专栏中美贸易

Solar subsidies likely to top agenda at Trump-Xi meeting

American solar installers have stopped doing business with China-backed U.S. production centers due to uncertainties about their products’ eligibility for government subsidies.

As Donald Trump prepares to visit China later this week to meet with President Xi Jinping, U.S. protectionist measures against Chinese products are likely to be one of the top items on the agenda. An important part of that discussion could focus on solar energy products, not only ones produced in China but also ones made at Chinese-invested plants in the U.S.

That issue was a central element in a Reuters report last Friday, which revealed that U.S. solar installers, as well as insurance companies and banks, have stopped doing business with China-invested U.S. solar module makers. That includes companies like leading residential solar installer Sunrun (RUN.US), which has stopped buying panels from U.S. plants with links to Chinese companies.

In what looks like a direct response to that challenge, leading Chinese panel maker JinkoSolar Holding Co. Ltd. (JKS.US; 688223.SH) has agreed to sell 75.1% of its U.S. plant in Florida to private equity company FH Capital, according to an announcement from FH Capital the same day as the Reuters report. JinkoSolar would retain the remaining 24.9% in the factory in the city of Jacksonville, which began operations in 2018.

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