Why Won’t Environmentalists Speak Out Against Forced Labor For China-Made Solar Panels?
America’s leading climate and environmental groups including Natural
Resources Defense Council (NRDC), Energy Foundation, and Environmental
Defense Fund have not responded to repeated queries about evidence that China is forcing Uyghur Muslims to choose between forced labor at factories which make solar panels which all three groups promote, or being sent to concentration camps.
NRDC, Environmental Defense Fund, and Energy Foundation
are the three most influential environmental organizations within the
Biden Administration and among Democrats in Congress. In December
President Joe Biden named NRDC President & CEO Gina McCarthy as his National Climate Advisor. The organizations routinely denounce abuses of human rights and issue regular calls for environmental justice.
Why, then, aren’t they calling for a ban on solar panels made in China?
Yesterday, the Solar Energy Industries Association issued a set of guidelines,
or a “protocol,” for solar panel companies to use to avoid the use of
genocide labor. “Solar customers expect their products to be ethically
produced, and this protocol helps ensure that solar products coming into
the United States are not made using forced labor,” it says.
But conditions in Xinjiang are determined by the Chinese government
which is repressing the Muslim population. “It has become almost
impossible to talk of voluntary labor among a group of people who are in
immediate danger of being incarcerated for no reason whatsoever,” said a Xinjiang expert.
Notes
the Wall Street Journal, “Chinese manufacturers aren’t always
transparent about where they are getting their raw materials, and wafer
makers sometimes mix polysilicon from Xinjiang and other regions
together."
China supplies
more than 80% of the world’s polysilicon, the base ingredient for
panels. Xinjiang produces half of global production, according to
Bloomberg New Energy Finance. The U.S., by contrast, produces less than
5% of the world’s solar-grade polysilicon.
And the Association did not respond to my query as to whether or not
it would support a ban on solar panels from China until the protocol can
be implemented. Republicans have introduced legislation to ban solar panels made in China but have not been joined by Democrats.
Meanwhile, the Chinese government shows no sign of supporting a
relocation of its solar panel industry from Xinjiang, and continues to
deny claims of genocide
NRDC, EDF, and Energy Foundation receive over $100 million each from mostly anonymous donors. One of EDF’s largest donors is oil, gas and renewables investor Julian Robertson, who has donated $60 million to EDF and sits on EDF’s governing board.
And NRDC had at least $70 million of its own funds directly invested in
natural gas and solar panel companies through BlackRock, a shadow bank
whose former senior official, Brian Deese, is head of President Biden’s National Economic Council.
All three have large offices in China. People close to the
organizations told me on background that their offices would be
jeopardized if any of these groups criticized China for genocide.
In 2018, a “senior strategic director with NRDC published a book, Will China Save the Planet? a book which praised the country for “leading the development of a global system of green finance.”
After NRDC was criticized by members of Congress for being too cozy with China, an NRDC spokesperson said, “We’re proud of our work, in China and elsewhere, helping to create a more sustainable future for everyone.”
NRDC in the 1990s successfully promoted the deregulation of the
electricity sector, which resulted in blackouts in California in 2000
and 2001, and promoted the financialization of energy markets through
“cap and trade” climate legislation from 2000 to 2010, when it failed in
the Senate.
Last year, BlackRock raised $5 billion for its Global Energy &
Power Infrastructure Fund which invested in businesses connected with “renewable energy (solar, wind, hydro and waste-to-energy).”
Jeffrey Sachs Says It’s Not Genocide
Some environmentalists like Columbia University’s Director of the
Center for Sustainable Development Director, Jeffrey Sachs, recently called
the genocide claim “flimsy.” “There are credible charges of human
rights abuses against Uighurs,” he adds, “but those do not per se
constitute genocide.”
However, the parliaments of the United Kingdom, Canada, the
Netherlands and many other nations have described China’s policy as one
of genocide.
After I emailed Sachs, who was head of Columbia’s Earth Institute
from 2002 to 2016, to ask if he accepted funding from the Chinese
government, he replied, “I have no funding from the Chinese
government.”
When I asked if he had received funding in the past, or if his Earth
Institute at Columbia University had received money, from the Chinese
government, Sachs said, “None at the Center, and none of my projects
when I was director of the Earth Institute. Of the approximately 850
staff of more than 25 centers at the Earth Institute, I do not know.”
In 2018, Sachs wrote the foreword to a policy position paper, used for lobbying regulators and policymakers, by telecommunications giant Huawei, and shortly after penned a column urging the Trump administration to back off of efforts to restrict the Chinese company.
The same relationships bind EDF. “EDF has served as an advisor on
China's highest international advisory body on the environment,” the
organization’s Chinese staff boast, “which reports directly to the Premier every year.”
On Twitter, Sachs wrote,
“I respect Huawei’s technologies, it’s vision of ICT for development,
and the many benefits of Huawei technologies for sustainable
development. I was not and am not paid by Huawei.” Then, 13 days later,
Sachs abruptly deleted his Twitter account.
The Chinese government claims that it is fighting terrorism in Xinjiang, an argument Sachs repeated.
Some Democrats recognize that China’s treatment of the Uyghurs is a
problem for solar. “We know we have a solar supply chain program,” said Senator Mark Kelly (D-AZ) at a Senate hearing last month.
But, noted
Bloomberg, “Biden can’t just flip a switch to make the problem go away.
Instead, his team may have to come up with a phased strategy to address
the issue,” and that would take years to implement.
And even if China were to move all of its solar panel production out
of Xanjiang, China’s genocide would continue. “Episodes of forced labor
have also been reported in Chinese facilities outside Xinjiang,” notes the New York Times.
So Much for “Never Again”
CNN reported
last year that China is torturing many of the two million Muslim that
are being held in concentration camps in Xinjiang. Like reporters from
Vice and Bloomberg, CNN reporters were constantly followed and harassed
by secret Chinese police, including demands for identification at 1 am
in the reporter’s hotel room.
“It’s nearly impossible to freely report on the hundreds of thousands
of people that are likely languishing in camps right now,” the CNN
correspondent repeated. “And that means that the rest of the world can't
really see what's going on there.”
China’s genocide is high-tech, reports CNN, and global. The
government uses facial recognition, GPS tracking devices, and collecting
DNA samples from all residents between 12 and 65 years old. The Chinese
government is even harassing Chinese nationals in other countries around the world.
Like other researchers and journalists who have been to Xinjiang, the
CNN reporter became emotional and spoke in very strong language about
the situation. “This is one of the biggest human rights stories on
earth. And as we saw firsthand, China is actively trying to cover it
up.”
For decades, Hollywood’s leading lights, university professors, and
environmentalists have defended the rights of oppressed racial and
religious minorities, including Muslims, and promised “never again” in
the context of genocide.
And yet all three institutions — Hollywood and the entertainment
industry, academic institutions, and environmental groups — have
sacrificed “never again,” and concerns about genocide for money, access,
and power.
Columbia University reported none of the money it received for “The
Confucius Institute” to the US Education Department, which “is part of a
network of chapters believed to be quietly undermining academic freedom
on campuses across America,” writes a Columbia graduate student.
“Confucius instructors, hired and trained by Beijing, have always banned certain topics” including “Xinjiang, where up to 2 million Uyghur Muslims languish in concentration camps,” he noted.
Sachs, for his part, criticizes the researchers who allege genocide.
“The genocide charge is being fueled by ‘studies’ like the Newlines
Institute report,” he says, which has “an apparently conservative policy agenda.” Sachs makes no mention of any financial conflict of interest.