US is working on ban targeting Chinese energy inverters, sources say(reuters.com)
reuters.com
US is working on ban targeting Chinese energy inverters, sources say
https://www.reuters.com/legal/litigation/us-working-ban-targeting-chinese-energy-inverters-sources-say-2026-06-30/
9 comments
It has nothing to do with security: It's hard to push through a ban on evil radical-left solar in favour of nice clean coal, but much easier to ban the Chinese inverters that are required for the solar to work, in the name of good patriotic notional security.
Great point
Largely because there are radios in the inverters. Typical connected-grid stuff is sending people with too little knowledge into a tizy
My house is currently powered from US-made inverters that have radios in them, and at least three different known remote-access mechanisms that the manufacturer can use to get in and control things. Probably some others that aren't known.
I'd actually feel a lot safer if I was running Chinese-made gear.
I'd actually feel a lot safer if I was running Chinese-made gear.
Actually a security researcher found a back door in some Chinese inverters recently.
Normally I’d believe this administration is just knee-jerk banning because China and solar, but in this case there was an actual reason.
Normally I’d believe this administration is just knee-jerk banning because China and solar, but in this case there was an actual reason.
And what was found? was it enabled? was it in the spec sheet when they bought it?
Was it an actual backdoor? Or an intended service config?
Was it an actual backdoor? Or an intended service config?
Would appreciate a non-paywalled source.
As for the subject... I generally don't have a problem with this. Handing over any part of your energy infrastructure to a country with a long and storied history of hacking your companies is generally not smart.
I've purchased two inverters: one is a 3000w "Energizer"-branded one, while the other is a 1200w Victron unit. The Victron's quieter on RF, from what I can tell, is designed in the Netherlands, and is made in India.
As for the subject... I generally don't have a problem with this. Handing over any part of your energy infrastructure to a country with a long and storied history of hacking your companies is generally not smart.
I've purchased two inverters: one is a 3000w "Energizer"-branded one, while the other is a 1200w Victron unit. The Victron's quieter on RF, from what I can tell, is designed in the Netherlands, and is made in India.
whoa
Real, actual concerns: -Lack of security -Password defaults left on device during setup -Aluminum transformers in inverters don't last more than 4-5 years at rated wattage