DATONG, China — Pandas are round and roly poly. Solar panels are angular. That did not stop a state-backed Chinese company from building a panda-shaped solar plant on a stretch of northern plain.
Panda Green Energy Group’s Datong plant has a capacity of 50 megawatts and is connected to the state grid. Viewed from above it looks like two pandas — if pandas were made of solar panels and dusty bits of road.
The company pitches the plant as a prototypical win-win: energy, plus what Chinese President Xi Jinping calls “positive energy,” which roughly means doing things that align with Communist Party goals.
Projects like this are the soft, cuddly face of China’s shift to solar. At a time when the United States is wavering on climate change, the Chinese government is investing in green energy on a giant scale.
Having the world’s biggest polluter nurture solar energy is, in many ways, a good thing. It has the potential to curb the smog that blights the region and, over the long term, slow the pace of climate change.
But some U.S. firms see China’s embrace of solar as a threat to American business — and that presents a challenge to President Trump as he takes his “America First” agenda to China this week.
Voices within the U.S. solar sector have complained for years that the China’s support for its solar industry gives Chinese companies an unfair edge. In 2012, the United States slapped anti-dumping tariffs on Chinese-made panels.
Last week, officials at the U.S. International Trade Commission recommended new restrictions on solar power equipment purchased from abroad, with tariffs of up to 35 percent.
The recommendation raises the question of whether Trump, who has railed against Chinese trade practices, will bring the issue up with his hosts. It also sets up one of the president’s first big choices on trade.
The case was backed by two U.S. solar producers who claimed they were forced into bankruptcy because of subsidized imports. Big buyers of solar panels vehemently opposed it, arguing tariffs would lead to an untenable spike in prices.
“If [Trump] imposes tariffs, 10,000 U.S. jobs will be lost — jobs in blue-collar, middle class America,” said Abigail Ross Hopper, president and CEO of the Solar Energy Industries Association, a trade association. “Imposing tariffs will not create a manufacturing renaissance in the U.S., it will raise prices and kill demand.”
Over the last 10 years, China has made renewable energy a priority, with various branches of goverment offering subsidies, loans or discounts on land, said Zhang Zhongxiang, an energy expert at Tianjin University.
In recent yeras, the state has tried to rein in subsidies to tackle overcapacity. But there is still support to be had, particularly for projects that align with the central government’s plans.
Panda Green’s main shareholder is China Merchants New Energy Group, a subsidiary of China Merchants groups, a powerful state-owned conglomerate.
In May the company signed an agreement with the Chinese government to promote construction projects as part of its “belt and road” program of infrastructure investments abroad.
The firm has said it plans to build 100 panda-shaped plants around the world, though it has given few details about when, where and how the projects will get underway.
The company is also working with United Nations Development Program. The goal, according to the UNDP, is to “enhance engagement with the next generation of young leaders to take action on climate change.”
At Panda Green, employees said they feel confident because the plant is running well—and because the state supports their mission.
Guo Bin, a 26-year-old engineer who lives at the facility, about 200 miles west of Beijing, predicted that the firm would prosper. “We are following in the country’s steps,” he said.
Asked about Green Panda’s prospects, spokesperson Ou Lianwei referred to a speech Xi delivered on the importance of renewables.
Ou said Panda Green, which does not produce or export panels, would not be hit hard if Trump decides to implement tariffs.
But any comment or trade move from Trump could still shake up the sector, experts said.
“Protectionist trade moves will definitely have an impact,” said Gu Limin, a director at Jiangsu Akcome Industrial Group, a Chinese energy company. “There will be damage to the market and the industry.”
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Emily Rauhala
www.washingtonpost.com