Trade Unions Representing 1.5 Million American Workers Oppose Retroactive Solar Tariffs
By Solar Energy Industry Association
Members of the International Union of Operational Engineers (IUOE) assess solar equipment at the union’s training facility in Crosby, Texas. Photo courtesy of IUOE. |
Americans across the clean energy industry sprang to action as Congress threatened $1 billion in retroactive solar tariffs. A handful of lawmakers are using the Congressional Review Act (H.J. Res. 39) to repeal President Biden’s two-year moratorium on the enforcement of tariffs resulting from the Auxin anti-circumvention case.
This
reprieve is a necessary bridge for the solar and storage industry as the
Inflation Reduction Act goes to work for the economy and spurs domestic
manufacturing across the country.
This
week, clean energy trade associations, environmental groups such as the League of
Conservation Voters and Sierra Club, and 417 solar companies all voiced their strong
opposition to this harmful bill in letters to the Hill.
Now,
the largest trade unions active in the U.S. solar and storage industry are
joining the industry opposition.
The Laborers' International Union of North America (LIUNA) president Terry O’Sullivan sent a letter to Congress pointing to the positive effects of the Inflation Reduction Act and the disruptive nature of this legislation. LIUNA has more than 500,000 members who are trained to work in construction and energy industries where they build infrastructure projects, like utility-scale solar projects. LIUNA has been active in the renewable energy industry for more than a decade.
“By
way of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), the Biden Administration has brought
good-paying union construction jobs into the renewable industry,” wrote
O’Sullivan. “These jobs are finally good jobs, with family-supporting wages and
benefits. Repealing President Biden's moratorium, however, will bring several
solar construction sites to a halt, leaving our members without
a paycheck.”
“Our
union has never seen this much solar construction work, and future construction
work already on the books, within the renewable energy industry, and it is now
all at risk if the CRA is passed,” O’Sullivan said.
The International Union of
Operating Engineers and United Brotherhood of
Carpenters and Joiners of America released a joint statement about the harm these actions
would cause.
IUOE
has more than 400,000 members and represents heavy equipment operators,
mechanics, and surveyors in the construction industry, as well as stationary engineers
who work in operations and maintenance in building and
industrial complexes.
“Repealing
President Biden’s Proclamation will result in retroactive duties and tariffs
that would jeopardize 30,000 construction and 4,000 manufacturing jobs,” said James T. Callahan, General President of the International
Union of Operating Engineers. “We are not prepared to stand by and let
some partisan dispute eliminate Operating Engineers’ jobs and slow the
deployment of clean energy.”
The
Carpenters are one of the largest building trade unions with over half a
million workers. They have an active solar workforce across the Midwest that
install solar projects across all market segments.
“President
Biden’s Proclamation saves Carpenters’ jobs and smooths the development of the
domestic solar manufacturing industry. Today, we’re seeing the American
manufacturing sector respond to incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act and
develop homegrown solar modules,” said Carpenters Union General
President Douglas J. McCarron. “Now is not the time to disrupt the
solar industry and layoff thousands of union workers just as we’re getting a
foothold in the burgeoning solar business.”
These
union workers are a critical part of the solar and storage workforce, and as
the union leaders write, those jobs are now at risk. In total, more than 30,000
solar jobs could be at risk, including 4,000 manufacturing jobs at a time when
the industry is working hard to expand its domestic
manufacturing presence.
As
H.J. Res. 39 moves to the House floor for a vote next week, every member of Congress needs
to understand the damage that this bill would cause across the
solar and storage industry.
Members
of Congress that want to support a clean energy future and domestic
manufacturing must vote no on this harmful bill.