Solar Energy
Boom Could Worsen Forced Labor in China, Group Says
Bloomberg News
March 28, 2022
The
rising demand for solar energy threatens to increase the risk of
forced labor in the supply chain, which often includes raw materials
produced in China’s Xinjiang region.
An analysis conducted
by the Rights Lab at the University of Nottingham and supported by the
British Academy warns of a handful of consequences if the solar
industry doesn’t quickly find a way to make sure there’s no forced
labor in its supply chains. Without intervention, the increase in
demand for solar energy is likely to worsen conditions for workers, it
says.
Alternatively, a haphazard response to forced labor could slow the
roll-out of solar energy, making prices higher and limiting progress
toward net zero goals. Or supply chains could split, with some goods
able to certify fair labor practices and others not, an outcome that
might not address the overall problem, the researchers say.
The
findings once again put China’s role as a major supplier of renewable
energy technologies in the spotlight. A little less than half of the
world’s polysilicon, the ultra-conductive material that makes up solar
panels, is produced in Xinjiang -- a region that’s home to Uyghur
people and other ethnic minorities.
Advocacy groups and a panel of United Nations experts expressed
concerns that those groups have been subject
to mass detention. As many as 3 million laborers in
Xinjiang are transferred each year as part of government-sponsored
labor programs, according to a Bloomberg News analysis of official
data.
Beijing calls those allegations the “lie of the century.” It denies
the reports, saying they’re part of a Western effort to undermine
development in the region and that such work programs are aimed at
providing job opportunities.
Read more: Secrecy and Abuse Claims Haunt China’s Solar Factories in
Xinjiang
“The
fact that we can’t definitively put these concerns to bed, is itself a
warning sign to all involved,” said James Cockayne, professor of
global politics and anti-slavery at Rights Lab and one of the report’s
authors. “It’s an indication that we can’t conduct effective, reliable
human-rights due diligence to the standard required by international
norms, which is feasible in pretty much every other value chain around
the world.”
But
it’s hard for investors, lenders or customers to know exactly what’s
happening in the supply chain, in part because the Chinese government
has cracked down on independent investigations. Most of the current
evidence relies on a variety of sources, including testimonies from
Uyghur and other ethnic minorities, reports in Chinese-language media,
documentation by foreign journalists, and occasional database or
document leaks.
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To
address the lack of transparency, the Rights Lab researchers
introduced a new method for quantifying the risk of forced labor in a
given supply chain, using industry and trade data and a well-regarded
database of social impact assessments. In this case, they calculated
the accumulated risk of forced labor for solar energy production in
the electricity grid in 30 different countries.
They
plan to apply the same methodology to other forms of power, so that
governments and utilities can compare forced labor risk of different
energy types the same way they compare costs or emissions. It could
also be used to show the value for companies that can verify their
products are made with supply chains free of forced labor.
That
verification has gotten more important in recent months. The U.S.
cited forced labor concerns when it barred the
import of some Xinjiang solar products last June, and in December
passed the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act. Effective June, the new
law bans goods from Xinjiang unless companies can prove they aren’t
made with forced labor. That move stirred “enormous anger” across
Chinese society and the solar industry, a Chinese industry
association said at
the time.
— With assistance by Colum Murphy
Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
Spokane, Washington. 99212
www.exactrix.com
509 995 1879 cell, Pacific.
exactrix@exactrix.com
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