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Green economy meeting to examine trade remedies in renewable energy goods sector


Information Note
For use of information media - Not an official record
UNCTAD/PRESS/IN/2014/002
Green economy meeting to examine trade remedies in renewable energy goods sector
Anti-dumping and countervailing duties placed on goods such as solar panels, wind turbines and biofuels can run counter to both trade and environment policies

Geneva, Switzerland, 31 March 2014

​The use of trade remedies – specifically anti-dumping duties (ADs) and countervailing duties (CVDs) – on renewable energy goods such as solar panels, wind turbines and biofuels, will be among the topics examined by experts at an UNCTAD meeting in Room XXVI, Palais de Nations, on 3–4 April 2014.

The second in a series of Green Economy and Trade meetings will address the implications of trade remedies for competition, investment, employment and value chains in green sectors. There will be contributions from renowned legal experts, scholars and trade officials from around the world.

According to a forthcoming report commissioned by UNCTAD, some 41 AD and CVD cases have been initiated since 2008 on biofuels, solar energy and wind energy products. Notably, almost half of these measures target solar energy products. The trade remedy trend accelerated during 2012–2013 among major producers of renewable energy, including Australia, China, the European Union, India, and the United States. But these measures are often at cross purposes with national and international policies on climate change and the environment, the report will contend.

While trade remedies can have a significant effect on value and job creation throughout the supply chain, they also may hamper competition.

In addition, trade remedies against renewables provide a counterpoint to initiatives that reduce tariffs on environmental goods, particularly as some of the most active users of trade remedies participate in such initiatives.

Trade remedies also tend to shatter alliances among interest groups and signal a profound shift that is now under way with a new generation of trade and environment disputes. The policies behind recent disputes relating to renewables have more in common with industrial policy measures in such sectors as steel, cars and semiconductors than they have with import measures on tuna and shrimp in the environmental disputes of the past.

Among the questions facing the experts will be: What are the actual or potential effects of trade remedies involving renewables, and what kind of conclusions can be drawn from trade remedy cases since 2008? Are there alternative approaches that might lessen the impact of trade remedies on the deployment of renewable energy? Can aligning the anti-dumping rules with competition or anti-trust rules help make sure they only remedy truly anti-competitive behaviour, as opposed to undesired competition?

The meeting will be divided into three sessions: Trade remedies and renewables – trends, problems and prospects (10.15–13.00 on 3 April); The effects of ADs and CVDs on investment, employment and value edition along the supply train (15.00–18.00 on 3 April); and Trade remedies – a new policy space in the twenty-first century? (15.00–17.30 on 4 April).