Sunday, June 16, 2013

In EU-China Solar Panel Slapdown, No One Wins - Bloomberg

In EU-China Solar Panel Slapdown, No One Wins - Bloomberg:
Solar Tariffs
Photos: Bloomberg; Illustration by Bloomberg View

In EU-China Solar Panel Slapdown, No One Wins

China and the European Union are quarreling over Chinese exports of solar panels, whichEurope says are being dumped in its markets. It’s a stupid fight -- but one that could easily escalate into a bigger trade conflict if both sides don’t take care.
In the short run, the EU should withdraw its threat of punitive tariffs. In the long run, all the big trading nations, including the U.S., should reform the anti-dumping rules that encourage this nonsensical wrangling.
So far, Europe has been following the U.S.’s bad example. The U.S. imposed tariffs on Chinese exports of solar panels last year after complaints about illegal subsidies and dumping, or selling below cost. The EU’s trade commissioner, Karel de Gucht, advocates the same approach and is recommending preliminary tariffs of more than 40 percent, with the possibility of permanent duties once his investigation is complete. China, of course, is threatening to retaliate.
The political and economic rivalries in all this are complex. For instance, China is accused of illegally subsidizing its solar-panel producers as well as dumping -- but governments everywhere subsidize renewable energy in different ways, and rightly so. Isn’t cheap solar power a good thing?
Many EU governments oppose the commissioner, and not just because environment ministers like cheap solar energy or because trade officials fear a bigger trade fight. The balance of business interests is complex, too. Tariffs on Chinese solar panels would help Europe’s solar-panel producers but hurt Europe’s wider solar-power industry, which relies on cheap Chinese panels and which sells components such as polysilicon to Chinese panel makers. (A report commissioned by an alliance of European solar companies found that a tariff of 60 percent would cost almost 250,000 EU jobs over three years.)
Germany’s chancellor, Angela Merkel, has called for a negotiated settlement. De Gucht has said he is open to it.
This might avoid an escalating trade war, and that’s important, but has little else to commend it. A settlement would probably require China to set a minimum price for its solar-panel exports -- making the product more expensive for EU consumers and putting money that would otherwise accrue to the EU as tariffs into Chinese manufacturers’ pockets. Agreements to rig markets at consumers’ expense in this fashion have often been the outcome of anti-dumping disputes. The companies bringing the complaint are protected from competition; the companies that are the subject of the complaints cartelize their market at government direction and fatten their margins; everybody else loses.
The underlying problem is the very idea of dumping. Current trade rules fail to emphasize the vital distinction between selling below cost and predatory pricing. Selling below cost isn’t necessarily anti-competitive, and on the face of it is good for consumers. When producers have excess capacity and falling demand, selling below cost can make sense for everybody. Selling below cost in order to monopolize a market and drive up prices later -- predatory pricing -- is different. That indeed is anti-competitive and should be curbed.
Yet genuine predatory pricing is rare, because the conditions for making it work are demanding. Would-be predators must expect to gain monopoly power. The strategy fails if their plot to raise prices later just brings more producers back into the business. Solar-panel production isn’t concentrated -- it’s a competitive industry with low barriers to entry. Moreover, every analyst agrees it is suffering from global overcapacity because of rapidly rising production (especially in China) and depressed demand (especially in Europe). The predation theory looks hugely implausible.
International trade rules have contained most forms of self-defeating protectionism. Anti-dumping complaints stand as the main exception. It’s too easy for a narrow commercial interest to launch an anti-dumping procedure that leads to tariffs that aren’t in the public interest. Stricter tests, turning on the idea of predatory pricing and administered by neutral parties (such as the World Trade Organization), should be brought to bear.
When it comes to anti-dumping, the EU and U.S. both need to drop their misguided demands and raise their sights: Trade policy should be about promoting competition, not bowing to corporate interests.
To contact the Bloomberg View editorial board: view@bloomberg.net
'via Blog this'

Sunday, May 5, 2013

The Incredible Shrinking Cost of Solar Energy

The Incredible Shrinking Cost of Solar Energy:


The Incredible Shrinking Cost of Solar Energy

By Juan Cole, Informed Comment
04 May 13

ob Wile uses a graph to point out the obvious, the dramatic fall in the cost of solar power generation. In many countries– Italy, Spain, Germany, Portugal — and in parts of the US such as the Southwest, solar is at grid parity. That means it is as inexpensive to build a solar plant as a gas or coal one. The pace of technological innovation in the solar field has also accelerated, so that costs have started falling precipitously and efficiency is rapidly increasing. By 2015, solar panels should have fallen to 42 cents per watt. Reneweconomy.com says that the best Chinese solar panels fell in cost by 50% between 2009 and 2012. That incredible achievement is what has driven so many solar companies bankrupt– if you have the older technology, your panels are suddenly expensive and you can’t compete. It is like no one wants a 4 year old computer. Conservatives shed no tears when better computers drive slower ones out of the market, but point to solar companies’ shake-out as somehow bad or unnatural. No wonder US solar installations jumped 76% in 2012. The reductions in cost over the next two years are expected to continue, at a slowing but still impressive 30% rate:
Construction has begun on the world’s largest solar plant. MidAmerican Solar and SunPower Corp. are building a 579 megawatt installation, the Antelope Valley Solar Project, in Kern and Los Angeles counties in California. That is half a gigawatt, just enormous. It will provide electricity to 400,000 homes in the state (roughly 2 million people?), and reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 775,000 tons a year. The US emits 5 billion metric tons a year of C02, second only to China, and forms a big part of the world’s carbon problem all by itself. We just need 645 more of the Antelope Valley projects.
Important new research also shows that hybrid plants that have both solar panels and wind turbinesdramatically increase efficiency and help with integration into the electrical grid. Earlier concerns that the turbines would cast shadows and so detract from the efficiency of the solar panels appear to have been overblown. Because in most places in the US there is more sun in the summer and more wind in the winter, a combined plant keeps the electricity feeding into the grid at a more constant rate all year round, which is more desirable than big spikes and fall-offs.
That Germany, then China, then the US are the world’s largest solar markets is no surprise. But that number 17 Japan will increase its solar installations by 120% in 2013 and so may be the second hottest solar market, just after China, this year, would mark a big change. Japan may well have 5 gigawatts of solar installed by the end of this year, even though the relatively new prime minister, Shinzo Abe, is no particular friend of the renewables. In my own view, if Japan made the right governmental and private investments, it could overtake China in the solar field and reverse its long post-bubble stagnation.
ABB has been commissioned a large solar electricity generating plant on the edge of the Kalahari Desert near Cape Town, South Africa. It will supply the electricity needs of around 40,000 persons and reduce annual emissions by 50,000 tons of carbon dioxide. South Africa emits 500 million tons of carbon dioxide annually, and is third in the world for per capita emissions. (Still, it only emits a 10th as much over-all as the US). But they just need a thousand more plants like the Kalahari one, and voila! South Africa is alsoimposing a carbon tax, which will hurry things along. (At the moment, South Africa is far too dependent on dirty coal plants, which not only fuel climate change but also spew deadly toxins such as mercury into the atmosphere, whence it goes into human beings.
Because of South African and Israeli demand in particular, demand for solar panels in the Middle East and Africa has risen over 600% during the past year. Saudi Arabia’s announced plans to save its petroleum for export by going solar at home will add a great deal to regional demand if it sticks to those plans. (In most countries, petroleum isn’t used much for electricity generation as opposed to transportation, but in oil states such as Saudi Arabia it often is used in power plants; but that cuts down on foreign exchange earnings.)
The two Indian states of Gujarat and Rajasthan are emerging as the solar giants in India, with each having now passed half a gigawatt in solar electricity generation capacity. The two account for some 88% of all of India’s solar power. But Rajasthan may soon outstrip Gujarat, given the state’s solar-friendly commitments, its ample amounts of scorching sunlight, and its vast deserts

'via Blog this'

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Coal plant emissions killed up to 1,15,000 people in 2011-12

Coal plant emissions killed up to 1,15,000 people in 2011-12:

Coal plant emissions killed up to 1,15,000 people in 2011-12

IANS | Posted on Apr 30, 2013 at 05:35am IST
New Delhi: Emissions from coal plants resulted in 80,000 to 1,15,000 premature deaths and more than 20 million asthma cases in 2011-12 in the country, the Lok Sabha was informed on Monday. According to a report titled 'Coal Kills - An assessment of death and disease caused by India's dirtiest energy source', the coal-based plants quantified additional health impacts, such as hundreds of thousands of heart attacks.
The estimated monetary cost associated with these health impacts exceeded Rs.16,000 to Rs.23,000 crore per year, the report said. The Central Pollution Control Board has said that steps have been taken to curb the pollution emission from such coal-based power plants.
Emphasis is placed on cleaner technology while granting environmental clearance to new coal-based thermal power plants, Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare Abu Hasem Khan Choudhury said in a written reply.
Coal plant emissions killed up to 1,15,000 people
The estimated monetary cost associated with these health impacts exceeded Rs.16,000 to Rs.23,000 crore per year, the report said.

'via Blog this'

Friday, January 4, 2013

Robert Redford: Another Looming Cliff of Grave Consequence

Robert Redford: Another Looming Cliff of Grave Consequence:


Robert Redford

GET UPDATES FROM ROBERT REDFORD

Another Looming Cliff of Grave Consequence

Posted: 01/04/2013 7:52 am

The wake up call that Hurricane Sandy gave us was but one of many just in the last year. We can see that climate change is happening all around the country after the wildfires, droughts, floods and violent storms of 2012. So when President Obama said it was time to deal with global warming in his victory speech, that made perfect sense.
Why then would one of the first decisions after the election be to ignore the climate impacts of one of the dirtiest energy projects out there? That doesn't make any sense.
The Keystone XL tar sands pipeline is winding its way through a State Department environmental review process. The State Department messed up last time around. They didn't include climate and a lot of other concerns that people along the pipeline path have. After the President rejected this pipeline earlier this year and TransCanada reapplied for a presidential permit for the northern section, the State Department got another chance to get it right.
It begs the question then, why does it look like they are going to get it wrong?
The Keystone XL tar sands pipeline is a disaster in the making. It will cause expansion of the expensive and dirty tar sands oil excavation up in Canada's Boreal forest. It threatens our own farms, and waters throughout our heartland. And it is going to make climate change worse as more tarry gunk is dug up, turned into gasoline and diesel and burned in cars and trucks.
All of this is for a pipeline that is meant to export tar sand oil overseas from America's Gulf Coast. Our heartland, aquifers and climate are meant to sustain us. Instead the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline means that we take all the risks - from pipeline leaks and blows to the aftermath of toxic pools of wastewater -- and Big Oil reaps all the benefits. Canadians know better - they haven't let new tar sands pipeline be built yet to either of their own coasts. In fact, the proposed Northern Gateway tar sands pipeline to the west coast is considered dead by many.
It only makes sense to get the environmental review right. And that means taking a hard look at the climate impacts.
This is a time for climate leadership. So, instead of a shoddy Keystone XL environmental review, the first major climate action for this Administration's second term should be to set limits on climate change pollution from power plants. That is the kind of action that makes sense.
And then it will make sense to reject this dirty energy project. With extreme weather taking its toll on communities all over America, we can't afford another major dirty energy project such as the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline.

'via Blog this'

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Coca-Cola Plans to Invest $5 Billion in India - WSJ.com

Coca-Cola Plans to Invest $5 Billion in India - WSJ.com:

Coca-Cola announced plans to invest $5 billion in India by 2020 to boost consumption and increase its presence in one of the fastest emerging markets. The WSJ's Isabella Steger speaks with reporter Alex Frangos about why foreign investors are still betting on India.
NEW DELHI—Coca-Cola Co.'s KO +0.30% chief executive Muhtar Kent said the company and its bottling partners will invest $5 billion in India by 2020 as it looks to raise its presence in one of its fastest-growing emerging markets.
"We think there's potential here," Mr. Kent said Tuesday during a visit to India, adding that the company wants "to stay ahead of the curve" in the country.
Bloomberg News
Coke will spend $5 billion in India. Above, a roadside cart in New Delhi.
India, a country of 1.2 billion people, remains one of the last big frontiers for the Atlanta-based beverage giant. As Mr. Kent pointed out, Indians on average consume only 12 eight-ounce bottles of Coke a year compared with 240 in Brazil and 90 bottles globally.
The investment outlay of $5 billion marks an increase on plans announced late last year to invest $2 billion in India over the next five years. Coca-Cola has put $2 billion into its Indian operations in the past two decades.
The company plans to spend the money increasing capacity at its Indian bottling unit and at its 13 bottling franchisees, expanding distribution and brand building.
Mr. Kent's bullishness comes despite the company's tumultuous history in India. In the late 1970s, Coca-Cola left the country after refusing to partner with an Indian company and hand over its secret ingredients. It returned in 1993 after India liberalized its economy.
It has faced other challenges since then. In 2006, the company took out ads in Indian newspapers to counter unfounded claims by local non-government groups that its products contained illegal levels of pesticides.
For India, Coca-Cola's optimism on the country is a rare bit of good news at a time when foreign businesses have soured on the country for policy flip-flops, including plans to retroactively tax deals involving overseas investors.
Other consumer goods companies also are planning to expand in India. Last week, Swedish furniture company IKEA Group said it would invest nearly $1.9 billion in the country to set up 25 stores in coming years. Later this year, Seattle-based coffee-chain operator Starbucks Corp. SBUX -1.25% is expected to open its first store in India.
The planned investments show how big consumer goods and lifestyle companies can't afford to ignore India's growing middle class, estimated at about 20% of the population, despite the difficulties of doing business here.
Although economic growth slowed to 5.3% in the first three months of 2012, in part due to weak investment, that's better than almost flat rates in most of Europe and the U.S.
Coca-Cola for years trailed rival PepsiCo Inc. PEP -0.22% in the Indian market. PepsiCo began selling its cola in India a few years before Coca-Cola returned in 1993, giving it an edge. Homegrown Indian colas like Parle Agro Pvt. Ltd.'s Thums Up also became popular.
On its return, Coca-Cola bought Parle's four leading soft drinks brands—Thums Up, Limca, Gold Spot and Maaza—giving the company an instant 60% share of the Indian soft drinks market. At the time, PepsiCo had less than 30%.
The Parle acquisition also handed Coca-Cola a nationwide bottling and marketing system on which to piggyback its own brands.
Now, Coca-Cola and PepsiCo together dominate the market for carbonated soft drinks in India, where soda sales overall are estimated to total 60 billion rupees ($1.05 billion). Coke accounted for 60% of retail value sales of carbonated soft drinks in India in 2011 versus PepsiCo's 37%, according to data from Euromonitor International.
Coca-Cola's dominance comes from Thums Up and Sprite, another of its brands, which both had a 16.5% market share in 2011, making them the nation's most-popular carbonated drinks.
But in the battle of colas, Pepsi had a 15% market share compared to Coke's 8.8%, according to Euromonitor.
PepsiCo, too, has been investing in its Indian operation. PepsiCo's chief executive, Indra Nooyi, was born in India.
India has been one of Coca-Cola's fastest-growing emerging markets. Sales in the January-March period jumped 20% compared with a 9% increase in China and 4% in Brazil.
The investments by Coca-Cola in India are part of a plan to spend $30 billion to build capacity and on marketing in emerging economies to fulfill its aim of doubling revenue and volume by 2020.
Write to Nikhil Gulati at nikhil.gulati@dowjones.com and Rumman Ahmed atrumman.ahmed@dowjones.com
A version of this article appeared June 27, 2012, on page B1 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: India Has 1.2 Billion People But Not Enough Drink Coke.

'via Blog this'