I found the claim that he is being fined for buying chinese solar panels... dubious. So I figured there must be more to the story.
Apparently the "tough import policy" is a limitation to the 30% tax credit people can get for installing solar panels. The rules of the credit were changed in May to make it only apply to american-made panels: http://www.sustainablebusiness.com/index.cfm/go/news.display...
His company, Sunrise Solar, encourages customers to take the tax credit for his products: http://www.sunrisesolar.net/
This appears to be where the potential fines are coming from.
I'm not sure. But I was confused about how an "import policy" could result in him being "fined as much as 250 percent on his solar panels." That didn't seem like the result of any sort of tariff I've ever seen.
So I went to his website, saw the tax credit advertisement, figured that might have something to do with it and googled it.
And while your linked 31% tariff may be the "tough import policy" referenced in the article, I'm still having trouble understanding how that turns into a 250% fine.
Something does seem off there, but maybe it's sloppy reporting. The article states:
Unless he can show specific manufacturing documentation
by August 29, Keith said he could be fined as much as
250 percent on his solar panels -- an effective rate of
$270,000.
Besides the 250% "fine", the dangling $270,000 reference (and calling it a 'rate') is confusing.
Apparently the "tough import policy" is a limitation to the 30% tax credit people can get for installing solar panels. The rules of the credit were changed in May to make it only apply to american-made panels: http://www.sustainablebusiness.com/index.cfm/go/news.display...
His company, Sunrise Solar, encourages customers to take the tax credit for his products: http://www.sunrisesolar.net/
This appears to be where the potential fines are coming from.