Originally Published in the ECOreport. When Rhone Resch used to get together with the CEOs from other energy sectors for lunch, he always felt like the little guy at the table. He might have been President of the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA), but it was the major players—like gas and oil—that used to pick up the tab. Those days have gone: around 29% of all new electricity installations during 2013 were solar; the industry is now mainstream. According to statistics in the newly released Solar Market Insight Year in Review 2013, solar was the second largest source of new electricity generating capacity in America last year, exceeded only by natural gas. 4,751 megawatts (MW) of solar photovoltaic (PV) capacity were installed, and almost half of that in the fourth quarter. Courtesy Solar Market Insight Year in Review 2013 There was also an 80% increase of concentrated solar power (CSP). Around 410 MW of capacity came online during 2013, “kicking off with the 280 MWac Solana project and the Genesis Solar project’s initial 125 MWac phase.” Solar’s contribution to the energy sector has almost tripled in size in a single year. “This has been a record shattering year,” said Arno Harris of Recurrent Energy, one of the three speakers who introduced this report to the media. “There were more installations these last 18 months than during the past 30 years. These numbers show that solar will be one of the three technologies that shape energy’s future.” “We forecast 26% PV installation growth in 2014, with installations reaching nearly 6 GW. Add in CSP and we will pass 6 GW,” said Shayle Khan, Senior Vice President at GTM Research and lead author of the report. He predicted that this growth will continue to be rapid in the residential sector, which has been the industry’s “bedrock,” and the non-residential sector will continue to remain relatively “flat year-over-year.” After two years of continuous declines, the price for polysilicon and upstream PV components is now increasing. That is because of increased demand, especially in the US, China, and Japan. Modules produced in the 4th Quarter were priced 35% higher a year ago. The cost of solar installations has also gone down and was 15% lower at the end of 2013 than 2012. Solar companies have been trying new financing options:
- NRG Energy took its first YieldCo public, generating a tradable, dividend-producing security that contains both utility-scale and rooftop solar projects, as well as fossil fuel assets.
- SolarCity successfully launched the first distributed solar securitization, worth $54 million.
- There are also opportunities to invest in solar via crowdfunding or community solar.
0 comments:
Post a Comment