• memfree
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    192 months ago

    Chinese-backed companies have distinct advantages over competitors in the U.S., such as heavily subsidized supply chains for raw polysilicon and unfinished solar modules, as well as low-cost government financing.

    U.S.-based Convalt, for example, is struggling to bring online 10 GW of U.S. capacity at a factory it started building in upstate New York in 2022.

    “If we are to succeed, we need American manufacturers like Convalt to survive this onslaught of low prices, to build factories with capacities that allow us to compete against the largest global firms, with Chinese beneficial ownership,” CEO Hari Achuthan said

    This is one of the many reasons it is a bad idea to privatize utilities/infrastructure. That said, U.S. subsidies helped destroy economies across the globe (like Jamaica’s dairy farmers via world bank loan rules), so it is basically ‘fair play’ for China to play a similar game.

    • @gibmiser
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      152 months ago

      So let’s take all those oil and gas subsidies and transfer them to domestic green tech.

    • @[email protected]
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      52 months ago

      “Heavily subsidized supply chains”

      Let’s just call it what it is: economies of scale. China makes up 80% of the polysilicon market. The US? Barely 5%. Scale is the strongest subsidy of them all.

  • @ralphio
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    102 months ago

    I genuinely do not care who owns the factory as long as it creates jobs.

    • memfree
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      22 months ago

      I’m paranoid that if/when governments get in an argument, foreign infrastructure will either shut off or escalate pricing such that the public suffers (and yells at their local leaders to ‘do something!’).

      • @[email protected]
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        22 months ago

        These are factories in the US. The worst case is, the US seizes and nationalizes them. Wouldn’t be the first time.

        • memfree
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          22 months ago

          True, but I’d still rather infrastructure to be publicly held utilities. Energy suppliers are a strange case because any company can become part of the grid, but the power lines to our homes are generally controlled by one entity. I want at least that entity to be responsive to the public, but I also don’t want random suppliers taking down the grid.