Instability to stalk European solar PV market over
next five years
July 15, 2010 | Paul Buckley | 222901213
Instability to stalk European solar PV market over next five years
Market research analyst, Solarbuzz, reports that the pace of the
European solar photovoltaic (PV) market in the first half of 2010 was
dominated by the impending mid-year incentive tariff reductions in
Germany and conditioned by the lower module pricing that emerged through
2009.
The new market study entitled 'Solarbuzz in Europe PV Markets 2010'
looks back at 2009 and points out that the German PV market reached 3.87
GW, with a growth rate of 109 percent. The growth would have been even
larger if not for a shortage of inverters that has curbed the market
since September 2009. The largest customer segments in 2009 were
Investor Groups (42 percent of the on-grid market), Agricultural (18
percent) and Commercial (14 percent), with Utility and Government
customers playing a smaller role. Private residential PV systems
accounted for 13 percent of the market.
“Despite the strength of end-market demand, which was one-third higher
in Germany in the first half of 2010 than in the second half of 2009,
the first PV module price increases of 2010 only emerged in June,” noted
Alan Turner, Vice President of European Market Research for Solarbuzz.
“Even then, the increases in euro terms only partially compensated for
the deteriorating price picture in dollar terms caused by the euro's
dramatic decline against the dollar. Such is the strength of supply
growth in the PV industry.”
With 770 MW newly installed capacity, Italy became the world's second
largest PV market. The Czech Republic, France and Belgium combined to
add 933 MW of newly installed capacity in 2009.
Growth of the total European market was just 16 percent in 2009, while
growth excluding Spain was 126 percent. Solarbuzz suggsts that this
growth discrepancy highlights the vulnerability of the overall market to
policy review in the larger markets balanced against the growth of
emerging markets.
The PV industry has gone from boom to bust and back to boom within a
cycle of less than two years from the downturn in Spain late in 2008 to
the current surge in Germany. On that basis, few would project stability
over the next five years. The fundamental problem is the continued
dependence of the industry on market incentives. Increasingly, their
cost is becoming a “political hot potato” when programs overshoot their
planned scale.
Further cutbacks in incentive levels in major markets now hang over the
PV industry some 21 months on from the start of the debacle that has
turned the Spanish market from leader to laggard. The macro economic
climate has also changed markedly over that period. The banking crisis
that coincided with the Spanish PV market downturn has turned into a
broader economic malaise.
Current forecasts indicate the new mechanism of tariff adjustment in
Germany will be effective over the 2011-2012 period in subduing the
German market. Despite this there remains upside potential in 2011,
especially in the most aggressive pricing environment of the Solarbuzz
Production-Led scenario.
The European outlook of tightening policy as governments seek to reduce
the economic burden of their national incentive programs will sustain
pressure for continued price reduction beyond the short-term tightening
around mid-2010.
Turner added, “Exposure to individual country markets remains a high
risk strategy. The policy risks are simply too great and downstream
solar companies need to look for a geographical portfolio that balances
materiality and growth to secure their long-term position.”

Figure 1: 2009 Europe PV Market Size by
Country (MW)
Solarbuzz Europe PV Markets 2010 provides a detailed review of
Europe's 2009 PV market and a five-year forecast. Te report provides
analysis on major countries including Germany, Spain, Italy, Belgium,
Bulgaria, Czech Republic, France, Greece and Portugal including market
segmentation, government policies, downstream acquisitions,
project-by-project listings, investment economics, downstream market
pricing and market forecasts.
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