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2012 PV Forecast: Industry Value Chain Blues

By Paula Mints, Navigant Consulting
February 13, 2012   |   6 Comments

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If the price of technology per watt peak is below the cost of producing it and technology manufacturers are failing, true grid parity has not been reached.
6 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 6
February 13, 2012
So 2 years ago Mints gave a presentation where her "accelerated" prediction for 2010 was 8.6 GW and for 2011 it was 11.4 GW.
http://www.californiasolarcenter.org/pdfs/forum/2010/20100217_SolarForum_PMints_PVForecast.pdf
Correct me if I'm wrong, but those predictions were not even in the ballpark. So why exactly would we care about her 2012 PV forecast (except as a contrarian)? Anyone?
Actually, it is the same in all fields of future predictions by analysts. There is no correlation between accuracy and the number of times people are exposed to their predictions.
Comment
2 of 6
February 13, 2012
Option 3: The market proceeds by the normal industry shakeout model with only the low cost producers surviving. These producers continue to increase scale by absorbing market share and creating new demand with lower prices. Increased scale drives costs down, driving a virtuous cycle until the market reaches an equillibrium. And innovation is happening everyday - producers are making their cells thinner, improving their production processes, and driving out costs throughout the manufacturing process. I'm sorry that it isn't happening fast enough in thin film, which you obviously favor, to compete with traditional silicon panels at this point in time.
Comment
3 of 6
February 15, 2012
USA buyers in the chain are in false purchasing position, based on over inflated USD. you may find
PV panels price may reach there bottom or start to climb by end 2012 in real terms currency cross rates will give better pricing if USD is kept as trade currency, one day poeple in US will pull there head out of the sand to find there world trade currency default may be gone
Comment
4 of 6
February 17, 2012
I've seen Paula speak a couple of times and read many of her articles. She always provides good data, but her judgments always seem awry to me. And her facts sometimes debatable.

For example, she states in this piece that Germany slowed down in 2011. The data I have shows that Germany installed 7 GW in both 2010 and 2011, with 3 GW in December alone, leading the world in installations. How is that a slowdown? 2011 was a record year for PV installations, continuing a six year period of blockbuster growth in PV installed worldwide.

Why the pessimism?

Paula raises a good point about negative margins for some PV manufacturers. This clearly can't continue. But obviously many companies are making money - perhaps only the Chinese companies. We simply wouldn't have a market for PV sales if none of these companies were making money at current rates.

I don't agree that PV prices necessarily have to rise, however, to keep the market going. Even if we have overshot sustainable pricing for PV currently, based on costs of production, those very costs are coming down steadily. So even if some manufacturers have negative margins now there is a steady race to reduce production costs and make those margins positive.
Also, I wish Paula would engage with her readers here and respond to comments. She's never done so historically so her prognostications keep coming, keep on being shown to be overly pessimistic, and yet her gloomy view of FITs and the PV market in general never change... Methinks that Paula's generally pessimistic views are due for a correction of their own.
Comment
5 of 6
February 21, 2012
Excellent analysis.
Dr.A.Jagadeesh Nellore(AP),India
E-mail: anumakonda.jagadeesh@gmail.com
Comment
6 of 6
April 15, 2012
Here is my own PV forecast based on data collected from 2009-early 2012.
http://mayer.pro/solar-panel-price
The trend looks healthy.
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With over 50,000 subscribers and a global readership in 174 countries around the world, Renewable Energy World Magazine covers industry, policy, technology, finance and markets for all renewable technologies. Content is aimed ... more »

 

Paula Mints

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About: Paula Mints is principal analyst, PV Services Program, and associate director in the energy practice at Navigant Consulting. more »

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