E - PAPER

CURRENT MONTH

LAST MONTH

VIEW ALL
  • HOME
  • NEWS ROOM
  • COVER STORY
  • INTERVIEWS
  • DRAWING BOARD
  • PROJECT WATCH
  • SPOTLIGHT
  • BUILDING BLOCKS
  • BRAND SYNC
  • VIDEOS
  • HAPPENINGS
  • E-MAGAZINE
  • EVENTS
search
  1. Home
  2. ALLIED

Safeguard Duty no Help for Local Solar Cell Manufacturers

The 25% safeguard duty imposed on imported solar components, meant to support domestic manufacturers, has not done cell producers any good, although module makers have fared better. “We’ve got zero orders since the duty became applicable,” said the chief executive of a solar cell company, request

BY admin
Published - Thursday, 03 Jan, 2019
Safeguard Duty no Help for Local Solar Cell Manufacturers
The 25% safeguard duty imposed on imported solar components, meant to support domestic manufacturers, has not done cell producers any good, although module makers have fared better. “We’ve got zero orders since the duty became applicable,” said the chief executive of a solar cell company, requesting anonymity. “Our factory is still shut. We are surviving with great difficulty.” Solar cell manufacturers said even with the duty, their products remained more expensive. They had suggested a safeguard duty of 70%, but following an uproar by developers, the duty was reduced to 25%. “If you require a certain price to break even, raising the competition’s cost to half of that doesn’t help,” said Dhruv Sharma, chief executive of cell manufacturing company Jupiter Solar. “We are operating at 40% capacity. If things don’t improve soon, we will definitely be heading to the National Company Law Tribunal (declaring bankruptcy).” With safeguard duty, the cost of an imported solar cell is about 12 cents. Indian manufacturers are being forced to sell at that price, too, though their input cost is 13.5 cents per cell. About 90% of panels and modules used in Indian solar projects are imported because they are cheaper. The safeguard duty was levied by the Directorate General of Trade Remedies, acting on a complaint by local manufacturers that imported equipment was causing their business “serious injury” and they were unable to compete with Chinese and Malaysian rivals on price.

RELATED STORY VIEW MORE

Delhi Govt To Make Public Buildings Divyang-Friendly
Indigrid To Acquire Rs 2,100 Cr Worth Transmission & Solar Assets
JK Cement Acquires 60% Stake In Saifco Cements For Rs 150 Cr

TOP STORY VIEW MORE

Retail as a Real Estate Anchor: Redefining Tier 2 Cities

Umang Jindal, Founder at Homeland Group talks about driving urban growth through commercial projects.

29 May, 2025

US Based Panattoni To Invest €100 Million In India’s Key Industrial Hubs

29 May, 2025

Africa’s Dubai — Lagos Mega-City With Luxury Homes

29 May, 2025

NEWS LETTER

Subscribe for our news letter


E - PAPER


  • CURRENT MONTH

  • LAST MONTH

Subscribe To Realty+ online




Get connected with us on social networks!
ABOUT REALTY+

Started in 2004, Realty+, an exchange4media group publication is one of the most respected real estate magazines in India with offices in Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru.

Useful links

HOME

NEWS ROOM

COVER STORY

INTERVIEWS

DRAWING BOARD

PROJECT WATCH

SPOTLIGHT

BUILDING BLOCKS

BRAND SYNC

VIDEOS

HAPPENINGS

E-MAGAZINE

EVENTS

OTHER LINKS

TERMS AND CONDITIONS

PRIVACY-POLICY

COOKIE-POLICY

GDPR-COMPLIANCE

SITE MAP

REFUND POLICY

Contact

Mediasset Holdings 3'rd Floor, D-40, Sector-2, Noida (Uttar Pradesh), Pincode - 201301

tripti@exchange4media.com
realtyplus@exchange4media.com

+91 98200 10226


Copyright © 2024 Mediasset Holdings.
Rental Mobil bandung,Sewa Mobil Bandung, Rental bandung, Sewa Mobil, Jual Mesin Antrian, Harga Mesin Antrian, Mesin Antrian Murah, Jual KIOSK,Mesin Antri, Berita Terkini, Info Bray,Info Tempat Wisata,Portal Berita,Jasa Website