GreenergyDaily
Sep. 26, 2025
The US is investigating whether Waaree Energies Ltd., India’s largest solar panel maker, evaded anti-dumping and countervailing duties on solar cells from China and other Southeast Asian nations.
US Customs and Border Protection has started a formal investigation of Waaree and Waaree Solar Americas Inc. and imposed interim measures because there is reasonable suspicion the company evaded duties when bringing merchandise into the US, according to a public notice by the agency obtained by Bloomberg News.
Waaree sells products such as solar modules and inverters. The company’s shares have more than doubled since its debut in Mumbai last October on an optimistic outlook for the Indian renewable sector, whose development has become a focus for the government but which has suffered a setback after the US imposed punitive tariffs on the South Asian nation.
“Waaree has in the past cooperated with the US investigations and will continue to cooperate in ongoing investigations,” the company said in a statement, adding that it abides by all applicable local laws and regulations in every country that it operates. The company also said it is working to expand its manufacturing footprint in the US.
The probe is being launched in response to an allegation by the American Alliance for Solar Manufacturing Trade Committee that Waaree was mislabeling solar cells that originated in China as coming from India to avoid tariffs on Chinese solar products.
US solar manufacturers have been calling for higher tariffs on imported photovoltaic equipment that the fledgling industry says is being unfairly subsidized and dumped into one of the world’s biggest markets. In August, the US Commerce Department launched a new trade probe on modules from Indonesia, Laos and India after US makers filed a complaint. Steep duties were imposed earlier this year on solar equipment from Vietnam, Cambodia, Malaysia and Thailand.