US Policy Pushes Chinese Solar Giants to Abandon Billions in American Investments
In an alarming reversal, Chinese solar manufacturers including Jinko Solar are pulling the plug on billions of dollars in U.S. investments, citing policy shifts that have made the American market unprofitable.
The exodus marks a significant setback for U.S. renewable energy goals. Industry insiders warn it could drive up solar panel prices and delay project schedules.
"This is a wake-up call," said Dr. Emily Tran, senior energy analyst at GlobalPolicy Insights. "The combination of tariff uncertainties and domestic-content incentives has created a hostile environment for foreign manufacturers."
Background
For years, Chinese firms like Jinko Solar invested heavily in U.S. factories to circumvent anti-dumping duties. They were key suppliers for America's booming solar market.

But a series of policy changes—including the Inflation Reduction Act's strict domestic-content bonus, extended Section 201 tariffs, and fresh anti-circumvention probes—have undercut their business models. Jinko alone had committed over $500 million to a new module plant in Florida; that project is now on ice.
"The math no longer works," added Mark Ruiz, a supply-chain specialist at the Solar Energy Industries Association. "Labor costs, material costs, and policy risk have all risen sharply."
What This Means
The cancellations threaten to slow America's clean-energy transition. Solar accounted for over 50% of new U.S. generating capacity in 2024, much of it supplied by panels from these companies.
Short-term, developers may face panel shortages and higher prices. Long-term, the pullout could accelerate reshoring, but experts caution that domestic capacity remains years behind.
"We're seeing a classic case of policy whiplash," said Dr. Tran. "If the goal was to build a self-reliant solar industry, this abrupt shift risks breaking the supply chain instead."
Jinko Solar declined to comment on the record. Other firms, including Trina Solar and LONGi Green Energy, are reportedly reassessing their U.S. footprints as well.
Analysts expect the total canceled investments to exceed $2 billion by year-end. That figure could grow if trade tensions escalate further.
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