Context:
The United States has imposed a preliminary countervailing duty (CVD) of 12.6% on solar panel imports from India, creating concerns for domestic original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) amid existing oversupply, weak domestic demand absorption, and pricing pressures.
Key Highlights:
- US Trade Action
- The US imposed preliminary CVD of 12.6% on Indian solar imports.
- Such duties are meant to offset alleged subsidies provided by the exporting country.
- The move may reduce the competitiveness of Indian solar module exports in the US market.
- Dependence on US Market
- Between 2021 and 2024, over 90% of India’s solar photovoltaic module exports went to the US.
- In 2024, India’s solar exports to the US were valued at $792.6 million, nearly a nine-fold rise compared to 2022.
- Export concentration exposes Indian manufacturers to external trade-policy shocks.
- Domestic Manufacturing Capacity
- India’s solar module manufacturing capacity has crossed 140 GW per annum.
- It is projected to rise further to 165 GW by March 2027.
- However, export restrictions could intensify domestic oversupply.
- Domestic Sector Challenges
- Solar exports from India stood at around 3 GW in the last calendar year.
- Industry estimates suggest annual solar capacity installations in India may be around 45–50 GWdc, creating a sizeable supply-demand mismatch.
- Slow project awards, delays in Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs), and transmission connectivity constraints are affecting domestic absorption.
- Industry Response
- Some firms believe the impact may be moderated because exports to the US had already declined by more than 50% in 2025.
- Others see it as a warning to diversify markets and reduce dependence on a single export destination.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Countervailing Duty (CVD)
- A duty imposed to neutralize the effect of government subsidies given to producers in the exporting country.
- It is distinct from anti-dumping duty, which addresses unfair low pricing.
- Solar Photovoltaic Module
- An interconnected assembly of solar cells that converts sunlight into electricity.
- Commonly referred to as a solar panel.
- Power Purchase Agreement (PPA)
- A contract between a power producer and a buyer for the sale of electricity at agreed terms.
- OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer)
- A manufacturer that produces components or final goods used in larger systems or sold under its own or another brand.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Economic and Trade Implications
- The US duty shows the vulnerability of export-led sectors to protectionist trade measures.
- Heavy dependence on one overseas market can undermine industrial stability.
- The duty may compress margins for Indian manufacturers and trigger price competition in the domestic market.
- Impact on India’s Renewable Energy Ecosystem
- A fall in exports may lead to inventory pile-up, lower realizations, and financial stress for OEMs.
- It could also affect investor confidence in the domestic solar manufacturing value chain.
- Structural Challenges in India
- Domestic manufacturing has expanded faster than project execution and grid readiness.
- Delays in PPAs and evacuation infrastructure reduce timely deployment of solar capacity.
- This highlights the need to align manufacturing policy with deployment policy.
- Strategic Response Needed
- India must deepen its domestic market through faster tendering, timely PPAs, and grid expansion.
- Indian firms may need to move from product exports to localized manufacturing abroad, especially in major markets like the US.
- Diversification into markets in Europe, Africa, West Asia and Southeast Asia can reduce export risk.
- Way Forward
- Accelerate domestic solar deployment and remove implementation bottlenecks.
- Build alternative export destinations and reduce excessive US dependence.
- Promote competitiveness through scale, technology upgradation, and cost efficiency.
- Align manufacturing incentives with actual domestic demand growth and grid preparedness.
UPSC Relevance:
- GS Paper III: Economy, renewable energy, industrial policy.
- GS Paper II: India–US trade relations.
- Prelims: CVD, PPA, solar manufacturing ecosystem.
