美国国家安全调查目标是风电行业
US National Security Probe Targets Wind Industry

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/us-national-security-probe-targets-wind-industry

## 风能面临新的关税威胁 美国商务部已启动对进口风力涡轮机和零部件的232条款调查,可能导致在现有钢铝关税之上增加额外的关税。这令人担忧,因为美国风能产业严重依赖进口——约41%来自墨西哥、加拿大和中国——用于关键部件,如叶片和驱动系统。 分析师预测,这些关税可能使涡轮机成本增加7-10%,整体项目成本增加5-7%,最终导致电价上涨。制造商可能会提高价格并调整供应链,而签订了固定价格合同的开发商将面临重大的财务风险。 虽然电网问题和许可仍然是挑战,但关税正成为一个主要的成本因素。此次调查预示着政策转变,优先考虑国内生产,即使以牺牲短期成本为代价,可能会延迟项目完成并增加购电协议的压力。美国的塔架和某些零部件制造商可能会从这种转变中受益。

相关文章

原文

By Julianne Geiger of OilPrice.com

The Commerce Department just opened a Section 232 “national security” probe into imported wind turbines and parts—quietly on Aug. 13, publicly today. That matters because 232 isn’t a press release; it’s a legal on-ramp to more tariffs on top of the new 50% duty already applied to the steel and aluminum content in turbines and components.

Here’s the operational read: the U.S. wind build is heavily import-dependent for blades, drivetrains, and electrical systems. In 2023, the U.S. brought in about $1.7B of wind equipment, with roughly 41% from Mexico, Canada, and China. If you tax the metal inside the machine—and potentially layer more 232 duties later—you squeeze project profit margins, renegotiate Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs—long-term contracts to sell the power), or delay FIDs. None of those outcomes lowers your Levelized Cost of Energy (LCOE—think of it as the average lifetime price per unit of electricity once you add up all the costs).

Wood Mackenzie pegs the tariff bite at +7% for turbine costs (+5% total project costs) under the earlier tariff proposals; in a universal 25% tariff scenario, turbine costs could rise ~10% and LCOE up ~7%. And that was before Commerce slapped a 50% surcharge on the steel/aluminum content—so the floor just moved higher. Expect original equipment manufacturers to reroute supply chains, localize sub-assemblies, and raise prices anyway. Vestas has already said the quiet part out loud: these costs flow straight through to electricity prices.

Don’t confuse this with an offshore-only story. Onshore wind is where the bulk of U.S. volume lives, and it’s far more sensitive to every $/kW swing, gearbox delivery delay, and tower steel price jump. Section 232 is also being deployed against other “critical” imports (planes, chips, pharma), so wind isn’t a one-off carve-out—it’s part of a broader, durable trade posture that project finance now has to underwrite.

Winners and losers? Near-term winners include U.S. tower fabricators and any blade/drivetrain maker who can credibly and quickly localize. Losers are developers stuck with fixed-price PPAs and engineering firms with thin contingencies. Grid bottlenecks and permitting are still the bigger choke points, but tariffs aren’t a rounding error anymore—they’re line-item pain.

The probe suggests that “buy more domestic, pay more near-term” is policy, not rhetoric. Expect delayed Commercial Operation Dates (CODs—the day projects actually flip the switch and start earning revenue), tougher PPA negotiations, and a faster push to U.S. content. Wind still looks okay economically on paper, just with a higher metal cost and a thinner margin for error.

Loading recommendations...

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com