Panasonic Corp. is targeting rooftops for its solar panels as
developers struggle to find big enough plots of affordable land in Japan
with the access to transmission lines needed for utility-scale
projects.
Japan’s largest consumer-electronics maker, which sold 540 megawatts of solar products in the 2012 fiscal year, wants to increase the volume by 25 percent this year, said Kazuhiro Yoshida, who heads the solar division of the Osaka-based company.
“Rooftops don’t require the purchase of land, and
there are transmission lines already available nearby,” he said in an
interview in Tokyo today. “Rooftops are going to be more popular.”
Yoshida’s comments follow a debate about how to fix
grid congestion issues on Hokkaido island in the north of Japan, one of
the few places that does have large plots of inexpensive land. The
Panasonic official said homes, apartment buildings and convenience
stores have potential forsolar.
Panasonic is forecasting Japan’s solar market may consume as much as 5 gigawatts of solar cells
in the year through March 31, making it one of the biggest in the
world. Of that, 3.5 gigawatts will be for projects smaller than 50
kilowatts, according to the company, which began developingsolar panels in 1975. One gigawatts equals 1,000 megawatts.
Incentive Program
Japan’s solar market is
booming thanks to an incentive program that pays above-market rates for
power produced from renewable sources such as the sun and wind.
Introduced in July 2012, the program is intended to diversify the
country’s energy mix following the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster.
The rate for non-residential solar is
currently 37.8 yen (38 cents) per kilowatt-hour for 20 years, about
three times that of Germany’s. The generous tariff prompted new-entrants
such as SoftBank Corp. and Orix Corp. to build utility-scale plants.
Panasonic, whose new manufacturing plant in Malaysia
started operations in December, has been consolidating plants overseas.
Its Oregon plant ended solar wafer production at the end of June. It continues to make silicon ingots there.
The company plans to close a panel manufacturing plant
in Hungary in September, according to Yoshida. It is considering
Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia as markets where it could seek more
sales, he said.
Japan may add from 6.9 gigawatts to 9.4 gigawatts of solar capacity
this year, according to a forecast from Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
That would make the nation the biggest consumer of solar technology.
The country added 1.98 gigawatts of solar capacity
in the 2012 fiscal year and another 1.24 gigawatts in the two months to
May 31, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry said this week. The
ministry has approved 20.9 gigawatts of solar projects by the end of May.
Copyright 2013 Bloomberg
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2013/08/panasonic-sees-rooftops-as-key-market-for-solar-power-in-japan
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