3 Canadian Solar Firms File Suit Against Trump’s Solar Tariff
Three Canadian solar manufacturers — Silfab Solar, Heliene, and Canadian Solar — have filed a lawsuit with the US Court of International Trade in New York against Donald Trump’s imposition of 30% tariffs on all imported solar cells and modules, citing “immediate, severe, and irreversible injuries” for the Canadian solar industry.
Earlier this month, China filed complaints with the World Trade Organization seeking talks on compensation with the United States for the recent tariffs imposed on both solar and washing machine exports under the claim that the United States decision to impose such steep tariffs is “not consistent with its obligations under the relevant provisions of” the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 (GATT 1994), and the Safeguards Agreement.
Around the same time, three Canadian solar manufacturers filed a complaint (PDF) with the US Court of International Trade in New York claiming that the imposition of the solar tariff on Canadian solar products violates the Trade Act of 1974 and the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and is seeking an injunction prohibiting the tariffs enforcement on Canadian solar imports.
Additionally, Canadian imports of solar modules and cells do not constitute a “substantial share” of the total imports into the US or “contribute importantly to the serious injury” caused by solar imports which led to the investigation in the first place.
In other words, not only should Canada probably not have been included within the scope of the 30% solar tariff due to its status under the Trade Act of 1974 and NAFTA, but it was never Canadian imports that were the problem, and imposing the tariff on Canadian imports is throwing the blanket too wide.
The plaintiff companies are simply looking to be excluded from the tariff and are calling on the Court to expedite the process so as to prevent “immediate, severe, and irreversible injuries” — though they haven’t ruled out the possibility of seeking “further and additional relief as this Court may deem just and proper.”
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