The landscape of international trade has shifted significantly with the United States’ recent decision to impose a 123% preliminary anti-dumping duty on solar cells and modules imported from India. This move represents a massive blow to the Indian solar industry, effectively pricing Indian products out of the American market.
Coming just two months after a 126% countervailing duty was applied, the cumulative tariff on Indian solar exports now exceeds 200%, reaching nearly 250% in total.
Defining Dumping and Countervailing Duties
The US justification for these tariffs rests on two legal pillars: anti-dumping and countervailing duties.
- Dumping occurs when a country exports a product at a price lower than its domestic market value or its actual production cost. The US claims Indian firms are selling solar products below “fair value” to capture market share and eliminate competition.
- Countervailing Duties (CVD), such as the 126% duty imposed in February, are intended to offset government subsidies. The US argues that the Indian government provides artificial support through incentives, cheap financing, and favorable policies, allowing Indian firms to export at artificially low prices.
The Strategic “America First” Motive
Beyond technical trade rules, the sources suggest these moves are part of a broader strategic industrial policy under the current US administration. The primary goal is to bolster US domestic manufacturing and reduce dependency on imports. By invoking a “threat to domestic industry,” the US is attempting to shield its own companies, like First Solar, from international competition.
This protectionism also ties into energy security and climate politics. Solar technology is a strategic sector for the clean energy transition, and the US wants to ensure it controls its own supply chain rather than relying on external partners like India or Vietnam.
Impact on Indian Manufacturers and Global Trade
Major Indian solar players, including Waaree Energies, Vikram Solar, and Adani Solar, are expected to face significant revenue declines and stock volatility due to these developments. Indian firms will now be forced to diversify their markets, looking toward Europe, the Middle East, or ramping up domestic consumption through India’s own solar push.
On a global scale, these tariffs could lead to a supply chain realignment where production shifts to tariff-free nations. Furthermore, the World Trade Organisation (WTO) is currently ill-equipped to handle such disputes because the US has effectively stalled the appointment of judges to its appellate body, leaving India with limited legal recourse.
The Logical Indian Perspective
From an Indian standpoint, these massive duties appear less about “fair trade” and more about blatant protectionism. While the US labels Indian incentives as “unfair subsidies,” it conveniently ignores its own massive subsidies provided to domestic green energy firms under its own industrial policies.
There is a glaring hypocrisy in American climate rhetoric. While the US urges the world to transition to clean energy, it is simultaneously making solar panels 3.5 times more expensive for its own citizens. This will inevitably slow down the global adoption of renewable energy.













