Chinese hold on
solar-power tech raises fresh sabotage fears in Europe
By Linus Höller
May 29, 2025,
02:12 PM
A soldier poses for the media as he walks between recently installed solar panels at the Defence School of Transport (DST), Normandy Barracks, on Sept. 29, 2021, in Leconfield, England. (Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)
THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Hidden components in Chinese-made solar power
equipment have caused alarm bells in Western capitals amid concerns over
Beijing’s ability to interfere with power grids. Europe may be particularly
vulnerable, experts say, with most of its solar farms potentially at risk of
remote shutdown.
The revelation of undeclared remote access devices in American solar
farms, first reported by Reuters earlier this month, came less than a month after a power outage
that shut down electricity for millions throughout Spain, Portugal, Andorra and
parts of France, highlighting the possible fragility of even highly developed
and integrated European power grids.
According to unnamed sources cited by Reuters, the communication
devices that were embedded in solar farm gear were not shown on schematics and
customer information of the products, suggesting they may have been
deliberately concealed. The undisclosed devices were reportedly found during a
routine disassembly of Chinese-made power inverters, which serve to connect
solar farms to the electricity grid, control the flow of power and maintain the
all-important grid frequency.
While Iberian authorities have ruled out a cyber attack in the case of
the peninsula’s massive blackout, the finding has nonetheless instilled a new
sense of urgency in European planning to make the continent’s integrated
electrical grid safe and resilient.
Market dominance
Inverters are crucial in
linking photovoltaic (PV) power plants, which output DC electricity, to the
broader electricity network, which runs on AC. In 2023, 78% of all inverters
installed in Europe came from Chinese vendors, with the overwhelming majority
being made by Huawei and SunGrow, according to DNV, a risk
consultancy. The report was commissioned by SolarPower Europe, an industry
advocacy group.
This market dominance can likely be explained by a combination of
China’s large manufacturing capacity and the comparatively lower prices of
Chinese inverters compared to European ones.
Control over the inverters allows outsiders to simultaneously
disconnect generating capacity from the grid, which can cause blackouts. It
would also allow them to manipulate voltage and frequency settings to
destabilize local grids and to override safety protections like anti-islanding
systems.
Both Huawei and Sungrow have documented links to the Chinese government
and the country’s ruling Communist Party, including formal ties, participation
in government projects, and officials holding high-ranking positions
simultaneously in both the companies and the state.
Under Chinese law, Huawei
faces mandatory cooperation requirements with intelligence services. The 2017
National Intelligence Law declares that Chinese companies
must “support, assist, and cooperate with” China’s intelligence-gathering
authorities. As a result of questions over its independence and safety, the
electronics giant has already faced restrictions on work on critical communications
infrastructure – especially 5G networks – in several countries. It is also
front and center in a major investigation currently ongoing in Brussels
surrounding bribery of European officials.
Energy sovereignty at risk
“Europe’s energy sovereignty is at serious risk due to the unregulated
and remote control capabilities of photovoltaic inverters from high-risk,
non-European manufacturers – most notably from China,” said the European Solar
Manufacturing Council, an industry association.
This isn’t purely
hypothetical, either. In November 2024, some solar inverters in the U.S., U.K.
and Pakistan were actually disabled remotely from China. Very little was
publicly revealed about this incident and its consequences; investigations
later showed that the shutdown may have been the result of an industry
dispute, according to Günter Born, a
German tech and cybersecurity journalist.
Following the decoupling of Europe’s energy needs from cheap and
readily available Russian gas after the invasion of Ukraine, energy sovereignty
has become a new priority for capitals across the continent. Renewables have
been front and center, building on existing momentum to combat climate change
and residual skepticism of nuclear power for its perceived safety shortcomings
and high cost.
“Today, over 200 GW of European PV capacity is already linked to
inverters manufactured in China – the equivalent of more than 200 nuclear power
plants,” said Christoph Podewils, the ESMC secretary general, citing numbers by
the DNV consultancy.
“This means Europe has effectively surrendered remote control of a vast
portion of its electricity infrastructure.”
The Iberian Peninsula
blackout was triggered by a 2.2-gigawatt (GW) loss in electricity generation
that occurred within seconds. Previously, DNV had estimated that a loss of 3 GW
of generating power could have serious ramifications for the European power
grid. A loss of this amount of input can result in cascading effects, leading
to a large-scale shutdown of the power grid, just as had occurred in Spain on
April 28.
The DNV report identified over a dozen threat scenarios, most of which
it considered “high” or “critical” risks even after the full implementation of
existing EU cybersecurity measures.
In the first three months
of 2025 alone, nearly 68 terawatt hours of electricity were
produced by solar panels, data from the energy think tank Ember shows. This
marks an increase by almost a third over the same period a year earlier. It
amounted to 8.2% of Europe’s electricity production in March, despite the
shorter days at that time of year. In summer, around 15% of Europe’s
electricity may come from the sun, with some countries – particularly around
the Mediterranean – relying on it to make up over a quarter of their total
energy mix during the daytime.
According to SolarPower Europe, the industry advocacy
group, the installed PV capacity in Europe is expected to exceed 800 GW by
2030.
Wrangling the dragon
The shock of the Spanish power outage – even without it being caused by
an attack – has jolted some in Europe into action. But consciousness
surrounding a China vulnerability predates the grid collapse.
Lithuania on May 1 implemented new legislation that requires
photovoltaic projects above 100kW to use inverters that meet national safety
standards. Existing projects must also be retrofitted. This practically outlaws
Chinese inverters in the country’s power infrastructure.
Late last year, Estonia’s
spy chief Kaupo Rosin said that Chinese technology in critical infrastructure,
particularly solar farms, could open Europe up to Chinese blackmail.
Some EU lawmakers are also taking note, with one member of the European
parliament submitting an inquiry on the topic of solar inverters and the risk
of Chinese influence on May 15.
A 2022 EU directive called NIS2 provides the basis for joint cybersecurity
defense measures of critical infrastructure, outlining 18 broad sectors that
require particular attention, including electrical grids.
However, the directive primarily applies to very large projects,
leaving smaller power generation projects vulnerable. This is particularly
relevant to solar, which is not only produced in large farms but also by
countless dispersed, smaller photovoltaic projects, such as those on rooftops
and factory grounds.

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