Company: WELPM
Filing Date: 2025-08-01
Form Type: 10-Q
Source: 0000107815-25-000204
Chunk: 25

Company: WISCONSIN ELECTRIC POWER CO
Filing Date: 2025-08-01
Form: 10-Q
Item: Part I, Item 2
Chunk 25
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 manufactured in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China, such as polysilicon included in the manufacturing of solar panels, are prohibited from entering the United States. While our suppliers have been able to provide the CBP sufficient documentation to meet the UFLPA compliance requirements, and we expect the same will be true for subsequent projects, we cannot currently predict what, if any, long-term impact the UFLPA will have on the overall supply of solar panels into the United States and whether we will experience any further impacts to the timing and cost of our solar projects included in WEC Energy Group's long-term capital plan.

In January 2025, the Department of Homeland Security announced the addition of several more Chinese businesses to the UFLPA, including five solar supply chain providers. We are working to avoid doing business with these companies and remain in compliance with the UFLPA.

United States Department of Commerce Complaints

In August 2023, the DOC issued a final decision regarding an AD/CVD petition filed by a California-based company finding that Chinese manufacturers were shifting products to four Southeast Asian countries to avoid tariffs required on products imported from China. The DOC applied duties to certain imports of solar cells from Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia, starting on June 6, 2024. In addition, in response to its findings, the DOC promulgated new regulations that imposed enhanced duties in certain circumstances, including when the USITC determines there is a reasonable indication the domestic solar industry is materially or potentially injured because of imported products that violate certain fair trade laws.

In April 2024, a coalition of several U.S. producers of solar panels filed a new petition with the DOC requesting tariffs on imports from the same four Southeast Asian countries. The group alleged that some Chinese companies had moved their solar operations to avoid penalties. In response to the petition, the DOC and USITC initiated new AD/CVD investigations of solar panels from the four Southeast Asian countries to determine whether there was a reasonable indication imports of such solar panels were causing injury to the U.S. solar industry. Based on the USITC’s preliminary affirmative determination, the DOC began AD/CVD investigations and, in the fall of 2024, announced preliminary affirmative determinations and set preliminary duties on imports from the four Southeast Asian countries. In April 2025, the DOC announced its final affirmative determinations in its AD/CVD investigations, increasing the preliminary tariff rates, in some cases significantly. These increased rates became effective and enforceable in May 2025