The European Union needs to take into account its ambitious targets for solar power deployment before it considers any measures to curb imports of photovoltaic panels, wafers and other components, a senior EU official said on Monday.
European Commissioner Mairead McGuinness told the European Parliament that the EU was working on a vast set of instruments to support the solar industry. Currently, 97% of the panels deployed in Europe are imported, mainly from China.
“Given that we currently rely to a very important degree on imports to reach EU solar deployment targets, any potential measure needs to be weighed against the objectives we have set ourselves when it comes to the energy transition,” she told lawmakers.
The Commission has set a target of 750 gigawatts of solar generation capacity by 2030, from 260 GW in 2023.
Europe’s solar panel manufacturing industry has urged the EU to step in with emergency measures to avoid local firms shutting down under price pressure from Chinese imports.
If these measures, including buying up excess inventories of EU solar modules, could not be done rapidly, it urged the Commission to consider “safeguard” measures that could include import tariffs and quotas.
via Reuters
