Why is bolded figure (88%) important? Let's see what Peter Terium, CEO of RWE, one of largest European energy producers, has to say in this link:EU imposes levies on Chinese solar panels
Imports of Chinese solar panels to Europe will be subject to anti-dumping duties following a European Commission ruling.
The European Commission has imposed anti-dumping duties on imports of Chinese solar panels, defying German-led opposition and dire warnings from Beijing the move could spark a trade war.
"Today, the European Commission has decided unanimously to impose (punitive) tariffs" on Chinese solar panels, after finding they were being sold at up to 88 per cent below cost in the European market, EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht said.
De Gucht said it "is clear that the dumping" is harming the European solar panel industry, with 25,000 jobs threatened as Chinese companies take 80 per cent of the market.
Accordingly, the Commission would levy an initial average tariff of 11.8 per cent from June 6, rising to 47.6 per cent on August 6 in the absence of negotiations based on a Chinese commitment to address the problem.
"I want a fair solution with China," De Gucht said, adding that Tuesday's decision opened the way to talks, if Beijing wanted them.
"The ball is now in China's court."
The commissioner insisted that the measures were not protectionist but rather within the EU's rights under international trade law to protect its interests.
China has solar panel production capacity equal to 150 per cent of world demand, he said, and that meant they were manufacturing too much.
The tariffs are provisional for six months, with EU member states having a vote in December on whether to make them permanent or not.
In recent weeks Germany has led growing opposition to the move, winning the support of 17 other member nations including Britain but not France.
The commission's decision is its single most important anti-dumping action, covering a market worth 21 billion euros ($A28.32 billion), and follows similar steps in the United States.
German subsidies, Chinese dumping prices, and yet, solar energy is still considered as sensible as growing pineapples in Alaska. But it surely must be good for evironment, yes?SPIEGEL: Now RWE wants to invest in solar. Your predecessor Grossmann still rails that generating solar electricity in Germany makes about as much sense as "growing pineapples in Alaska." Why are you entering the pineapple farming business?
Terium: Because the government subsidizes growing pineapples in Germany. As a taxpayer, I can be upset about the fact that it's a waste of money. Spain has twice as many hours of sunshine as Germany. For the same amount of invested capital, twice as much energy could be generated there.
Ooops, turns out trying to replace nuclear power with solar not only turns large parts of Europe into glass/metal desert, but rare, unthinkable phenomenon known as slightly cloudy day turns "clean" renevables into big CO2 emitters. Who would have thought? Well, except for everyone sane who bothered to read anything on the topic?SPIEGEL: But the nuclear industry has been claiming for years that the lights will go out if plants are shut down. And yet nothing has happened so far. Why should we take this doomsday scenario seriously now?
Terium: The warnings are coming from the Federal Network Agency (ed's note: the German government agency responsible for regulating the energy industry). Things were especially tight last winter. The system was almost brought to its knees during the week of Feb. 9. There was little wind, little sun and we hardly had any reserves. Some oil-fired power plants in Austria had to be connected to the grid to guarantee the security of supply. Shutting down nuclear power plants is initially going to be a step backwards for climate protection.
Anyway, say what you want about EU, but continent needs some sort of meritocratic, yet responsible before voters, overseeing net too big to be bribed like national governments looking for common good of everyone, even when particular countries drum up baseless nationalistic or pseudoecologic hysteria to score a few more votes or donations in coming election. See no further than first article above, why otherwise sensible governments can protest decision saving both European economy and environment in one is beyond me