Overnight Energy & Environment

Energy & Environment — Feds say solar panel makers skirted tariffs 

Solar panels at the DTE O'Shea Solar Park work in Detroit, Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2022. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

The Commerce Department says four solar panel makers circumvented U.S. tariffs. Meanwhile, the EPA sets the stage for a final veto of the Pebble Mine, and House Natural Resources Committee leaders want documents on a controversial Trump-era pardon. 

This is Overnight Energy & Environment, your source for the latest news focused on energy, the environment and beyond. For The Hill, I’m Zack Budryk.

Probe finds solar manufacturers dodged US tariffs 

The Commerce Department has reached a preliminary determination that Chinese solar panel manufacturers illegally circumvented U.S. tariffs by shipping them through southeast Asian nations. 

Who’s involved? A Commerce official confirmed on a call with reporters Friday morning that the investigation found four companies were engaged in circumvention: BYD Hong Kong, Canadian Solar, Vina Solar and Trina. The official also identified solar companies that were determined not to have circumvented tariffs, including New East Solar, Hanwha, Boviet and Jinko. 

Pushback: Pro-solar energy members of Congress have questioned the investigation as well.

“We are only able to supply about 15 percent domestically of the demand for solar panels. So we don’t have the capacity here right now to fulfill all the orders there are and even finish the projects that are already bid out,” Sen. Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.) told The Hill in May. 

In June, President Biden announced the four nations in question would be exempted from solar tariffs for two years to offset any impact from the investigation “in order to ensure the U.S. has access to a sufficient supply of solar modules to meet electricity generation needs while domestic manufacturing scales up.” 

Read more about the announcement here.

EPA closes in on veto of controversial mine project

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recommended blocking a proposed gold and copper mining project in Alaska’s Bristol Bay Thursday. 

What’s next? The recommendation from Sixkiller, the administrator for the EPA’s Pacific Northwest region, is the penultimate step in the long, involved veto process. The recommendation will now go to the desk of Radhika Fox, the EPA’s assistant administrator for water, who has 60 days to either issue the veto, amend it or decline. 

Local environmentalists and conservationists had long opposed the project, while the state of Alaska, which owns the land, has backed it. However, some conservatives such as Tucker Carlson and Donald Trump Jr. have also come out against the project. Carlson aired a segment opposing the project on his show, the top-rated cable news program, in 2020. 

Read more about the veto recommendation here.

Dems seek Interior documents on bribery allegation 

Two Democrats on the House Natural Resources Committee are seeking documents from Interior Secretary Deb Haaland that they say could shine line on whether President Trump offered a pardon to two people convicted of setting fires on public land because of a campaign donation. 

In a letter to Haaland on Friday, Natural Resources Chairman Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.) and Rep. Katie Porter (D-Calif.) outline what they say are indications that real estate developer Mike Ingram donated to a Trump-aligned super PAC in exchange for the pardons of two other men. 

In 2018, the letter states, an assistant to Ingram emailed the Interior Department’s Senior Deputy Director for External and Intergovernmental Affairs to make the case for a pardon of the Hammonds. The subject line of the email was “Articles Mike told you about,” suggesting Ingram had been discussing the case with administration officials. Democrats on the committee have previously claimed Ingram’s status as a donor allowed him access to high-level administration officials to lobby on issues. 

A few weeks later, then-Rep. Greg Walden (R-Ore.), a vocal backer of pardoning the Hammonds, tweeted that Trump was considering it. The following day, Ingram donated $10,000 to the pro-Trump America First Action, Inc. Super PAC, according to the letter. Trump pardoned the Hammonds eight days later. 

Grijalva and Porter requested all communications pertaining to the Hammonds in 2017 and 2018 between Interior Department personnel and Ingram, representatives from Ingram’s company and representatives of the super-PAC, as well as any documents relating to the pardons. 

Read more about the letter here. 

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That’s it for today, thanks for reading. Check out The Hill’s Energy & Environment page for the latest news and coverage. We’ll see you next week.