The Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) says it is releasing a new tool to increase supply chain transparency and help ensure that all solar components are made ethically throughout the solar value chain.

The Solar Supply Chain Traceability Protocol is a set of guidelines designed to help solar companies meet compliance obligations and provide customers with assurances that their solar products are free of unethical labor practices.

“Solar customers expect their products to be ethically produced, and this protocol helps ensure that solar products coming into the U.S. are not made using forced labor,” says John Smirnow, vice president of market strategy at SEIA. “Solar is one of the cleanest and most reliable technologies on our grid today, and we hope this tool will give customers confidence at a time when solar energy increasingly supports our need to fuel economic growth and tackle the climate crisis.”

As manufacturers begin using the traceability protocol, it will be regularly reviewed and updated to improve its usability and effectiveness. It is important to point out that the protocol by itself will not stamp out forced labor, companies need to go through the steps laid out by the protocol.

In addition to the new traceability protocol, SEIA has finalized an update to its Solar Commitment, which defines common labor, health and safety, environmental, and ethical standards and expectations for solar companies. The update modernizes the standard and now covers an expansive list of topics, including guidance on workplace safety and ethical labor practices.

The standard now features recycling and refurbishment best practices, information on energy consumption tracking, procedures companies can follow to avoid the use of conflict minerals in solar products and additional guidance that companies can follow to hold their suppliers to all of these standards.

SEIA notes it is also releasing a Solar Buyers’ Guide on Traceability, which summarizes the protocol and offers key questions that customers, developers, financiers and other stakeholders should ask suppliers about products in the solar+storage value chain.

On April 30, SEIA will host a webinar to discuss the new resources and explain how solar companies can put them into practice. The webinar is free and open to the public.



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