2012 solar PV year in review: A complex picture of a changing market
by Solar Server International Correspondent Christian Roselund
January 20th, 2013
January 20th, 2013
The difficulties that the global solar industry
experienced in 2012 were both clear and expected. Continuing excess
solar photovoltaic (PV) manufacturing capacity spurred a collapse in
prices across the PV value chain, creating consistently negative margins
and negative profitability for upstream PV manufacturers.
This led to a large number of bankruptcies,
insolvencies and acquisitions, but also trade wars between the United
States and China, the EU and China, and between India and everyone else.
However, as in 2011 these difficulties masked the
continued progress in PV markets, policy and technology. Many of Solar
Server's predictions for 2012 played out, including the increasing
diversification of global PV markets and the dramatic expansion of a
number of emerging markets in 2012.
A difficult year: falling prices
The most fundamental problem of the global PV
industry in 2012 was, and continues to be, too much manufacturing
capacity for global demand. Exact numbers are hard to come by, given the
difficulty in information collection in China, where much of the new
capacity is located. However, Greentech Media estimated that in 2012
global PV module manufacturing capacity reached nearly 60 GW, with
global polysilicon, wafer and cell capacity more than 40 GW each.
This represents a module capacity roughly double the
estimates of the 2012 PV market. Given that large inventories are still
left over from 2011, a continuing collapse in prices was inevitable.
And fall they did, across the PV value chain. In
the first 11 months of 2012 crystalline silicon module spot market
prices had fallen between 19% and 29%, with Chinese crystalline silicon
modules falling to EUR 0.56 (USD 0.74) per watt, according to Sologico.
This follows on a price fall between 36% and 46% from January 2011. In
just two years, Chinese c-Si modules are being sold for a little more
than a third of their previous market value per watt.
Polysilicon spot prices likewise fell an estimated
47% globally in 2012 to a low of USD 15.3/kg, with Xinhua reporting a
fall of more than 50% in China, as the second straight year of price
collapse. While much polysilicon is sold through long-term contracts,
the collapse in polysilicon prices has eroded the contract market,
making manufacturers more willing to depend on the spot market.
Wafer and cell manufacturers have reported similar
stories. The net result is that the only large PV manufacturers
reporting positive operating margins in 2012 are those who have
diversified into PV project development.
Perhaps the worst hit are makers of PV
manufacturing equipment, who have seen orders collapse over the past six
quarters. While some orders continue for upgrades, most expansions have
been halted. SEMI's most recent report found that PV equipment bookings
remained flat in the third quarter of 2012 at only USD 234 million, 56%
below a year prior, and Solarbuzz reports that global sector revenues
fell 72% to USD 3.6 billion over the full year 2012.
Again, diversification has been key, and those
players that have survived often have multiple product lines in multiple
industries to soften the impact of the collapse in PV equipment demand.
Bankruptcies, insolvencies and acquisitions
The fallout of the collapse in profitability has
been a large number of bankruptcies, insolvencies and acquisitions among
PV manufacturers. The largest of these was Q-Cells' insolvency and
subsequent sale to Hanwha Chemical Corporation, a major fall from its
position as global PV market leader in 2008.
However, Q-Cells was the tip of the iceberg. Mercom
Capital has counted 35 solar bankruptcies or insolvencies in 2012, and
50 restructuring or downsizing announcements, including major workforce
reductions at SMA and Schott's departure from crystalline silicon PV
manufacturing.
While much noise was made about the US PV
industry, the United States never had a very large scale of PV
manufacturing to begin with. Instead, Europe was the hardest hit,
particularly silicon wafer production. REC ASA completely shut down its
wafer division at three locations in Norway during 2012, with Schott and
PV Crystalox closing wafer facilties in Germany.
Chinese manufacturers also spilled considerable red ink during the year, however none of the large Chinese PV companies have failed yet. Instead, Chinese manufacturers have posted worse and worse balance sheets, have received minor bailouts from government entities, and in some cases have sold off portions of their businesses to state-owned enterprises.
Chinese manufacturers also spilled considerable red ink during the year, however none of the large Chinese PV companies have failed yet. Instead, Chinese manufacturers have posted worse and worse balance sheets, have received minor bailouts from government entities, and in some cases have sold off portions of their businesses to state-owned enterprises.
Global trade war
The global solar trade war which erupted in 2012
must be seen in light of these extremely difficult conditions. Prompted
by a coalition led by SolarWorld, the United States slapped anti-dumping
and countervailing duties of 24% - 255% on Chinese-made PV cells, and
modules made from those cells. However, these tariffs have been easy to
avoid, given the option to outsource cell production and the relatively
small size of the US PV market.
Much more serious is an EU investigation into
imported Chinese PV products, which is currently underway. Meanwhile,
China has not sat idly by while all of this has occurred. It has
launched an anti-dumping investigation of its own into US and EU
polysilicon, from which 30-50% tariffs are expected.
Not to be outdone, India has also responded with
anti-dumping investigations into PV products, naming China, Malaysia,
Taiwan and the US.
While many in the industry have opposed these trade
actions, the extremely difficult positions that US and EU PV
manufacturers and Chinese polysilicon producers have found themselves in
is undeniable. What is more difficult to establish is the intentional
damage alleged by some claimants. In the end, there is simply too much
capacity for the market.
The good news: A growing PV market
Despite all of the difficulties which manufacturers
are facing, the global PV market continued to grow by 10% - 17% in 2012
to an estimated 31 - 33 GW, with growth even in highly mature PV markets
like Germany. The latest figures from the German Ministry of the
Environment indicate that despite feed-in tariff cuts, Germany's 2012 PV
market reached 7.6 GW by the end of the year, another world record for
annual PV installed.
The Italian market for large commercial and
utility-scale PV has been effectively killed by the near-elimination of
the feed-in tariff in the fifth Conto Energia, but as this came in
August, Italy will still post impressive 2012 installation figures,
estimated by Mercom at 3.5 GW.
However, other trends indicate that the big story will not be in Europe anymore.
Asian PV markets rise
In our 2011 year in review, Solar Server noted the
passage of feed-in tariffs in China and Japan as among the most
important trends in the global solar industry. In 2012, we have not been
disappointed.
It is likely that the Chinese PV market more than
doubled again this year. While final numbers are not in, IMS Research's
October 2012 prediction of 5 GW installed in 2012 would make China the
world's second-largest PV market. This includes not only installations
under the feed-in tariff, but also 1.7 GW of projects under the nation's
Golden Sun Program.
Japan likewise has seen an extraordinary boom in PV
installations, driven by what may be the world's most lucrative feed-in
tariff and a need to put generation online to replace shuttered nuclear
power plants and reduce costly fossil fuel imports.
Mercom Capital estimates that Japan's PV market doubled to 2.5 GW in 2012. Also, JPEA found that the nation's PV cell and module imports increased more than 300% year-over-year in the third quarter of 2012 to 32% of the total market, as Japan's PV manufacturers struggled to meet this sharp increase in demand.
Mercom Capital estimates that Japan's PV market doubled to 2.5 GW in 2012. Also, JPEA found that the nation's PV cell and module imports increased more than 300% year-over-year in the third quarter of 2012 to 32% of the total market, as Japan's PV manufacturers struggled to meet this sharp increase in demand.
Ongoing diversification
China and Japan were hardly the only markets that
grew dramatically in 2012, as PV technology continued its viral growth
across the globe. While both India and the United States showed
impressive growth during the year, the growth in other emerging markets
in 2012 may indicate a more significant trend over the next decade.
Throughout 2012 there were frequent announcements of
utility-scale projects either initiated or completed on six continents,
including locations as unlikely as Costa Rica, Ghana, Kazakhstan,
Nigeria and Peru.
Of these emerging markets, one that is notable for
its size is South Africa. The end of 2012 was filled with a flood of
project groundbreakings and supply deals for the 1.45 GW of PV plants
which were approved under the first phase of the nation's Renewable
Energy Independent Power Producer Program (REIPP), which aims to install
8.2 GW of PV by 2030.
Other notable regions include Southeastern Europe.
While Romania installed only 29 MW, the Greek and Bulgarian markets were
much more impressive. A number of large PV plants came online in both
nations during 2012, including a 50 MW PV plant built by Astronergy and a
60 MW PV plant built by SunEdison in Bulgaria in 2012.
Many had higher expectations for Latin America.
Chile has built an impressive pipeline of over 3.1 GW of solar projects
which have received environmental approval, but the nation reached only
2.4 MW of installed utility-scale PV capacity by year's end, with
another 2.5 MW under construction.
Peru showed greater progress, with four PV plants 20
MW and larger, totaling 84 MW, commissioned during 2012. AES Solar also
commissioned a 24 MW PV plant in Puerto Rico, one of several
utility-scale projects underway in the island territory.
Also this year two very large projects were
announced in sub-Saharan Africa. Blue Energy announced plans to build a
155 MW PV plant in Ghana, and Helios Energy signed an MOU with a state
government in Nigeria to build a 30 MW PV plant.
Technology progress: CPV
As predicted by Solar Server at the beginning of
2012, during the year concentrating photovoltaic (CPV) technology
continued its progress into the mainstream. In April, Cogentrix
commissioned a 30 MW CPV plant in the US state of Colorado, the Alamosa
Solar project. The plant is many times larger than any existing CPV
installation, and was featured by Solar Server as our November 2012 Solar Energy System of the Month.
Also, in December 2012 Soitec announced the long-awaited opening of its CPV factory in Southern California, which will supply modules for hundreds of megawatts of plants under contract which are based on its Concentrix technology.
Also, in December 2012 Soitec announced the long-awaited opening of its CPV factory in Southern California, which will supply modules for hundreds of megawatts of plants under contract which are based on its Concentrix technology.
CPV also saw new technical achievements in 2012. In
October 2012 Solar Junction announced that it had reached 44% cell
efficiency with its multi-junction technology, and in the same month
Amonix reported that it had achieved a 33.5% outdoor efficiency with its
CPV modules.
CPV still faces many challenges, most notably
bankability. However, 2012 saw important progress for CPV, with more
growth expected in 2013 as developers begin work on large projects in
South Africa and California.
2013 and beyond
Given the fundamental underlying problem of
overcapacity, the difficulties faced by the PV industry in 2012 are far
from over. Multiple research firms have forecast an ongoing fall in sale
prices in 2013, and IHS has made the particularly grim prediction that
the number of companies in the PV supply chain will be reduced by 70%
over the course of the year.
However, these falling prices have aided market
growth, particularly in nations such as the United States, and have
benefited developers and installers.
Global PV markets continue to grow and diversify,
and with this diversification comes new opportunities, including in
those markets which were previously considered closed to outsiders.
NPD Solarbuzz has predicted significant
opportunities in the PV balance of systems market in China, and Japanese
industry data shows that despite the cultural preference for domestic
products in the nation, the share of imported PV is growing rapidly in
Japan.
In other nations, falling prices mean that PV is
finally becoming cost-competitive without subsidies, as has been shown
by successful "grid-parity" projects underway in Spain. 2013 promises to
be another difficult year. However, for the companies that survive,
there are excellent prospects for substantial long-term growth in the
PV industry. We can look forward to a new PV market that is both more
global and more stable, less prone to strong quarter-to-quarter changes
and less dependent upon boom-and-bust cycles in individual nations.
(Source :Solarserver )
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