|
|
|
|
|
by pjc50
723 days ago
|
|
> the decision the Chinese government made to heavily subsidize solar manufacturing This is often claimed, but does anyone have budget numbers or even a decent order of magnitude estimate for how much subsidy was applied here? Or was it actually the free market supplying compounding cost reductions through technological improvements? |
|
Cheap producer credit, covering up to 50% of new-facility costs and feed-in tariffs [1]. At least the latter began getting phased out after costing Beijing over $15bn in 2017 [2].
Haven’t run the precise numbers, but that one-year figure seems to line up with the IRA’s total solar package [3].
[1] https://chinafocus.ucsd.edu/2021/02/16/solar-energy-in-china...
[2] https://chineseclimatepolicy.oxfordenergy.org/book-content/d...
[3] https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy1830