China's Solar Panel Exports Jump 60% on Year in April
By Reuters | 18 May, 2026
China's solar shipments abroad stayed robust even after the government removed an export tax refund, possibly due to demand created by the Iran conflict.
China's solar shipments abroad jumped 60% year-on-year in April, customs data showed on Monday, remaining robust even after the government removed an export tax refund.
Following are the details.
• In April, China shipped 60% more solar cells abroad than in the same month last year - and the shipments, valued at $3.12 billion - likely understate actual growth in energy terms since photovoltaic technology advances over time.
• Shipments were down from the previous month. April exports totaled 1.34 billion cells, compared with 1.71 billion in March.
• In volume terms, exports were 1.16 million metric tons in April, down from March's record high of 1.78 million tons, driven by rising demand in Southeast Asia and Africa.
• Investors have been betting that the Iran war would boost demand for renewables, but analysts said the surge in March was also a result of front-loading. Buyers rushed to import solar equipment before China cancelled an export tax refund program on April 1.
• China's customs administration will release country-specific data on Wednesday.
(Reporting by Colleen Howe; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
Recent Articles
- Intel Turns to Next-Gen ASML Tool to Help Make Its Laptop Chips
- Cambodian Gaming Tycoon Was Landlord to Chinese Scam Compound
- China New Home Price Slide Slows, but Recovery Doubtful
- Iran Threatens to Block More Vital Seaways as Trump Orders Renewed Iran Blockade
- ASML Beats Q2 Revenue Estimates on AI Chip Demand
- Nvidia Has Begun Shipping H200 AI Chips to China
- IBM Warns AI Boom Is Squeezing Software Budgets; Sending Shares Down
- Two Utah National Monuments Fall to Trump Anti-Green Drive
- 72% of Americans Disagree with Trump on Refugees
- June CPI Not As Hot As Feared, Soothing Markets
