Author Archives Laura Arnold

NYT: China Bends to U.S. Complaint on Solar Panels but Plans Retaliation; Implications for Indiana Solar Panel Manufacturing?

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   December 03, 2011  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Dear Readers:

This story from the New York Times is a follow-up to two earlier blog posts. See U.S. Solar Manufacturers Welcome Support of United Steelworkers in Landmark Trade Case  and Coalition For Affordable Solar Energy Expresses Opposition To China Trade Complaint.

The topic of the future of renewable energy manufacturing such as solar and wind energy system components, aka "supply chain", was discussed at the Indiana Renewable Energy Association (InREA) Annual Meeting and Conference on Sat., Nov 12, 2011 in Indianapolis.

Laura Ann Arnold

Original article: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/22/business/global/china-bends-to-us-complaint-on-solar-panels-but-also-plans-retaliation.html

By
Published: November 21, 2011

HONG KONG — Chinese solar panel makers plan to shift some of their production to South Korea, Taiwan and the United States in hopes of defusing a trade case pending against them in Washington, according to industry executives.

But at the same time, the Chinese industry is considering retaliating by filing a trade case of its own with China’s Commerce Ministry.

The most likely target would be American exports to China of polysilicon — a prime ingredient in solar panels — Chinese industry executives and officials said on Monday. American manufacturers exported about $873 million of polysilicon to China last year, nearly as much in dollar terms as the value of the solar panels that China shipped to the United States.

The Chinese moves come after the United States Commerce Department opened a trade case against China’s solar panel makers earlier this month, at the request of SolarWorld Industries America and six other American solar companies.

The Commerce Department said it was considering punitive tariffs of 50 to 250 percent on Chinese solar panels, based on preliminary evidence that China was “dumping” solar panels in the United States below the cost of making and marketing them. The department is also investigating whether the Chinese government is breaking international trade rules by subsidizing the export of solar panels — if such a finding was made, it could result in additional tariffs.

Having hired trade lawyers to advise them on the Commerce Department case, Chinese solar panel manufacturers are increasingly gloomy about their chances of winning it, said Ocean Yuan, the president of Grape Solar, a big importer of Chinese solar panels that is based in Eugene, Ore.

Mr. Yuan said that Grape Solar was already negotiating with several Chinese manufacturers, whom he declined to identify, to perform final assembly of solar modules in Oregon. That would be the last step in new supply chains the Chinese industry intends to set up that would start in China then run through South Korea and Taiwan in hopes of avoid any new tariffs.

But because final assembly of solar panels is relatively low-tech manual labor, any Chinese expansion into Oregon would be unlikely to add many valuable American jobs.

Currently, the only Chinese solar panel assembly site in the United States is near Phoenix and owned by Suntech Power. That plant has a capacity equal to about 3 percent of the American market for solar panels.

Even before the filing of the trade case, Suntech had begun preparations to increase output at that operation, planning to add a work shift and double the size of the factory. But that will expand the current work force to 260, from 110 now. And even then, its capacity would serve only a small fraction of the American market. By contrast, companies based in China supplied more than 40 percent of the American market for installed panels in the third quarter of this year, according to GTM Research, a renewable energy consulting firm based in Boston.

Meanwhile, the Chinese solar panel industry is seeking legal advice on filing its own antidumping and antisubsidy trade case against the United States, industry executives in Beijing said Monday.

The most likely target would be American exports of polysilicon, the main material used in making conventional solar panels, said Wang Shijiang, a manager at the China Photovoltaic Industry Alliance based in Beijing.

The manufacture of polysilicon requires enormous amounts of energy — so much electricity that it typically takes the first year of operation of the panel to generate as much power as was required to make the polysilicon in it. The process requires superheating large volumes of material in electric-arc furnaces, including the melting of quartzite rock at more than 3,600 degrees Fahrenheit.

The United States is one of the world’s largest producers of polysilicon, in states like Tennessee and Washington, because it has access to a lot of inexpensive hydroelectric power. And most of that polysilicon is exported.

China’s own polysilicon industry is controversial because it relies heavily on electricity generated by coal-fired power plants, and because weak environmental controls at Chinese polysilicon factories have resulted in toxic spills that have fouled streams and rivers.

Solar energy now contributes only about one-tenth of 1 percent of American electricity, but the amount of new solar wattage installed in the United States has been growing more than 70 percent a year since 2008, according to GTM Research.

American solar panel makers, though, have had trouble competing with the Chinese, whose export industry has helped push wholesale solar panel prices down sharply — to $1 to $1.20 a watt of capacity today, from $1.80 in January and $3.30 in 2008.

Three American solar companies that together represented one-sixth of American manufacturing capacity in the sector went bankrupt in August — including Solyndra, whose failure despite receiving more than $500 million in federal loan guarantees has fueled Republican criticism of the Obama administration’s green-energy policy. Four other American solar companies have laid off workers and cut output since spring of last year.

Meanwhile, formerly brisk demand for solar panels in Europe has slowed, as financially pressed governments have reduced subsidies. And so far, the Chinese domestic market for solar power remains tiny. As a result many Chinese manufacturers have a capacity glut, to which they have responded by shipping more panels to the United States, driving prices down.

The United States energy secretary, Steven Chu, noted in Congressional testimony last week that solar panel prices had fallen 70 percent in the last two and a half years. Mr. Chu was testifying as part of a Republican inquiry into Solyndra.

At the simplest level, there are four main steps in making a solar panel, also known as a solar module. Using molten polysilicon to grow crystals or cast blocks of polycrystalline silicon is the first step. The second step is cutting and polishing the material into thin, smooth wafers.

The third step involves chemically treating the wafer and adding electrical contacts to turn it into a solar cell. The last step involves connecting 60 or 72 solar cells together, covering them with glass, enclosing them in an aluminum frame and adding an electrical junction box.

The United States trade case was filed against solar panels for which either of the final two steps — turning the wafer into a cell or assembling cells into a panel — was done in China.

Mr. Yuan said that Chinese manufacturers wanted to keep wafer production in China, but were making plans to ship wafers to Taiwan or South Korea for conversion into solar cells, as one way to potentially avoid any new tariffs the United States Commerce Department might decide to impose. That step is the costliest, most high-tech and most highly automated task in producing solar panels, representing about a third of the total cost.

Chinese manufacturers have studied moving solar cell factories directly to the United States but have largely rejected it in favor of other countries because it takes so long to comply with the many American regulations for opening new factories that use a lot of chemicals, according to a Chinese industry executive, who spoke on condition that neither he nor his employer be identified.

Mr. Yuan of Grape Solar said cells made in Taiwan or South Korea from Chinese wafers would be shipped to the United States for final assembly — a step that typically accounts for a little less than a fifth of the total cost of making a solar panel.

A version of this article appeared in print on November 22, 2011, on page B7 of the New York edition with the headline: China Bends to U.S. Complaint on Solar Panels, but Weighs Retaliation.

Indy Star Columnist Dan Carpenter: “Spinning our own Solyndra in Indiana”

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   December 01, 2011  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   1 Comments

Original article: http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2011111270324

4:13 PM, Nov. 25, 2011

Written by Dan Carpenter

The distinguished columnist George Will, a gushing admirer of our own Gov. Mitch Daniels, recently joined the conservative chorus denouncing the Obama administration's financial backing of the ill-fated Solyndra green-energy project.

"Crony capitalism," he called it, noting that it involved a former Obama campaign operative ensconced in the Department of Energy, whose wife is with Solyndra's law firm.

Progressives like this sort of government meddling in the market, Will sniffed, when in fact it "is not just susceptible to corruption, it is corruption. It is political favoritism with a clean (even green) conscience."

Indeed. Those lascivious liberals, lavishing taxpayer money on high-risk gambles from which their friends can richly gain and cannot lose.

If the man Will wishes had run for president were not responsible for it, he might have included among his exhibits Indiana Gasification LLC.

I'm not the first to dub this venture Daniels' Solyndra, and I'm certainly not smart enough to predict disaster for it. But examine the markings.

At Daniels' behest, and with the blessing of the credibility-challenged Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission, the state has promised to shell out $7 billion over 30 years to buy the output of a yet-to-be-built $2.65 billion plant that would make synthetic gas out of coal. The hope is that coal prices fall in the future and natural gas prices rise, making this greenish fuel a bargain. Meanwhile, "hundreds" of jobs -- not thousands, for all those billions -- will result, Daniels proclaims.

The state is wagering on this little-tested technology because private money -- utilities and banks -- ran the other way.

The New York company the state is bankrolling has, as its chief Indiana executive, Mark Lubbers, the governor's former chief of staff and longtime political teammate.

Whether these men have been scrupulous stewards of the public purse will not be known for sure in my lifetime; but I can guarantee they're not libertarians.

Billions to Lubbers' Leucadia Corp., billions to the horrendously destructive make-work extension of I-69, billions that would have been foisted on Duke Energy ratepayers if consumer activists and the news media had not exposed that company's orgy of crony capitalism with the IURC -- talk about your big government bedfellowship.

Before he wrote a book condemning President Barack Obama's Washington for sending our grandchildren down a red river to socialism, Daniels was busy writing the book on grand gestures with the people's money. To be sure, he has a lot of co-authors, in both political parties; not the least of them the Obama folks, whose stimulus funds have enabled Indiana to skate through the post-meltdown years with its fiscal responsibility image intact and George Will-praiseworthy.

Like Energy Secretary Steven Chu, Daniels will defend the state's friends as honorable experts and the state's gambles as necessities of the market. Unlike some pundits, I won't play favorites with the label "crony capitalism." Since I'm not going to be at the table, I just hope they get some lucky rolls with my chips.

Carpenter is Star op-ed columnist. Contact him at (317) 444-6172 or at dan.carpenter@indystar.com.

Talk of Purdue energy farm still in the wind; Performance Services still optimistic

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   November 30, 2011  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Original story: http://www.jconline.com/article/20111129/NEWS0501/111290311/Talk-Purdue-energy-farm-still-wind?odyssey=tab%7Ctopnews%7Ctext%7CFRONTPAGE

Written by ERIC WEDDLE 12:02 AM, Nov. 29, 2011

The developer of a proposed wind energy park on farmland owned by Purdue University and nearby privately owned property is optimistic it will become a reality despite delays in securing capital.

Performance Services, an Indianapolis-based engineering and construction company, has been seeking financial backers and a power purchase agreement since February for a turbine park planned for Purdue and private land in western Tippecanoe County.

But a rocky economy has slowed the progress, said Scott Zigmond, vice president of sales and marketing for Performance Service.

"We are just working through that," he said. "All parties are interested in getting this pushed up, one way or another, because we believe this is a fantastic project for the state and for Purdue."

The current proposal is for a 100-megawatt park consisting of 50 two-megawatt turbines. Purdue faculty and students would have access to the turbines for various research and teaching opportunities. Energy from the Purdue Energy Park -- its proposed name -- would be sold to a utility company.

In February, the company was selected by the Purdue Board of Trustees to work with the university on developing the project on 1,600 acres of mostly agriculture land at the Purdue Animal Sciences Research and Education Center 10 miles northwest of West Lafayette.

Ken Sandel, Purdue director of physical and capital planning, said the university's primary financial interest is as landowner. The Purdue Research Foundation is overseeing the lease of land.

"If Performance Services can deliver a project, we will be very happy to work with them," he said. "We are primed and ready."

Zigmond said environmental studies and other regulatory issues are under way so the park could be operational by Dec. 31, 2012 -- the cutoff date for tax credits on wind facilities. Zigmond said the federal program could result in savings up to a third of the park's cost.

Unless lawmakers extend the date, financing would need to come through in the next 60 days. Nonetheless, the project will go forward, Zigmond said.

In addition to finances, Performance Services needs to strike a deal with a manufacturer of turbines.

General Electric Co. was originally announced as the turbine manufacturer for the park, but Scott said Monday that a deal was not finalized.

The total amount of the leasing agreement is still to be determined, Sandel said, adding the agreement would likely be for 30 years. Earlier this year, campus officials said the university would receive annual lease payments of approximately $10,000 per turbine.

The name Purdue Energy Park also would cover a 33-turbine wind energy farm known previously as Performance Park, which is slated to be developed on more than 2,400 acres of private land by Performance Services as the first wind farm in Tippecanoe County.

WSJ: New Battle Looms on Labor ; Indiana Push for ‘Right to Work’ Bill Is Latest Front in Midwest Fight Over Unions

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   November 22, 2011  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Dear Blog Readers:

Just in case you doubted the importance of the "right to work" battle during the 2012 session of the Indiana General Assembly, then you need to read the article below from the Wall Street Journal which ran on page A3 in the Tuesday, November 22, 2011 edition.  I think this article helps to put the issue in perspective nationally. Clearly "right to work" will be the 800 lb guerrilla in the room during the 2012 session of the Indiana General Assembly.

Laura Ann Arnold

NOVEMBER 21, 2011, 9:27 P.M. ET, Wall Street Journal

By AMY MERRICK

Indiana House Republicans said Monday they would make passing a so-called right-to-work bill their top priority in the coming legislative session, re-opening another front in a battle over labor unions that has roiled much of the Midwest this year.

INDIANA

Indianapolis Star/Associated Press Indiana House Speaker Brian Bosma, center, said Monday that Republicans would make passing a 'right to work' bill their top priority.

The Indiana bill would affect the rights of all private-sector workers, allowing employees at unionized companies to refrain from joining the union and to avoid paying union dues. Republicans and some company executives say such a bill would create jobs in a state where unemployment stands at 8.9%, while Democrats and labor leaders say it wouldn't help unemployment and would crimp incomes.

If the measure succeeds, Indiana will be the first state to pass a right-to-work law since Oklahoma in 2001, though such measures have been proposed in many state legislatures this year. Currently 22 states have right-to-work laws, and they tend to have the lowest unionization rates.

The Indiana announcement comes just weeks after neighboring Ohio voted by a wide margin on Nov. 8 to repeal a broader law limiting collective bargaining for public-sector workers. A Wisconsin law similar to the Ohio bill, meanwhile, was a driving factor behind the campaign launched last week to recall Republican Gov. Scott Walker.

INDIANA

Republican House Speaker Brian Bosma said his state's situation was different from Ohio's as Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels, a Republican, had already abolished collective bargaining for public employees, in 2005. The Indiana law would be less controversial, he said, as it applies only to the private sector, where a smaller proportion of workers are covered by unions. In addition, it wouldn't affect police officers and fire fighters—a big reason for the opposition in Ohio.

Mr. Bosma said that he planned to introduce the bill Jan. 4, the first scheduled day of the new session. "It's very clear that we're not going to be able to dip into the quarter of a million Hoosiers who are out of work without addressing the last barrier to job creation in our state," he said in an interview.

House Republicans said some executives at site-selection firms had told them business leaders would prefer to relocate to a state with weaker union protections.

Democrats and union leaders said the measure was an attack on the existence of unions, and vowed to fight it. When Indiana Republicans pushed a right-to-work bill in the spring, most House Democrats fled to Urbana, Ill., refusing to return until after the GOP withdrew the plan.

House Democratic Leader B. Patrick Bauer said passing a right-to-work law would lower wages and make workplaces more dangerous without bringing new jobs to Indiana. "It's disappointing that they're not reading the actions in other states, where the public is repulsing and repealing these anti-worker bills," he said in an interview. He said he wouldn't rule out Democrats leaving the state again, but said they had other options.

The Indiana AFL-CIO, which represents more than 300,000 workers, said it would fight the bill. "It forces organized labor to represent workers who refuse to pay for services, thus severely depleting their ability to effectively represent dues-paying members," said Nancy Guyott, president of the state chapter.

Mr. Daniels last year advised Republicans not to push a right-to-work bill, saying it would distract the legislature from education changes he wanted to make. In recent weeks he has said he expects lawmakers to propose a bill again, but declined to say whether he would campaign to pass it.

A spokeswoman for Mr. Daniels said Monday the governor would explain his views at a later date. In an interview this month, the governor claimed Indiana loses one-third of potential business relocations because of its strong union protections.

Write to Amy Merrick at amy.merrick@wsj.com

Indiana Republican legislators going right to work on ‘right to work’; What about energy?

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   November 22, 2011  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Dear Blog Readers:

The Indiana General Assembly will meet for Organizational Day on Tuesday, November 22 with the House convening at 1:00 p.m. and the Senate at 1:30 p.m. The first session day is scheduled for Wednesday, January 4, 2012. Although today's Organizational Day is mostly ceremonial, it is expected to set the tone for the upcoming short session. State legislative leaders are expected to give floor speeches and to outline their respective agendas for the upcoming session.

The second regular session or "short session" of each term of the general assembly shall adjourn sine die not later than March 14 in any even-numbered year.  By comparison, the first regular session of each term of the general assembly shall adjourn sine die not later than April 29 in any odd-numbered year. Sometimes non-Hoosiers are a little confused about this. When state lawmakers adjourn by March 14, 2012, they are done for the entire year. Yes, that's right. Therefore, the short session proceeds at  a pretty fast pace.

The article below from the front page of the Indianapolis Star gives a good preview of what we might expect. During the 2011 session, a five week walk by Indiana House Democrats shut down the Indiana General Assembly until Indiana Republican leaders agreed to take certain issues including "right to work" off the table. No one knows for sure what will happen this session.

Click HERE to watch on-line.

With a show down on "right to work", I don't hold much hope anything will get done on other issues such as energy. Let's see. I think both parties are anxious to prepare for the 2012 General Election where voters will not only vote for a Presidential candidate but a new Governor. Next year Governor Mitch Daniels will be completing his final year in office.

Don't blink or you might miss the whole thing!

Laura Ann Arnold

Original story: http://www.indystar.com/article/20111122/NEWS05/111220323/Indiana-Republicans-aim-get-right-work-right-work-?odyssey=tab|topnews|text|IndyStar.com

Written by Mary Beth Schneider,
 12:16 AM, Nov. 22, 2011

The final legislative session of Gov. Mitch Daniels' tenure will be a battleground over labor union rights.

The fight to make Indiana the 23rd so-called "right to work" state in the nation began Monday, when House Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, and Senate President Pro Tempore David Long, R-Fort Wayne, said the issue will be their top priority.

Unions call the legislation -- which bars companies and unions from negotiating a contract that requires nonmembers to pay fees for representation -- the "right to work for less." Their protests over this and other bills aimed at labor unions shut down the House for five weeks in 2011, when Democrats left the state to deny Republicans the ability to cast votes.

Republicans tabled the issue then, in large part because Daniels said 2011 wasn't the right time to deal with it.

But he's made it clear that he won't raise the same objections in 2012. Although he hasn't endorsed the legislation -- and his office declined to comment on it Monday -- he has argued that not having this law costs jobs.

"We miss about a third of the opportunities because businesses want a state where this protection is provided to workers," Daniels said last week in South Bend. "In this tough economy, the state needs every edge it can get."

Monday, House Minority Leader B. Patrick Bauer, D-South Bend, did not rule out a reprise of this year's walkout by Democrats, saying his 40-member caucus would "confer together to decide that."

Bosma and Long acknowledged that the issue will be divisive.

In fact, Bosma said, the House might try to move the bill quickly so it has cleared as many legislative hurdles as possible before the Feb. 5 Super Bowl. The concern? Fears that labor unions would hold protests that would interfere somehow with the big game at Lucas Oil Stadium, just a few blocks from the Statehouse.

The protests will begin from day one. Hundreds of union members are expected at the Statehouse today for lawmakers' one-day organizational meeting. Instead of the typical ceremonial gathering, today's meeting will give a taste of what to expect when the 2012 session starts Jan. 4.

Union organizers, who are bringing in busloads of members, said they'll try to have as many members as possible meet with their local lawmakers to argue against the legislation.

At the same time, business groups -- including the Indiana Chamber of Commerce -- will be lobbying for it.

They'll be getting a big hand from the National Right To Work Legal Defense Foundation, which said Monday that passing this legislation in Indiana is its top 2012 priority as well.

Greg Mourad, vice president of the National Right To Work Committee, said several other states also will be debating this legislation in 2012, including Michigan, Missouri, Maine, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Pennsylvania.

But Indiana, he said, is "probably our highest priority" for one reason: "They've got the votes there to do it."

Monday, Bosma -- who said he'd co-author the bill in the House while an identical bill moves in the Senate -- framed this as about two issues: jobs and freedom.

"With one in three employers that are looking for a place to locate in the nation taking Indiana off the table because we are not a right-to-work state, it is the time to remove that final barrier," he said.

Nancy Guyott, president of the Indiana State AFL-CIO, called Bosma's comments "laughable."

"In reality, this legislation isn't about giving Hoosier workers and employers more freedom," she said. "It's about taking away existing freedoms and choices."

She argued that Hoosiers should be free to negotiate a contract that has to get the support of employers and more than half of the union. And, she said, unions should not be forced to represent employees who pay nothing for those services, "thus severely depleting their ability to effectively represent dues-paying members in fights for better wages, working conditions and needed safety precautions."

Bauer said the GOP agenda would stand in stark contrast to the House Democratic agenda unveiled Monday, which includes offering tax incentives to boost small-business job creation; using unemployment benefits to subsidize the salary of a worker who otherwise would be laid off; giving Hoosiers preference in hiring for jobs funded by state contracts; offering vouchers to pay for preschool; capping class sizes for kindergarten through sixth grade; and other issues not likely to get much traction with the Republican-controlled legislature.

"They're talking about continuing crushing people's job opportunities and salaries and hopes," he said. "We're here to tell how we can get more jobs and higher-paying jobs and helping families."

Both sides can point to studies and statistics to back up their case that right-to-work states either create more jobs -- or simply create more low-paying jobs.

"The truth is, as it often is, probably somewhere in between," said Paul Carlen, chairman of the Department of Economics at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis.

Most studies, he said, "have found some positive effect, but it's small. . . . It does have some signaling value. It signals to outside employers that maybe this is a place where they're not going to have to worry as much about unions."

Bosma and Long argued that Indiana needs to look at anything that creates a better business climate, even if it causes division in the legislature.

"We'll have to fasten our seat belts," Long said. "It's going to be a bumpy ride."

The ride won't be over even when the legislature adjourns in mid-March. Instead, it's sure to be an issue in the November 2012 elections.

"In the end, we're here to debate the issues and vote on the issues," Long said as he warned Democrats not to fight this issue by shutting down the session. "Then you take your case to the public in the ballot booth and you see who wins."

Call Star reporter Mary Beth Schneider at (317) 444-2772.

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