panels.
The EU even moved to impose anti-dumping duties on Chinese panels
last month, but now both sides are trying to negotiate a way out of
their trade spat.
In the U.S., the Obama administration also slapped tariffs on Chinese solar panels to protect domestic manufacturers.
American solar panel manufacturers Solyndra and Abound Solar blamed
subsidized Chinese competition for their demise. Both companies
themselves received generous government-backed loan guarantees — $535
million to Solyndra and about $70 million to Abound Solar.
“With over $30 billion in reported government subsidies, Chinese
panel makers were able to sell below cost and put Abound out of business
before we were big enough to pose a real competitive threat to China’s
rapidly growing market share,” said Craig Witsoe, former CEO of Abound.
A Daily Caller News Foundation investigation revealed
that Abound solar was selling faulty solar panels that routinely
underperformed and even caught on fire. The company reportedly knew its
panels were faulty prior to receiving taxpayer dollars and may have
misled investors in order to keep the company afloat until federal aid
came in.
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