India Loses
Appeal in Solar Case with US at WTO
· Held that Measures for
Preference to Domestic Industry Violates WTO Rules
· Move to Compliance Panel
Next Step as India Drags Case
India
lost its appeal at the World Trade Organization in a dispute over solar power
on Friday, failing to overturn a US complaint that New Delhi had discriminated
against importers in the Indian solar power sector.
The WTO’s appeals judges upheld an earlier ruling that
found India had broken WTO rules by requiring solar power developers to use
Indian-made cells and modules. The appeal ruling is final and India will be
expected to bring its laws into compliance with the WTO rules.
“This report is a clear victory for American solar
manufacturers and workers, and another step forward in the fight against
climate change,” US trade representative Michael Froman
said in a statement.
Indian officials made no immediate comment on the
appeal outcome.
US solar exports to India have fallen by more than 90
percent since India brought in the rules, the statement said.
The judges said India could not claim exemptions on the
basis that its national solar power sector was included in government
procurement, nor on the basis that solar goods were in short supply.
There was also no justification on the grounds of
ensuring ecologically sustainable growth or combating climate change.
The dispute, which the United States first launched in
February 2013, involved an increasingly common target of trade disputes - solar
power, with an increasingly common complaint - local content requirements.
The
appeal ruling came just days after India launched a WTO complaint against
subsidies for the solar industry in eight US states.
Under
WTO rules, countries are not allowed to discriminate against imports and favour local producers, but in the past five years
countries keen to support their own manufacturers have frequently resorted to
local content requirements, while keeping a sharp eye out for their use by
others.
“We
strongly support the rapid deployment of solar energy worldwide, including in
India,” Froman said.
“But
local content requirements are not only contrary to WTO rules, but actually
undermine our efforts to promote clean energy by requiring the use of more
expensive and less efficient equipment, making it more difficult for clean
energy sources to be cost-competitive.”